182 of 405 lots
182
John Marin (American, 1870-1953) Autumn in Mist, 1918
Estimate: $15,000-$25,000
Sold
$10,000
Live Auction
Western Paintings and Sculpture including Contemporary Native American Art Session I
Size
19 1/4 x 16 1/4 inches
Description
John Marin
(American, 1870-1953)
Autumn in Mist
, 1918
watercolor
signed Marin and dated (lower right)
19 1/4 x 16 1/4 inches
Property being sold to benefit the Mission and Vision of the Couse-Sharp Historic Site, Taos, New Mexico
Condition
Appears in overall good condition. Faint fade line visible along edges from prior framing, most predominant on top and bottom edges. Pin holes in each corner. Some small points of discoloration in upper left corner and along top edge, behind mat. Affixed to mat board with archival tape at top corners. Faint, overall discoloration visible on verso, commensurate with age. Framed and matted behind glass.  Dimensions: 26 1/2 x 23 3/4 inches
Signature
signed Marin and dated (lower right)
Provenance

Provenance:
Kennedy Galleries, New York, New York
Sotheby's, New York, New York, 1990
Private Collection, acquired at auction from the above

Exhibitions:
The Berkshire Museum, "John Marin's Berkshire Landscapes", Pittsfield, Massachusetts, 1985

Despite having found a lifelong New York dealer in Alfred Steiglitz, and despite having exhibited with Picasso and just about every other name in Modernism in the 1913 Armory Show, John Marin spent the summer of 1918 in Rowe, Massachusetts, in large part because he found living there inexpensive. Yet the environs were so congenial to his painting that he stayed well into the fall, which is when he would have painted Autumn in Mist- not long perhaps, before Armistice Day began to clear the tragic fog of the First World War. Marin is an idiosyncratic painter. His subtle watercolors seem to have an origin in Asian practice, but they are utterly unique, as if his brushwork inscribes the calligraphy of a private language. The central gesture in Autumn in Mist, for example, is what appears to be the skeleton of a shrub, dimly perceived. The arrangement of green limbs, however, suggests a ghostly, dancing figure that might loom anciently from a cave wall. As Sheldon Reich wrote in his 1970 treatise on Marin, the artist embodied “some of the most cogent artistic tendencies of his day: the twentieth-century concentration on individual expression, the shattering of conventional standards of time and space, the faith in the act of creation as one of affirmation.” (Reich, p. 243).

-James D. Balestrieri