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Philip Guston (American 1913-1980) Oil on Canvas

Currency:USD Category:Antiques Start Price:200.00 USD Estimated At:3,000.00 - 5,000.00 USD
Philip Guston (American 1913-1980) Oil on Canvas
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Oil on canvas abstract expressionist painting, featuring an automobile travelling through buildings with serpentine garbage chutes; signed and attr. Philip Guston (American, 1913-1980; 13.5 x 16 inch (34.29 x 40.64 cm). In a career of constant struggle and evolution, Philip Guston emerged first in the 1930s as a social realist painter of murals in the 1930s. Much later he also evolved a unique and highly influential style of cartoon realism. But he made his name as an Abstract Expressionist. He avoided the muscular gestures of painters such as Pollock and Kline, and opted for a lighter touch, painting shimmering abstractions in which forms seem to hover like mists in the foreground. Guston's early career followed a pattern similar to that of many of his peers in Abstract Expressionism. He became interested in mural painting, and created fantastic scenes populated often by monumental, struggling figures. Although his early style was influenced in part by Italian Renaissance art, his backdrops invariably allude to contemporary cities and worldly conflicts. Guston was drawn towards Abstract Expressionism when he settled in New York in the late 1940s. There he evolved an abstract art characterized by warm clouds of red hatch-marks floating over formless white mists. For a time it led to his work being described as "American Impressionism." The upheavals of 1960s made Guston increasingly uncomfortable with abstract painting, and his work eventually developed into the highly original cartoon-styled realism for which he is now best known. This took him back to his early years - to the style of the comics he loved as a boy, and to the imagery of hooded Klansmen that he first explored in the 1930s. Occasionally, Guston seems to identify with the Klansmen, but paradoxically, his dark cartoons also resemble fearful urban worlds of racism and violence. PROVENANCE: Southern Ontario Estate