163

McClanahan, Marion - Original signed and numbered lithograph

Currency:USD Category:Art Start Price:10.00 USD Estimated At:100.00 - 200.00 USD
McClanahan, Marion - Original signed and numbered lithograph
ALL ITEMS GUARANTEED AS DESCRIBED

CERTIFICATE OF AUTHENTICITY AVAILABLE UPON REQUEST
ARTIST: Marion McClanahan
TITLE: The Purple Cloud
MEDIUM: Original lithograph on archival paper
SIZE: 33 x 22 1/2 inches (image)
EDITION: from the edition of 300
YEAR: Circa 1979
CONDITION: EXCELLENT
RETAIL/GALLERY PRICE: $700


American (1921 -1993)
Marion McClanahan's life has been one of contrast, the range of dramatic influences that have passed through her life have invested her personality with a mature grace. Born in Tulsa, Oklahoma she travelled extensively throughout the Southwest and through North America and Europe with her family. Her paintings recall many of her early impressions of Michigan, Kentucky and Paris.
The subjects she chooses are as varied as her life. They are ordinary enough scenes to begin with-a view from the window of her Paris studio, or a commonplace motel on Cape Cod; shacks; beaches; models casually posed in a studio. She comes to them, says Knox Martin, with "elegance, grace, sensitivity, giving to the most insignificant things a local habitation and a name. There are no insignificant subjects-all is Wonder."
The poet Barbara Guest sees all the objects in these paintings bathed in an air which is not simply the air we breathe but the fruit of a free imagination. "These scenes are the work of an eye full of wonders."
There is nothing dreamy or vague about this eye. It is sharp and clear and usually capable of surprises. She filters light and substance into poetically seen experiences. The paintings appear refreshingly relaxed. McClanahan's artistic approach confirms a tree flowing but firmly disciplined line which marks her work. The very intense personal vision presents a challenge to the viewer. All her images preserve the spontaneity and freshness of the original direct vision.
McClanahan's paintings are so bright and lively,-so "sparkling with sunlight, warmth and joy," as David Shirey said in a New York Times review of her show at the Graham Gallery in 1972-that it is easy to some unexpected treat to be found in a corner. Tom Prideaux, writing about some of her softer more atmospheric paintings, remarked of one of them, "a memorable meeting between bland sand dunes and mild blue skies. Strictly speaking, these are pastel shades. But there is no pastel feeling in these paintings, or, if there is, it is pastel with a sting, like a baby-blue Portuguese man-of-war on a pale beige beach."
The sting may be there, but no hostility. A deep serenity resides in this world, bathed in an extraordinarily delicate light. William Saroyan has written ecstatically about this light:
"In Marion McClanahan's paintings, I am delighted by the fragility of the connection between light and everything else, especially people. The light is in them, as it is in everything around them... .How she manages to convey that sense of super-powerful fragility is the thing that delights eye, mind, memory, and expectation; and compels gratitude."
And he concluded with these warm and wonderful and typically Saroyanesque words:
"Standing and looking at a couple of dozen of her paintings in her studio on the 6th floor, 5 rue de Plaisance in Paris, I had no chdice but to feel perfectly at home in the bumbling, bungling human race. The lines and the lights, they did it."