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Lot 662

George Morrison "Mirrored Image" Gouache 1956

Estimate: $10,000 - $15,000

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George Morrison (Ojibwe, 1919-2000). Gouache paper titled "Mirrored Image" depicting an abstracted layered landscape in rich yellows and oranges with hints of green, 1956. Signed and dated along the lower left; titled along the left margin behind the mat. With a label from The Contemporary Arts Center of the Cincinnati Art Museum affixed to the verso which titles the work as "Autumn Landscape."

Lot Essay:
Regarded as the founding figure of Native American modernism and among the top American abstract expressionist painters is George Morrison. Also highly regarded as a master collage artist, he assembled large collages of found driftwood and woodcut in framed, puzzle-like forms. In the 1940s, he was formally trained at the Minneapolis College of Art and in the 1950s at the Art Students League in New York before receiving a Fulbright to study in France. Taking his place as part of the modern art movement in New York in the 1950s after World War II, he was friends with Jackson Pollock and Willem de Kooning, regularly exhibiting with de Kooning, Philip Guston, Hans Hofmann, and Franz Kline. Morrison helped bring the New York Modern Art movement to Minnesota, where he was based and worked with pure form via Abstract Expressionism. Later in his career, in the mid-1970s, Morrison shifted to a new theme and started to really explore his heritage when he and his family built a home with an art studio on the Grand Portage Indian Reservation on Lake Superior, naming it Red Rock.

Rather than portraying an overt depiction of identity, Morrison was in the process of exploring his identity so he looked to nature, stating “in this search for my own identity, I seek the power of the rock, the magic of the water, the religion of the tree, the color of the wind and the enigma of the horizon.” Translating nature into paintings was Morrison’s way to navigate learning and absorption, and in turn produce self-expression. His token theme was the horizon, taking on dynamic form as colors or shapes in the eternal motion of nature. His inspiration was provided by Lake Superior, observing and documenting the temporary sight of the revered sky meeting landscape that he beheld in the moment.

Although his body of work on horizons didn’t make overt reference to his Ojibwe roots, it instead offers a respectful nod to Ojibwe culture. In creating this body of work, he ushered in a change to expectations imposed on Native artists, offering himself as a catalyst towards breaking the barrier that relegated Native American artists to feel a pressure to center upon subjects that were overtly self-reflective and rooted in identity politics. This effort boosted Moorison into a champion founder of Native American modernism. He taught at colleges like the Rhode Island School of Design and later taught American Indian studies and art at the University of Minnesota. A spotlight in the Minnesota art scene, Morrison’s success stemmed from his eventual grounding in nature and Anishinaabe culture and using that to offer his take on spiritual landscape paintings.

Morrison is also well-known for his woodcut collages, large in scale with a look that was either all natural in driftwood or all polished with sanded, sculpted wooden pieces. The collages display horizontally, again with an intent of capturing the shifting movements of the horizon. He altered the medium once more by creating rubbings of his wood collages, further emphasizing patterns created by momentary sights of the horizon and which served to re-invigorate the works with the rawness witnessed in the natural environment.

His artworks are spotted today in the collections of the Heard Museum, Philadelphia Museum of Art, and Whitney Museum of American Art, US National Gallery of Art, Minneapolis Institute of Art, and the Walker Art Center. In 1997 he was honored in a ceremony at the White House when his work was included in the Twentieth Century American Sculpture at The White House: Honoring Native Americans exhibition. In 1999 Morrison was honored as inaugural Master Artist in the Eiteljorg Museum of American Indians and Western Art, Indianapolis.

Sight; height: 18 1/2 in x width: 23 1/4 in. Framed; height: 26 1/2 in x width: 31 in.

Condition

There are no losses or restorations. The colors are bold and bright. There is a slight undulation to the sheet throughout. There is a small 1/2 inch vertical tear along the lower center. There is yellowed tape along the center of all edges and all corners; some pieces are missing. Framed under glass; some wear to the frame.

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