
The Sleep of Reason: A Private Collection of Surrealist Art Online
拍品已結束競投
May 20, 04:17 PM GMT
估價
15,000 - 20,000 USD
拍品資料
描述
EUGENE BERMAN (1899 - 1972)
LA TORRE DE SAN CRISTÓBAL (THE TOWER OF ST. CHRISTOPHER)
Signed with artist's monogram and dated 1948 (toward upper right); signed with the artist's monogram, dated Los Angeles Oct.-Nov. Dec.1948., inscribed (Saint Christopher.) and titled (on the reverse)
Oil on canvas
40 by 31½ in. (101.6 by 80 cm)
Framed: 48½ by 41 in. (123.1 by 104 cm)
Painted in Los Angeles in October-December 1948.
We extend sincere thanks to Peter Sherwin for his kind assistance in authenticating the present work from photographs.
Gallery of Surrealism, New York
Acquired from the above on September 25, 2003
Washington, D.C., Corcoran Gallery of Art, The Twenty-First Biennial Exhibition of Contemporary American Oil Paintings, 1949, no. 11
Eugene Berman is best known for his imaginary landscapes dominated by ruins of Greco-Roman architecture. Born in Russia, the Berman family fled to Paris during the Bolshevik Revolution. In Paris, Berman studied under the two great Nabis painters—Édouard Vuillard and Maurice Denis—and met Emilio Terry, a French architect with whom he first travelled to Italy. During his subsequent frequent trips to Italy, he was inspired by Renaissance paintings and architecture, which became a key motif in his work. After moving to the United States in 1935, he was awarded a Guggenheim Fellowship and gained the opportunity to explore the desert landscape of the Southwest. Berman combined the depictions of this vast desert with his signature elements of Neo-Romanticism.