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Open a larger version of the following image in a popup: John Marin, Downtown from the River, 1910

John Marin American, 1870-1953

Downtown from the River, 1910
Watercolor on paper
14 x 17 inches
35.6 x 43.2 cm
Signed and dated at lower right: Marin 1910; inscribed on verso: AS Collection. Never exhibited. Signature O.K. AS.
John Marin's early watercolors provide a clear bridge from nineteenth-century aestheticsm to twentieth-century modernism. Marin spent four years in Europe, from 1905 to 1910, during which time his metamorphosis progressed...
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John Marin's early watercolors provide a clear bridge from nineteenth-century aestheticsm to twentieth-century modernism. Marin spent four years in Europe, from 1905 to 1910, during which time his metamorphosis progressed rapidly. He left America a maker of etchings in the stamp of James Abbott McNeill Whistler and returned a watercolorist in a modernist vein all his own. Ruth Fine posits that "Marin might have known Whistler's work, and specifically his etchings, from exhibitions held in New York from the 1880s. He also might have seen them in the Pennsylvania Academy's own collection, access to which was cited as one of the benefits of holding a student ticket [Fine, John Marin (1990), p. 32]. "Whistler's etchings might have inspired Marin's use of a centrally focused, vignetted image; his delight in the decorated facades; his evocative rather than descriptive linework" [Ibid., p. 36].

In the catalogue for a 2015 exhibition surveying the advent of American modernism, Nannette Macijunes described the present work:

Marin perfected his handling of the broad washes and lucid hues of the medium during the teens in lyric works such as Downtown from the River, in which his Whistlerian roots still linger. During the twenties, he moved steadily and irrevocably away from such luminous effects, extending the range of expression that could be achieved by building up opaque strokes of saturated color, which he would then mix with graphite, colored pencils, charcoal and chalk [Nanette V. Maciejunes, What it Meant to be Modern, 1910 - 1965, 2016, pp. 11].

Downtown from the River indeed bears the silvery tonality of a Whistlerian nocturne, albeit refracted through the lens of a newly-minted modernist. The vertical stretches of lower Manhattan's skyline, growing before Marin's eyes, are presented as a central mass. The waterline underscores a horizontal much as Marin employed in his etchings of Notre Dame. The watercolor also looks toward the future as well: emanating from the central tower--possibly the Singer Building, then the tallest in lower Manhattan--lines of energy radiate, hinting at the vigorous abstract elements Marin would introduce in the coming years.

The palette, too, looks ahead to Marin's "Weehawken Sequence" of oils. The present work was completed at the very beginning of this important contribution -- arguably the first abstract painting in America. It shares the cool "full-spectrum" palette with the bulk of the sequence, evincing a cunning fusion visual ideas new and old amid the playful, energetic application.
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Provenance

The artist; to
Alfred Stieglitz, New York; to
John Marin, Jr., New York;
Jules and Connie Kay; to
[Richard York Gallery, New York];
Karen and Kevin Kennedy, New York, until 2017; to

[Menconi + Schoelkopf, New York, 2017]; to

Private collection, 2017 until the present

Exhibitions

The Downtown Gallery, New York, John Marin before 1920, February 2–28, 1959, no. 14

Richard York Gallery, New York, Movement: Marin, November 9, 2001–January 12, 2002, no. 3

Denver Art Museum; and Burchfield Penney Art Center, Buffalo, New York, What It Meant to Be Modern, 1910–1965: American Works on Paper from the Karen and Kevin Kennedy Collection, August 21, 2016–June 23, 2017

San Antonio Museum of Art, Texas, Becoming John Marin: Modernist at Work, October 26, 2018–January 20, 2019

Literature

Sheldon Reich, John Marin: A Stylistic Analysis and Catalogue Raisonné, Vol. II, Tucson: University of Arizona Press, p. 343, no. 10.19, illus.
Meredith Ward, Movement: Marin, New York: Richard York Gallery, 2001, no. 3, p. 21, illus. in color, 55
Nannette V. Maciejunes, What It Meant to Be Modern, 1910–1965: American Works on Paper from the Karen and Kevin Kennedy Collection, Denver Art Museum, 2016, pp. 11, 28, illus.
Ann Prentice Wagner, "Mental Voyages to Anywhere and Everywhere: John Marin from 1909-1919," in Now Modern, vol. 2, New York: Schoelkopf Gallery, Fall/Winter 2022, p. 87, illus. (detail)
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