Arthur Dove 1880-1946
Italy Goes to War, 1941
Watercolor
3 1/8 x 7 3/8 inches
7.9 x 18.7 cm
7.9 x 18.7 cm
Signed lower center: Dove
Other: Largely considered the first American painter to execute a completely abstract painting, Arthur Dove endeavored throughout his career to remain true to his singular artistic vision. Although this is...
Other: Largely considered the first American painter to execute a completely abstract painting, Arthur Dove endeavored throughout his career to remain true to his singular artistic vision. Although this is not to say he was without influence. Early in his career in 1907 he traveled to France where he took great interest in the work of the Fauves. Upon his return to the States in 1909 he met Alfred Stieglitz, with whom he would develop an enduring friendship and business relationship. In 1910 with Stieglitz's support Dove painted one of the first truly abstract paintings, which inaugurated the advent of abstraction in American art.
For Dove the purpose of painting abstractly was to extract and capture the essence of the subject. These "essences" or "extractions," as they were called, were meant to symbolize the basic elements of the natural world: force, growth, life. Dove based his compositions on the pulsating energy of nature, and he used basic organic shapes to comprise his paintings. The bold contrasts of geometric forms set in open spaces acted as remarkable precedents for American's postwar abstractions.
In Italy Goes to War all of the hallmarks of Dove's artistic style are present. Despite the work's small size, the composition barely contains the energy that emanates from the forms. He uses a highly worked line to create a sense of agitation, even anxiety. By abstracting the historical event Dove brilliantly captures the indecision, the chaos, and the perceived consequences of Italy's entry into the war. As ever Dove used the artistic method he developed and consistently maintained throughout his career, and in doing so created a work that speaks to his deep interest in the philosophies of modern art and life and a work of art's ability to capture and era's life force.
Largely considered the first American painter to execute a completely abstract painting, Arthur Dove endeavored throughout his career to remain true to his singular artistic vision. Although this is not to say he was without influence. Early in his career in 1907 he traveled to France where he took great interest in the work of the Fauves. Upon his return to the States in 1909 he met Alfred Stieglitz, with whom he would develop an enduring friendship and business relationship. In 1910 with Stieglitz's support Dove painted one of the first truly abstract paintings, which inaugurated the advent of abstraction in American art.
For Dove the purpose of painting abstractly was to extract and capture the essence of the subject. These "essences" or "extractions," as they were called, were meant to symbolize the basic elements of the natural world: force, growth, life. Dove based his compositions on the pulsating energy of nature, and he used basic organic shapes to comprise his paintings. The bold contrasts of geometric forms set in open spaces acted as remarkable precedents for American's postwar abstractions.
In Italy Goes to War all of the hallmarks of Dove's artistic style are present. Despite the work's small size, the composition barely contains the energy that emanates from the forms. He uses a highly worked line to create a sense of agitation, even anxiety. By abstracting the historical event Dove brilliantly captures the indecision, the chaos, and the perceived consequences of Italy's entry into the war. As ever Dove used the artistic method he developed and consistently maintained throughout his career, and in doing so created a work that speaks to his deep interest in the philosophies of modern art and life and a work of art's ability to capture an era's life force.
For Dove the purpose of painting abstractly was to extract and capture the essence of the subject. These "essences" or "extractions," as they were called, were meant to symbolize the basic elements of the natural world: force, growth, life. Dove based his compositions on the pulsating energy of nature, and he used basic organic shapes to comprise his paintings. The bold contrasts of geometric forms set in open spaces acted as remarkable precedents for American's postwar abstractions.
In Italy Goes to War all of the hallmarks of Dove's artistic style are present. Despite the work's small size, the composition barely contains the energy that emanates from the forms. He uses a highly worked line to create a sense of agitation, even anxiety. By abstracting the historical event Dove brilliantly captures the indecision, the chaos, and the perceived consequences of Italy's entry into the war. As ever Dove used the artistic method he developed and consistently maintained throughout his career, and in doing so created a work that speaks to his deep interest in the philosophies of modern art and life and a work of art's ability to capture and era's life force.
Largely considered the first American painter to execute a completely abstract painting, Arthur Dove endeavored throughout his career to remain true to his singular artistic vision. Although this is not to say he was without influence. Early in his career in 1907 he traveled to France where he took great interest in the work of the Fauves. Upon his return to the States in 1909 he met Alfred Stieglitz, with whom he would develop an enduring friendship and business relationship. In 1910 with Stieglitz's support Dove painted one of the first truly abstract paintings, which inaugurated the advent of abstraction in American art.
For Dove the purpose of painting abstractly was to extract and capture the essence of the subject. These "essences" or "extractions," as they were called, were meant to symbolize the basic elements of the natural world: force, growth, life. Dove based his compositions on the pulsating energy of nature, and he used basic organic shapes to comprise his paintings. The bold contrasts of geometric forms set in open spaces acted as remarkable precedents for American's postwar abstractions.
In Italy Goes to War all of the hallmarks of Dove's artistic style are present. Despite the work's small size, the composition barely contains the energy that emanates from the forms. He uses a highly worked line to create a sense of agitation, even anxiety. By abstracting the historical event Dove brilliantly captures the indecision, the chaos, and the perceived consequences of Italy's entry into the war. As ever Dove used the artistic method he developed and consistently maintained throughout his career, and in doing so created a work that speaks to his deep interest in the philosophies of modern art and life and a work of art's ability to capture an era's life force.
Provenance
An American Place, New York;World House Galleries, New York, 1953;
Private collection, New York;
Betty Krulik Fine Art, 2007;
Avery Galleries until present
Exhibitions
An American Place, New York, Exhibition of New Arthur G. Dove Paintings, March 27, 1941-May 17, 1941 (possibly one of the 13 watercolors on view but not listed by title).Gerald Peters Gallery, New York, Georgia O'Keefe and Other Modernists, October 29-December 18, 2009.
Schoelkopf Gallery, New York. Arthur Dove: Yes, I Could Paint a Cyclone, September 29-December 1, 2023.
Literature
Schoelkopf Gallery, New York. Arthur Dove: Yes, I Could Paint a Cyclone (2023).52
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