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Arshile Gorky: New York City

Sale price$38.00

Estimated shipping date – mid June


This book unpacks the relationship between Arshile Gorky and New York, focusing on the artist’s early years in the city following his arrival in 1924 after fleeing the Armenian genocide. What did it mean for an artist who named himself after a Russian writer and pledged allegiance to Picasso to find his own voice in New York? Embracing the metropolis as a locus of modernity and liberation, Gorky sought to reconcile it with his own cultural and historical inheritance. Bound together in a relationship of mutual influence, Gorky would come to shape the history of New York painting, just as the city had shaped his own work.

Edited by Ben Eastham, this richly illustrated book combines fascinating new insights into Gorky’s work with broader reflections on his status as an immigrant artist, and includes essays by writer Adam Gopnik, art historians Tamar Kharatishvili, Christa Noel Robbins, and Emily Warner, alongside a meditation on Gorky’s enduring influence by painter Allison Katz.

Arshile Gorky: New York City
Arshile Gorky: New York City Sale price$38.00

Language

English

Publisher

Hauser & Wirth Publishers

Composition

Paperback

Contributors

Edited by Ben Eastham. Texts by Adam Gopnik, Allison Katz, Tamar Kharatishvili, Christa Noel Robbins, and Emily Warner.

Pages

244

Size

24 x 17 cm

ISBN

9783907493069

Publication Date

June-25

Gorky’s New York 1924 – 1948

This map selectively illustrates Gorky’s relationship to New York City, the place that nurtured his vision and which he, in turn, transformed with his unique approach to art making.

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The Artist

ARSHILE GORKY

Arshile Gorky was born an ethnic Armenian in Ottoman Anatolia in c.1904. Fleeing the genocide that claimed the life of his mother, he emigrated to the United States as a teenage refugee in 1920. After five years with relatives in Massachusetts, Gorky moved to New York and changed his name in honor of the celebrated Russian poet. Refusing all categories, whether artistic or political, as necessarily reductive, Gorky forsook assimilation in favor of celebrating his otherness, becoming a central figure of the cultural milieu of a city on the brink of Modernism.

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