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Open a larger version of the following image in a popup: John Marin, Red and Green and Blue, Autumn, 1921

John Marin American, 1870-1953

Red and Green and Blue, Autumn, 1921
Watercolor on paper
19⅜ x 16 inches
49.2 x 40.6 cm
Signed and dated at lower right: Marin / 21
Barbara Haskell put the present work into context of Marin's thoughts on realism and abstraction: As John Marin noted, 'I don't paint rocks, trees, houses, and all things seen. I...
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Barbara Haskell put the present work into context of Marin's thoughts on realism and abstraction:

As John Marin noted, "I don't paint rocks, trees, houses, and all things seen. I paint an inner vision." His Red and Green and Blue, Autumn, with its high-keyed color and interpenetrating forms, celebrated the invisible flux and energy he felt in nature and the omnipresent tensions and balances he believed connected all things [Barbara Haskell, The Image of Modernism: Selections from a Private Collection (2008), no. 26].

Nanette Maciejunes remarked upon similar themes in the work:

Marin also spoke frequently of his artistic struggle to achieve in his paintings a "Blessed Equilibrium" between the forces of dynamism and those of stability and control. Beginning in the 1920s, he began to explore ways to contain and enframe his images with directional lines and his frame-within-a-frame device that asserted the painting as a flat, two-dimensional object, yet allowed it to remain connected to an actual experience in the world. A critic's observation once that Marin painted not from the visible world that lay before his eyes but from an inner vision offended the artist deeply and was summarily dismissed by him as "rubbish." Non-objective abstraction he declared to be "self-indulgent." To Marin the inner vision was irrevocably linked to the artist's response to the visual experience [Julie Augur and Nanette V. Maciejunes, What it Meant to be Modern, 1910 - 1965 (2016), pp. 26-27].

The distinction is a fine one, and perhaps no other watercolor in Marin's extensive oeuvre tests the thesis more than the present work. Red and Green and Blue, Autumn, is a passionate play of color in almost entirely pure form. Marin is often credited as being the first painter in America to reach abstraction in his Weehawken Series—and the present work goes further than those works of the preceding decade. Fiery, spontaneous marks of line and color were precisely what endeared Marin to the generation of Abstract Expressionists decades later, but Marin nonetheless hewed to his cautious flirtation with pure abstraction. The extreme energy the work releases is very aptly described by its title: three colors, almost entirely unmoored from form or reality, bound together by the simple assertion of a time and place: autumn.
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Provenance

The artist; to

John Marin, Jr.; to

Norma B. Marin (his wife);

[Meredith Ward Fine Art, New York]; to

Karen and Kevin Kennedy, New York; to

[Menconi + Schoelkopf, New York, 2018]; to

Private collection, 2018 until the present

Exhibitions

Whitney Museum of American Art, New York, Abstract Painting in America, 1935, no. 73 

Montclair Museum of Art, New Jersey, John Marin, America’s Modern Pioneer: A Retrospective Exhibition of the Watercolors and Oil Paintings from 1903–1953, February 23–March 29, 1964, no. 15 (as Red and Green and Blue, Autumn, New Jersey)

Los Angeles County Museum of Art; M. H. de Young Memorial Museum, San Francisco; Fine Arts Gallery of San Diego; Whitney Museum of American Art, New York; and National Collection of Fine Arts, Washington, D.C., John Marin: 1870–1953, July 7, 1970–June 6, 1971, p. 48, illus.

Pace/MacGill Gallery, New York, The Image of Modernism: Selections from a Private Collection, April–May 10, 2008, no. 26

Denver Art Museum, What It Meant to Be Modern, 1910–1965, August 21, 2016–June 23, 2017

Literature

Dorothy Norman, John Marin, America’s Modern Pioneer: A Retrospective Exhibition of the Watercolours and Oil Paintings from 1903–1953, New Jersey: Montclair Art Museum, 1964, no. 15 (as Red and Green and Blue, Autumn, New Jersey)

Sheldon Reich, John Marin: A Stylistic Analysis and Catalogue Raisonné, Vol. II, Tucson: University of Arizona Press, 1970, p. 488, no. 21.42, illus.

Larry Curry, John Marin: 1870–1953, Los Angeles: Los Angeles County Museum of Art, 1970, no. 59, illus. in color

Robert Hughes, "Fugues in Space" Time, February 22, 1971, p. 62-63, illus.

Barbara Haskell, The Image of Modernism: Selections from a Private Collection, Göttingen: Steidl, 2008, no. 26

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, illus. p. 27

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