Bob Thompson
31.1 x 22.9 cm
The vision of Bob Thompson, a figurative painter working in the midst of Abstract Expressionism, began with inspiration from the Old Masters that he transformed into brightly-hued, energetic compositions. He was at the center of the multi-racial Beat scene, his life and career cut short by a tragic early death at the age of 28. Thompson left behind an impressive body of work in various media that tells the story of an enormously talented and innovative artist who “seemed in the 1960s to be trying to paint all the history of art into one whole.” [1] He drew from centuries of art history, borrowing subject matter and compositions from European masters, which he suffused with a colorful palette and lyricism reminiscent of the Fauves. Thompson spent two years in Paris in the early 1960s and returned to New York with a large body of figurative works reflecting his signature style: the complex interweaving of flattened forms of subjects both real and imagined. The subject of La Promenade was likely influenced by the Impressionist paintings Thompson would have been exposed to during his sojourn in Paris--a widely known example of the present subject remains Pierre-Auguste Renoir's La Promenade (1870; Getty Center).
[1] Michael Brenson, “Black Artists: A Place in the Sun,” The New York Times, March 12, 1989
Provenance
The artist;Private collection; by descent to
The present owner