Seated Woman
Willem de Kooning, American (born Netherlands), 1904 - 1997
Geography:
Made in United States, North and Central America
Date:
c. 1940Medium:
Oil and charcoal on MasoniteDimensions:
54 1/16 × 36 inches (137.3 × 91.4 cm)Copyright:
© The Willem de Kooning Foundation / Artists Rights Society (ARS), New YorkCuratorial Department:
American ArtObject Location:
1974-178-23Credit Line:
The Albert M. Greenfield and Elizabeth M. Greenfield Collection, 1974
Made in United States, North and Central America
Date:
c. 1940Medium:
Oil and charcoal on MasoniteDimensions:
54 1/16 × 36 inches (137.3 × 91.4 cm)Copyright:
© The Willem de Kooning Foundation / Artists Rights Society (ARS), New YorkCuratorial Department:
American ArtObject Location:
Currently not on view
Accession Number:1974-178-23Credit Line:
The Albert M. Greenfield and Elizabeth M. Greenfield Collection, 1974
Label:
This composition is an early work from Willem de Kooning's long sequence of paintings of women that culminated in one of the most aggressive revisions of the female figure in the history of art. Began as a study for a commissioned portrait that the artist never completed, the portrait served as a vehicle for de Kooning to explore his ongoing interest in amalgamating figurative subjects with the pictorial concerns of abstraction. While the willful anatomical distortions reflect the influence of Pablo Picasso, the seated figure also recalls the sensuous women painted by the nineteenth-century French artist Jean-Auguste-Dominique Ingres, with their tightly fitted bodices and delicate features.
This composition is an early work from Willem de Kooning's long sequence of paintings of women that culminated in one of the most aggressive revisions of the female figure in the history of art. Began as a study for a commissioned portrait that the artist never completed, the portrait served as a vehicle for de Kooning to explore his ongoing interest in amalgamating figurative subjects with the pictorial concerns of abstraction. While the willful anatomical distortions reflect the influence of Pablo Picasso, the seated figure also recalls the sensuous women painted by the nineteenth-century French artist Jean-Auguste-Dominique Ingres, with their tightly fitted bodices and delicate features.