In Gropius-Bau What’d Andy Do? A Speer Lichtdom Erect

thomas hoepker photo of andy warhol from 1981, with andy in jeans, a white shirt and green and blue rep tie, standing sheepishly, as if andy had any other posing mode, next to a stuffed great dane mounted on a pedestal, and with a stacked diptych in red above white of a black silkscreened image of albert speer's lichtdom, the cathedral of light the nazi architect created for a nazi party rally in nuremberg in 1934. the screenprinting process abstracts the beams of light, which are inverted and painted black, and form a slightly conical structure that would have been visible in the cloudy night sky.
1981 pic by Magnum photographer Thomas Hoepker of Andy Warhol at 860 Broadway with the caption identifying the stuffed dog, but not the Albert Speer-related paintings behind him, via @twixnmix via @voorwerk

I swear, until this morning I was just going to like and reblog this photo of Warhol and move on. And then the Angel of History started piling rubble on top of rubble on the White House lawn.

Albert Speer was Hitler’s favorite architect, and Andy Warhol loved him. In the early 80s he made multiple paintings of Speer’s Lichtdom, and they seem to exist only in the backgrounds of snapshots of Warhol himself. Though they appeared in a major international exhibition in 1982, they seem to have been ignored by dealers and curators and historians then and since.

Continue reading “In Gropius-Bau What’d Andy Do? A Speer Lichtdom Erect”

Museums Will Not Save Us, Annotated

“The Ultimate Fight ring had not yet been erected on the White House lawn.”

The first line of the survey I did for Art in America of museums’ America 250 shows already locks it into a slightly less bleak past, April, when this stupid UFC thing did not yet stand. And reading the piece for the first time in over a month, I gotta say, it goes downhill from there.

The headline is, “As the Country Turns 250, Why Won’t Its Museums Meet The Moment?” My editor’s working title for the piece was “Picturing Independence”; mine was “Museums Will Not Save Us.” It started bleak, and it got bleaker, but I am grateful for the opportunity and the insights and all the folks who helped along the way.

For reasons beyond me that perhaps relate to the article appearing first in print, the links I used for reference do not appear in the Art in America published version. So I’ve gathered them here, like bonus content for a DVD. [Ask your parents.]

“As the Country Turns 250, Why Won’t Its Museums Meet The Moment?” [art in america, summer 2026]

A YouTube video of the bonkers CG history of America projected on the Washington Monument beginning on New Years, 2026:

Continue reading “Museums Will Not Save Us, Annotated”

Creation & Expulsion by Giovanni di Paolo is at The Met

a 15th century italian painting of god the father in a toga swooping out of a wormhole in the sky in the upper left to create the world, which is nested in a series of concentric circles that each represent the heavens and the elements, with a map of the edenic earth at the center. this is the left side of the painting. the right side is a winged angel shooing adam and eve out of their garden paradise, with a couple of symbolically loaded trees behind them, and some rivers at their feet. painted in 1445 by giovanni di paolo, this is at the metropolitan museum now
Giovanni di Paolo, Creation of the World and Expulsion from Paradise, 1445, tempera on panel, 18 1/4 x 20 1/2 in., locked in the Lehman collection at the Met

I saw some color theory on tumblr last night that reminded me of this painting, and I could not remember who made it or where it was. I felt like it was not at the Met, probably the National Gallery. And I started to wonder if there was an executive order banning searches for rainbow apocalypse. Was it in a gallery that’s closed for renovation?

Anyway, this morning Peter Huestis generously suggested he thought he knew which painting I was talking about, and that was indeed at the Met. And eventually yet, there it was. And the reason I couldn’t picture it at the Met was because it’s in the Lehman Gallery section, segregated off from the rest of the 15th century Italian paintings, including the other piece the Met has from the same Sienese altarpiece.

Anyway, I’m putting it here so I don’t lose it again. It’s Giovanni di Paolo’s Creation of the World and Expulsion from Paradise, 1445, from the Guelfi Altarpiece in the Church of San Domenico, which is in the Uffizi.

And it turns out that’s not a rainbow encircling a vision of another plane; it’s the nested spheres of the heavens with the paradisiacal earth at the center. I readily recognize that this is perhaps a suboptimal practice, and that my memory palace needs some refurbishing and a rehang. So be it.

I Did Not Know Jamie Nares Was British

A really great conversation at Hyperallergic between Valentina Di Liscia and artist Jamie Nares. Come for the essence of the brushstroke—one of Nares’s most intensive interests—stay for the incredible visuals like the wall of handmade brushes in her studio in Chatham, or the still from an early experimental film where Roman togas were doing a lot of long-unacknowledged gender work.

Besides Nares’s own work and story, there are a couple of moments where the difference between generations really comes through: Nares’s story of complimenting Frank Stella at an opening, and Di Liscia’s gentle deadpan, “It’s what we call a soft launch.”

Jamie Nares’s Enduring Romance With The Brushstroke [hyperallergic]

Krassesfit: Gustav Klimt’s Painting Smock

Speaking of sick artist fits from upper Fifth Avenue museums:

an indigo linen smock with deep pleats around the round collar, and white embroidery on each shoulder, here with the sleeves outstretched to present its magnificence, a replica of gustav klimt's painting smock sold by the neue galerie

The Neue Galerie offers a replica of Gustav Klimt’s artist smock in indigo linen with hand-embroidered epaulets, based on Moriz Nähr’s iconic 1911 photo of the artist and his cat, Katze:

moriz nähr's black and white photo of gustav klimt with his messy combover, slightly disheveled beard, and an absolutely sick full length smock that makes him look like the statue of liberty, except he's holding a black and white cat as he stands in a vienna courtyard

Klimt pic via @neilmatheson66; Neue Galerie pic via @chrissantamaria

[few days later update] Holy moley, Klimt really was That Guy In The Blue Smock, and in 1913 Egon Schiele was there:

a black sharp pencil and two-blue gouache drawing by egon schiele of the barest outline of gustav klimt in his blue painting smock. in two shades of blue, gesturing with long spindly fingers like he's levitating two sardines i don't know what this is about, but klimt's face is uncanny in its resemblance his thinning curly hair is like stretched out steel wool, an incredible work from 1913
Egon Schiele, Klimt im blauen Malerkittle, 1913, pencil & gouache, 48 x 32 cm, via @topcatt77 via @thelegendaryhitchhiker

Looking for the story on this Schiele portrait, it turns out Klimt’s friend/partner/muse Emilie Flöge operated a couture shop in Vienna that promoted the Reformkleidung, Reform Dress, a loose, flowing, and liberating fashion refutation of Edwardian-era corset-based dresses.

Gustav Klimt in his painting smock & Emilie Flöge in her Reform Dress, c. 1909, photo: Heinrich Böhler, via Klimt: Sonderausgabe

Agnes Martin COS Play

October 2016 feels like so many worlds away at this point. When I think of all the paths we diverged from, I mean just

a young fair wispy swedish looking model actually she looks surprisingly like a facetuned young agnes martin, stands with her hand on a concrete railing of the guggenheim museum. she wears a light blue tunic with a tie waist, which has a faint grid taken from an agnes martin painting, and an indigo tie skirt, part of the capsule collection the swedish brand cos did for the guggenheim in 2016
checked v-neck shirt

Of all the paths we didn’t take, one world I don’t miss is the one where Swedish mid-tier minimalist brand COS got any organic attention at all for the Agnes Martin Capsule Collection they designed for the artist’s Guggenheim retrospective.

a young polished and pink swedish boy with bieber bangs across his forehead leans against a white wall in the guggenheim museum while modeling a grey linen collarless and lapel-less mid-thigh jacket with a thin grey grid on it, taken from an agnes martin painting. he also wears a white waffle weave cashmere crewneck sweater and loose indigo pants with a tie waist, all from a capsule collection by cos in 2016
patterned linen coat

The twelve pieces made of “hand-drawn and hand-stitched” “grids and stripes” on “natural fabrics such as linen and canvas” were adapted from specific Martin artworks. They all seem to be from the 60s, none of the works that ended up in the Guggenheim’s Agnes Martin animated gif campaign. I thought I’d hunt them down, but I don’t have my Martin books handy.

COS says the collection was also inspired by the artist’s own wardrobe. And yet, they ignore her most iconic looks:

a serene older white woman with short hair parted to the side sits stiffly in a rocking chair against a dark wall, next to her white painting hanging on a white wall. she has a peter pan collar over the top of her dark blue cardigan, buttoned all the way up; dark cotton trousers, and white mallwalker sneakers. charles rushton took this portrait of agnes martin at her studio in new mexico in 1999
Charles Rushton portrait of Agnes Martin in New Mexico, 1991. Collared shirt, cardigan, sensible trousers, sneakers: the artist’s own.
a lush grey tone photo of a thin woman with her hair braided down her back, as she wears a white quilted jacket and pants, her back to the camera, she paints a white square canvas hanging on a raggedy white brick or plaster wall. agnes martin photographed in 1960 by alexander liberman
Agnes Martin photographed in 1960 in her unheated loft in Coentie’s Slip by Vogue creative director Alexander Liberman. Thermal quilted liner ensemble: artist’s own.

And of course:

a grainy scan of a photocopy of a black and white photo of a white woman with her dark hair pulled back, wearing white, and a black painting with a white line bisecting it in the background, an undated portrait of agnes martin by mildred tolbert
An undated photo of Agnes Martin by Mildred Tolbert, with the painting Night and Day in the background, from an exhibit in the lawsuit filed in October 2016 by Mayor Gallery against the Agnes Martin Catalogue Raisonné LLC

COS x Agnes Martin at the Guggenheim [trendland via @octavio-world]
Previously, related, from October 2016:
Agnes Martin Mini-Storage
The Complete Agnes Martin GIFs: A Retrospective

The OG No Kings At The NY Historical

an 1852 painting of a crowd of white colonists pulling on ropes to topple an equestrian statue of king george iii, while a black american is about to get trampled underfoot or crushed, and a native american family turns away in the corner, at the ny historical
Johannes Adam Simon Oertel, Pulling Down The Statue of King George III, New York City, 1852-53, oil on canvas, 32 x 41 in., collection NYHistorical

I have a piece in the Summer 2026 issue of Art in America, buy it wherever print magazines are sold! I’d say I’m psyched, but it was lowkey depressing as hell. Though it’s in the reviews section, it’s more a preview, of what US museums are showing for the 250th anniversary of the signing of the Declaration of Independence, at a moment when the country’s facing an ongoing fascist existential attack. tl;dr, museums are not going to save us.

But one museum is doing the most, and it’s honestly not who I’d have expected. The NY Historical has had Johannes Adam Simon Oertel’s 1852-53 painting of New Yorkers pulling down the gilded lead statue of King George III after a public reading of the Declaration of Independence on July 9, 1776, since 1925. And the online text goes deep on the symbolism of the Native American family turned away on the left, and the Black figure on the ground at the center, about to get crushed. But they don’t say why Oertel painted this when he did.

What the Historical also has, though, are pieces of the statue itself.

Continue reading “The OG No Kings At The NY Historical”

Barbara Gladstone Living Room

richard prince car hood is primer grey with a hood scoop filled with bondo, and some roughly sanded and filled spots, and a sloppy seam along the bottom where a piece of plywood has been tacked on, all hanging on a wall at sotheby's just like it did at barbara gladstone's house
Medusa, 2003, Barbara Gladstone’s own Richard Prince car hood, 62 x 45 x 5 1/2 in., selling at Sotheby’s

I’m scrolling through the Sotheby’s sale of furniture from Barbara Gladstone’s well-appointed home and wondering why there’s so much art mixed in. Was there concern that some art might attract less attention in a design auction? Or was it the other way around? Were there so many artist-designed furniture objects, that they made sure to add some art art objects so art art collectors didn’t miss the sale?

franz west's 1991 cross shaped sculpture is titled inri, but there is no plaque inscribed with those letters like on more classical depictions of jesus's cross. no, this spindly uneven cross is made from two thin branches or dowels, ten feet tall and five or six feet wide, seemingly held together by a skin of plaster-soaked gauze which gives the whole thing a cy twombly goes to the vatican vibe. selling from the estate of barbara gladstone at sothebys
Franz West, INRI, 1991, wood, gauze & plaster, 101 3/4 x 64 1/4 x 9 1/2 in., from Barbara Gladstone’s own sanctuary, being rendered unto Caesar at Sotheby’s

Whatever it is, it includes Franz West’s table & chairs, perhaps the most collectible thing from his Hamsterwheel installation at the 2007 Venice Biennale. [Also this buck wild, 10-foot tall cross, for the Franz West true believer.]

christopher wool's silk carpet has a cream base and an incredibly intricately done black and grey blotch that fills most of the 12 x 9 foot thing, with some splatters around the edges. just a messy masterpiece from bravinlee, which was walked on by barbara gladstone until she left this world rip
Christopher Wool, New Linen, 2012, hand-dyed silk carpet, 119 by 97.5 in., ed 3/15, walked on by the conservation-minded Barbara Gladstone, now selling at Sotheby’s

But the one thought that kept coming to me was: the Christopher Wool silk rug would get absolutely crushed by the Scott Burton granite side table, so maybe put the table directly on the floor.

i cannot imagine how a scott burton side table could look more 1987 corporate lobby than this red granite triangle nested downward into a totally black granite block with a notch out of the top. barbara gladstone bought one of the edition of 10 in 2011, and now her ghost is selling it at sothebys
Scott Burton, Cafe Table II, 1987, violetta calcutta, absolute black granite, 28 ⅝ by 29 ⅝ by 15 ⅞ in., ed 4/10, from under the cocktail glass of Barbara Gladstone, selling at Sotheby’s

Actually, that was like the second thought I had. The first thought was that Barbara bought this 1987 Burton table from Andrew Kreps in 2011? MoMA could really do a lot worse than having a dealer like Kreps take over the Scott Burton estate.

9 June 2026: Art & Design from the Collection of Barbara Gladstone [sothebys]
Previously, related: Scott Burton Estate Planning

PCy Twombly

artist cy twombly's draft card from april 29, 1946, when he was a high school senior in lexington virginia, filled out with his full government name edwin parker twombly jr, but signed edwin p/cy twombly with the p and c interposed, via familysearch dot org

I was just checking Cy Twombly’s childhood address yesterday by looking up his 1946 draft card on Familysearch, as one does, and saw his signature: Edwin PCy Twombly.

Did the high school senior standing in front of Mrs Beatrice McKenny Garth of the Rockbridge County Draft Board start to sign his government name, and then switch to Cy? Except Cy Twombly fits on the line. Did he sign his name, and Mrs Garth was like, “I am not writing this all out again, young man. Fix it.”?

The real thing I wonder is if Twombly hadn’t developed an art practice so infused by handwriting and line, and a writing style so intrinsic to that practice that his notes and letters often came to stand on their own as artistic objects, would I have ever even noticed?

Cy Twombly, Started At Silverwood

cy twombly 14 papers is a mostly square work where the top 70 or 80% of the sheet is dark smoky green grey, painted over orange-red and dark green, which peek out along the bottom edge. which is largely blank, a separate sheet of paper attached, with 14 papers and the artist's initials in red, sold at christie's in 2004
Cy Twombly, 14 Papers (Silverwood at 5130) [CR Cat. no. 210], 1985, April 24 85, gouache, watercolor, graphite and felt-tip pen on two attached sheets of paper, 22¾ x 22¼ in., sold at Christie’s in 2004 [update: Christie’s said this was 1983, because honestly, it says April 24 83. Nicolas’ CR says it’s 85, but I think that’s based on other 14 Papers drawings having a more distinct hat on the 5. This really does feel like a 3.]

I was confused by this Cy Twombly work on paper which I saw for the first time this morning via @paintedout via @octavio-world, and which sold at Christie’s in 2004. It was very similar to a Twombly that belonged to Emily Fisher Landau, and which sold at Sotheby’s in 2024.

the dark green dense brushwork form on the top two thirds of this cy twombly work on paper from 1985 has been joined to a mostly blank sheet on the lower third, which has the artist's inscription 14 papers and lexington and the date in red. sold at sothebys in 2024
Untitled (14 Papers from Silverwood), 1985 [Cat no. 212], signed CT Lexington VA Jun 24 85, oil, acrylic, wax crayon and graphite on paper, 22 by 22½ in. [UPDATE: Let’s be real, this looks like it says June 24 85. the CR says they’re all 24 Apr 85.]

First off, when were these made? Apr 24 1983 AND Apr 24 1985? When was Twombly in Lexington? His mother and sister were still there in the mid-80s, but not in Silverwood, and he didn’t have a house of his own there until 1994. Emily’s 14 Papers is not described as two joined sheets, but it clearly is. The Christie’s 14 Papers is not described as oil and acrylic, but it clearly is. Christie’s does feel right about the red felt tip pen, though?

[NEXT DAY GET REAL UPDATE] Thanks to greg.org hero Claudio Santambrogio for helping me to keep things real here. He first flagged my error about Christie’s error: in 2004 they dated their 14 Papers drawing to 1983, not, as I misremembered, as 1982. But from there we went through a whole series of exchanges about what is said about these drawings vs. what they actually say, and honestly, the situation is, as Claudio so neatly put it, “as messy as CT’s handwriting.” So I’ve added notes to the captions above, and at the end of the post below, to sort things out. When I get my hands on Yvon Lambert’s 1997 drawings CR, I’ll add that second/third semi-authoritative source.

Continue reading “Cy Twombly, Started At Silverwood”

Junta Watanabe: Ships To Albania

I really think I’ve been thinking about Junta Watanabe the wrong way.

For years since registering the domain name, I’ve imagined what a Junta Watanabe fashion line would look like. How to make it. How much or how little it should evoke CdG. How many or how few items to produce to make it work. How good or idiotic a few t-shirts would be. Should these pieces of clothing be mass or artisanal? Did Sterling Ruby validate clothes as art objects or ruin them?

a telephoto image of eight brown migrants in black and purple tracksuits surrounded by italian cops and handlers on the dock of an albanian port in 2024, where they were shipped to await refusal of asylum in the eu. one cop leading the way looks like a dad at a soccer game, only with a badge around his neck. the one next to him is husky in jeans and a hi-viz hellow DATCH t-shirt that matches his sneakers
eight Egyptian and Bangladeshi migrants getting taken by Italy to a detention center in Albania in Nov. 2024, via aia.al

Who should the clothing be for? The guerrillas or the junta? The idealistic junta or the power-mad monster junta? What if it’s conceived as critique, but ends up looking like prepper chic? Reactionary insurrectionistware? Half the looks I’d considered ironically a few years ago now appear on the ICE, who look like doughy Watchmen cosplayers.

Anyway, I think it’s all wrong, and I have to go back to the roots, to the MO for one of my first domain-inspired projects, mafiaboy.com. For that I was blogging without blog software, collecting links and lifestyle-related quotes from the investigation and trial of the Montreal teenager whose DDOS attack took down Yahoo! It was meant as a critique of the way hacker or script kiddie culture was conveyed in the media via pop cultural and fashion references. And because Mafiaboy was a minor, who couldn’t be named or depicted, these references took on outsized importance for courtroom reporters. And hilariously, I closed the loop when I got a check for like $48 from Rocawear for affiliate links to Mafiaboy’s satin bomber jacket.

a white woman with straight dark hair models a black and purple tracksuit jacket and black track pants, posing with one hand in her pocket and the other on her hip, contraposto, because it's italy i guess. givova is the brand
The Givova Tuta Visa Triacetato 4S Unisex in Nero/Viola, EUR14,90 at Givova

Point is, Junta Watanabe is already out there, on the runways of life. In this catalyzing case, that’s the bold purple and black tracksuits Italy dressed eight migrants in in 2024, before shipping them off to a detention camp-for-hire in Albania. The report yesterday of other EU countries adopting third-country removal and detention brought Italy’s pioneering looks back into view: it’s Italy’s own Givova Visa Triacetato 4S in Nero/Viola, a bold look for one-way border crossings. And while they don’t ship to the USA, they will ship to Albania.

So watch this space, I guess.

EU greenlights controversial return hubs in ‘strictest ever’ new migration law [euronews, h/t @alexanderchee]

Muji Car 1000 or Muji Car 170?

a white two door hatchback nissan march with steel wheels and no badges, because it's a muji car, and right hand drive sits in a gravel parking lot with some other cars behind it that may or may not also be for sale on car bye buy, a japanese used car website
a Muji Car 1000 for sale in Kanagawa, via kababa

Muji announced a car collaboration with Nissan in 2001, the 「MUJI Car 1000」.

The Muji Car 1000 was a debadged and stripped down 2-door version of the Nissan March, with the smallest engine, an automatic, steel wheels, and A/C, available in one color: white. It was sold only online at muji.net, in a limited edition of 1,000.

According to the seller of this Muji Car 1000 in Kanagawa, though, there were only around 170 actually sold. And this is one. It’s in pretty remarkable condition for a 25-yo car, with only 100k kilometers. At 710,000 yen, it’s 2-3x more expensive than comparable Nissans, but still only like $US4,400.

If you’re a Muji compleatist who likes extremely basic, internal combustion cars which exist only as marketing experiments, with only the thinnest veneer of design innovation, but that will only get rarer over time, this may be your best chance.

Curiouser and Curiouser: Alice Garden in Hiroshima

a screenshot from google street view of a pedestrian plaza in hiroshima with some trees surrounded by railings, asymmetrical and angled walls of tiled forms leading to the underground parking garage, and a parco department store in the background
Alice Garden on Streetview in 2017, when the two trees had railings for seating instead of platforms, and there was a coffee truck, and a tool shed.

Kenzo Tange’s Peace Memorial Park is the largest and most significant architectural public space in Hiroshima, and it always will be. But on a recent visit my curiosity was piqued by a weirdly eccentric post-modernist confection of a public plaza in the messy center of the city’s central shopping district. Even in aging cities outside of Tokyo, teardowns are the norm; the new Hiroshima Gate Park Plaza, built across the street from the ruins of the Genbaku Dome, on the site of the city’s old baseball stadium, is slated for recycling in less than 20 years. So it seemed wild to me that a small park/event space named Alice Garden has survived, mostly intact, next to the department store Parco, for over 30 years.

google map aerial view of alice garden, a public plaza and event space in central hiroshima, has the parco department store on the north/top edge; and two entrances to underground parking for bikes (west) and cars (south) that define the program. on the right side, buildings housing stairway entrances, restrooms, and maintenance, line the east edge, and help enclose the space, which remains largely open on the south. on the south west side, bleachers sit atop the parking entrance, facing an elliptical raised stage/platform on the north east corner, which also holds a red, cube-like geometric steel sculpture
the Google Maps plan of Alice Garden shows the program—fanciful entrances to underground parking on the upper west and southwestern sides, stair and ventilation structures and restrooms on the east, bleachers facing an ellipse-shaped plinth/stage with an “objet”

After wandering into the space by chance and being surprised by the extent of its design—and, again, its survival—I’ve spent the last couple of weeks researching Alice Garden and its designer/architects. So far, I’ve had little success. Its architecture is mostly undocumented online, and questions of design and history fall beyond the capacity of the city offices tasked with managing the space and calendar. Though maintenance is a mess, the site is not wholly neglected. Alice Garden was in regular, light, use, and active with event programming. But its integrity feels threatened by indifference to its holistic design, and to its barely historic era: a boldy whimsical, almost corny, post-modernist plaza from the early 90s feels very susceptible to underappreciation.

parked bikes ring the angled glass and tile geometric structure, tilted at various angles, that leads to underground bike parking. a mint green and purple square column and beam towers over the corner of the parking structure, with faded paint above the reach of the maintenance workers' attempts to paint over graffiti and flyers.
How I found it: this wacky, angled, bike parking structure, tagged and faded, but intact. all the pics, until otherwise noted: me.

At its core, there are contradictions in Alice Garden that make it more interesting, but that also put it at more risk. One is, there’s no creator to rally around. So far, I can’t find an architect or firm involved besides Parco, whose tile-covered new building [shinkan], completed in 1994, matches the all-tile plaza. The closest I’ve come to identifying an architect is Parco Space Systems, the shopping center company’s design subsidiary. After decades of corporate consolidations, it has been subsumed into J. Front Prime Space.

And then there’s the fundamental design incongruity between the Garden and one of its central elements. Linear Cycle (1994) is a major public sculpture by artist/musician Takashi Suzuki, that sits on an elliptical plinth that doubles as as an event stage. Suzuki’s sculpture is modernist and rational in a way that belies the surrealist narrative po-mo jumble of the park it inhabits. Whatever brought these elements together, I think the passage of time—and their survival—has made them a family. They have earned their place, and deserve attention—and more attentive care.

Continue reading “Curiouser and Curiouser: Alice Garden in Hiroshima”

A Slice of Augustus Vincent Tack

a tall vertically oriented painting of an oval abstract painting is surrounded by gold. the abstraction is mostly dark blue, purple, brown, and seems like a steep cliff face running diagonally from the upper right. other sections in lighter colors might reference the sky or vegetation, part of a series of paintings by augustus vincent tack in the 1930s
Augustus Vincent Tack, Untitled Oval (Golden Morning), 1930, oil on canvas on board, 69 x 43 in., the Phillips Collection

I’ve been a fan of Augustus Vincent Hack’s landscape-based abstract paintings from the 1930s ever since I saw them at the Phillips Collection. To be frank, it’s hard to see them anywhere else. Duncan Phillips was a close friend and longtime supporter of Tack’s work, which, in the 1930s, looked like it could be as important to the American abstract avant-garde as anyone. It mostly was not, but the paintings are still nice, and sometimes a little strange.

a detail of the upper right corner of an abstract painting by augustus vincent tack reveals that the abstract part is set within a very representational painted frame, with painted shadows, and a different, smooth canvas surface that enhances its resemblance to wood. so the painting is at once abstract and not. or rather, it's a representational painting of an abstract painting, which is frankly a wild thing to have painted in 1934 or whenever
detail of Tack’s Evening, 1934-36, as it was exhibited at the Phillips in 2014

The first time I noticed the strangeness apart from the niceness was in 2014, when I realized that Tack had painted a trompe l’oeil frame around an abstracted view of the sky, essentially a representational painting of an abstract painting.

While his extremely conventional, even boring, portraits have sold at auction for nearly nothing, Tack’s abstractions do great. So I was very interested to see what happened to this wild painting that just came up for sale this morning:

a portrait of a young white lady with the beginnings of grey hair, seated, with her arm on a table, wearing a black dress with white polka dots and frills on the shoulders. on the cream wall behind her, a segment of an oval-shaped abstract painting with a gold frame peeks into the upper left corner, augustus vincent tack's portrait of lotte lehmann
Augustus Vincent Tack, Portrait of Lotte Lehmann, 30 3/4 x 25 3/4 in., sold at Copake’s, via Invaluable

Unlike all the judges or bank vice presidents whose names are lost, this Tack portrait is already rare for having an identifiable subject—and one who has a wikipedia page. Lotte Lehmann was an internationally famous soprano who discovered the Von Trapp Family Singers. She helped launch the Music Academy of the West in Montecito, and there’s a theater at UC Santa Barbara that still bears her name. But most importantly, this painting has a slice of another painting in the corner.

I haven’t been able to identify a specific picture Tack reproduced here. And it’s also not clear when Tack painted this. Lehmann was born in 1888, so she was in her 40s when Tack started painting his abstracts. In 1939 her husband died—is that his urn behind her?—and Lehmann she moved in with Frances Holden, a “psychologist who specialized in the study of genius.” So that puts her on the ground in Santa Barbara. Tack died in 1949, so that’s the window.

In any case, I love it, and I put a bid in so I wouldn’t forget to watch it. And then I completely forgot. And it ended up selling for just $300. Whoops. The greatest bargain ever–on a square inch basis—for one of Augustus Vincent Tack’s most important paintings. Or part of one, anyway.

Previously, related: From Evening to Dawn with Augustus Vincent Tack;
Edward Wadsworth’s Dazzle Ships in Drydock in Liverpool (1919)