Description: This is an Important and RARE Vintage Modern Cubist Roman Statue Monotype Lithograph on Paper, by the esteemed New York Modernist painter, and founding member of the historic American avant-garde art group known as The Ten, Joseph Solman (1909 - 2008.) This print features several Ancient Roman or Classical Greek marble statues and busts, displaying multiple facial expressions, capturing the feelings of contemplation, happiness, and angst. This artwork is rendered with frenetic linework and abstracted layers, creating a mesmeric and dizzying tableau in hues of deep purple and various shades of blue. Titled in graphite in the lower left corner: "Monotype. World of the Antique" and hand signed in graphite in the lower right corner: "Joseph Solman." Additionally, there is an old, yellowed artist's label affixed to the verso of the frame, and a label of authenticity from the National Institute of Appraisers, Los Angeles, CA. Approximately 17 3/8 x 21 inches (including frame.) Actual visible artwork is approximately 11 x 15 inches. Very good condition for age and storage, with mild scuffing and edge wear to the original period vintage wood frame. This piece likely dates to the late 1950's - 1960's. I believe that this particular monotype is scarce rare, and I could find no other examples anywhere online. It is likely a one-of-one or was produced in a very limited edition run. Acquired in Los Angeles County, California. If you like what you see, I encourage you to make an Offer. Please check out my other listings for more wonderful and unique artworks! About the Artist: Joseph Solman Born: 1909 - Vitebsk, RussiaDied: 2008Known for: Mod figure-genre, portrait, streetscape paintingsName variants: Joseph Soloman Joseph Solman (1909 - 2008) was active/lived in New York / Russian Federation. Joseph Solman is known for Mod figure-genre, portrait, streetscape paintings. An expressionist portrait painter, Joseph Solman was a member of the avant-garde group called The Ten, active from 1932 to 1940. One of his portrait subjects was George Stephanopoulos, adviser to President Clinton, and a special exhibition of Solman's work was held in Washington D.C. at the Brown Gallery in the winter of 1998. Biography from Mercury Gallery Brought to America from Russia as a child in 1912, Joseph Solman was a prodigious draftsman and knew, in his earliest teens, that he would be an artist. He went straight from high school to the National Academy of Design, though he says he learned more by sketching in the subway on the way back from school late at night: people "pose perfectly when they're asleep."In 1929, Solman saw the inaugural show at the Museum of Modern Art featuring Seurat, Gauguin, Van Gogh, and Cezanne. It changed his life - and his art.In 1934, Solman had his first one-man show, much influenced by the French modern Georges Rouault. One critic was impressed by "the mystery that lurks in deserted streets in the late twilight." Another noted that Solman's color had "an astonishingly rich quality that burns outward beneath the surface."Joseph Solman was, with Mark Rothko, the unofficial co-leader of The Ten, a group of expressionist painters who exhibited as the "Whitney Dissenters" at the Mercury Galleries in New York in 1938. A champion of modernism, Solman was elected an editor of Art Front Magazine when its other editors, art historian Meyer Shapiro and critic Harold Rosenberg, were still partial to Social Realism.But Solman never believed in abstraction for abstraction's sake. "I have long discovered for myself," Solman has said, "that what we call the subject yields more pattern, more poetry, more drama, greater abstract design and tension than any shapes we may invent."In writing about a purchase of a typical 1930s Solman street scene for the Wichita Museum, director Howard Wooden put it this way: "Solman has produced the equivalent of an abstract expressionist painting a full decade before the abstract expressionist movement came to dominate the American art scene, but without abandoning identifiable forms."The subject of three books and included in many more, Solman has focused on themes - from streets to studio to portraiture, back to the streets. All have been hailed. He was a "painter's painter" (Jacob Kainen, 1937); his street scenes "forceful" (the New York Times, 1940); his interiors were "poetic paintingsā¦forcing the spectator to discover strange beauties in unpromising places" (another Times reviewer, in 1950, dubbed Solman "an intimist"); his first portrait show (1954) was "memorable" and Solman "among the most thoughtful and poetic of American painters" (Art News).In 1964, The Times, discussing his well-known subway gouaches (done while commuting to his some-time job as a racetrack pari-mutuel clerk), called him a "Pari-Mutuel Picasso." In 1985, on the occasion of a 50-year retrospective, The Washington Post wrote: "It appears to have dawned, at last, on many collectors that this is art that has already stood the acid test of time."Joseph Solman died on April 16, 2008 at the age of 99. Biography from Apple Ridge Fine ArtsStill active in his nineties, Joseph Solman is a pivotal figure in the development of 20th century American art. Emigrating to the United States from Russia at the age of three, he studied drawing under Ivan Olinsky at the National Academy of Design in the late Twenties. Solman was instrumental in the founding of "The Ten," a progressive group of artists whose members also included Adolph Gottlieb, Mark Rothko, Louis Harris and Ilya Bolotowsky.From 1936 to 1941, he was active in the easel division of the WPA Federal Art Project. In 1949, he was honored with a retrospective exhibition at the Phillips Memorial Gallery in Washington, D.C. and received the 1961 award in painting from the National Institute of Arts and Letters. His works are included in more than two dozen major museum collections throughout the world.Always an innovator, Solman did work that merges Realism with Abstract Expressionism. His portraits and figure studies are characterized by bold outlines, flat backgrounds, a fauvist palette and a gift for psychological perception.In his introduction to the 1995 publication Joseph Solman (NY: Da Capo Press), Theodore F. Wolff described Solman's portraits as "startlingly direct 'speaking likenesses' of real human beings in richly-hued canvases that exist as provocatively designed modern works of art." His studio interiors employ light "principally [as] a means of forcing the spectator to discover strange beauties in unpromising places," wrote Stuart Preston in the same monograph, adding that "there is also a note of strangeness in the absence of all figures when everything speaks of human presence." JOSEPH SOLMANJoseph Solman (January 25, 1909 ā April 16, 2008) was an American painter, a founder of The Ten, a group of New York City Expressionist painters in the 1930s. His best-known works include his "Subway Gouaches" depicting travellers on the New York City Subway, his studio interiors and the streets and buildings of New York City. Joseph Solman was born in 1909 in Vitebsk, in what is now Belarus, the son of Russian-Jewish parents who emigrated to the USA in 1912, to settle in Jamaica, Long Island. Already drawing and painting in his teens, his first portrait commissions were completed at high school. Out of school in 1930, he took night jobs soda-jerking and running elevators in order to paint in the daytime and study old masters in the Metropolitan.After high school, Solman went straight to the National Academy of Design but found that the painting was rather āold-schoolā and he began to ask people in the park to model for his portraits which were his first love. He continued to develop his style during the late 1920ās and early 1930ās, visiting as many museums as he could ā including the first show at the āModern Museumā which opened with Seurat, Gauguin, Van Gogh and Cezanne. The artist has mentioned that by about 1931, he started to find his āown roadā by painting the streets and back alleys of his neighbourhood.In an interview with the Smithsonian, Solman discussed his early influences. āAnd though I'm sure one can trace some influences there, I thought I fused some elements of cubism, some elements of Rouault, my own feeling for locale into something that I could honestly call my own. They were small gouaches, maybe six by nine inches in size; but they were easy to do outside because of the small size. I'd take my watercolors and gouache - I'd carry everything. And I was very prolific. I did the railroad yards, the bridges, the alleys, the streets, and so on. And I felt a great satisfaction in coming back with something I felt was in step with my own feeling, my own forms, my own colors, and so on.ā Using the same subject matter, he then moved on to working with oils.The 1930āsSolman painted gouaches and oils of the streets and railroad yards around Jamaica. He hung four of these pictures in the famous Jumble Shop, two in a group show at the Balzac Galleries, and had an oil in Patrick Codyreās āNo-Nameā show at the Hotel Marguery in September, 1933. He also married Ruth Romanofsky in the same year and had his first solo exhibition at Contemporary Arts in April 1934 where he showed a number of āvery darkā pictures, many of which he says he later destroyed as he could hardly see them himself. The influence of Rouault was noticed. One reviewer called him a āa celebrant of gloomā¦impressed by the mystery that lurks in deserted streets in the late twilight.ā Another, looking closer, noted that what seemed āalmost deadly colorā came to have āan astonishing rich quality that burns outward beneath the surface.ā From 1935-1939, while he was on the WPA project art project, Solman painted full time. New York streets, harbours, parks, theatres provide the elements from which he fashions increasingly forceful designs, subordinating colour and using black outlines to point up the tensions and contrasts of a pattern. He shapes and reshapes his own symbols of the city: The Blacksmithās Shop; Venus of 23rd Street; The Oculist; The Third Avenue El. In each he pulls out the image that sums up the scene and sets it with flat planes, sharp, contrasting angles and receding horizontal lines. The power of these paintings derives primarily from his struggle with and increasing control of the lineaments of his design.āThe TenāThis was hardly a popular or a profitable pursuit when the galleries were full of realism, social comment and political propaganda. Another Place, on Eighth Street, gave him a show in 1937, just about the time when a group of artists realized that in insisting upon a certain freedom in their means of expression, they had a common purpose and were being consistently unrecognized. Thus āThe Tenā came into existence as the first articulate group of painters to challenge āthe supremacy of the siloā and open the way for a more cosmopolitan range of expression in American Painting. āThe Tenā consisted of Ben-Zion, Ilya Bolotowsky, Adolph Gottlieb, Louis Harris, Jack Kufeld, Marcus Rothkowitz (later Rothko), Louis Schanker, Joseph Solman and Tschacbasov. They announced themselves as an independent group and started off with an exhibition at the Montross Gallery in 1936. They were actually nine, but in a succession of shows through 1940 some of the members were replaced, and the number was rounded out by such guests as Karl Knaths, Jean Liberte, Lee Gatch and Maurice Golubov. The press called them āexpressionistsā (a fighting word in those days), āuninhibitedā and āradicals.āAfter knocking at many doors with dark photographs of dark paintings, the group received unexpected hospitality at a rather conservative gallery, the Montross at 785 Fifth Avenue. The exhibition, the first as a new group, took place from December 16, 1935 through January 4, 1936. Each artist showed four works.Immediately following this first show, āThe Tenā exhibited from January 7 to 18 in the opening show of the Municipal Art Galleries. Edgar Levy, a good friend of Adolph Gottlieb, was included in this show as the "tenth man." With the help of Joseph Brummer, they also exhibited at Galerie Bonaparte in Paris in November 1936. The Group exhibited several other times but drew the most attention as āThe Whitney Dissentersā in November 1938 at the Mercury Galleries, refusing to submit their works in the Whitney Annual. As their forward expresses it, in the third person: āAs a group they are homogeneous in their consistent opposition to conservatism, in their capacity to see objects as though for the first timeā¦the title of this exhibition is designed to call attention to a significant section of art being produced in America. Its implications go beyond one group of dissenters. It is a protect against the reputed equivalence of American painting and literal painting.ā Most critics labelled the group as inchoate expressionists.By early 1939, āThe Tenā had added John Graham, Earl Kerkam, and Ralph Rosenborg to their group. Lee Gatch showed with them for a short time and Karl Knaths was a guest artist twice. Each of the artists were beginning to attach themselves as a distinct member to particular galleries. In 1938 the New Art Circle added Solman to its roster that already included among its Americans Gatch, Knaths, and de Martini. Along with Kerkam, they were billed as āFive New American Paintersā in May of 1938. The Artists Gallery favored Ben-Zion and Adolph Gottlieb with large shows. Each artist was graduating into his fixed gallery.With their first tentative appearances in group shows, and their baptism under fire at the Contemporary Arts and Secession galleries, the foothold of independence that the WPA/FAP gave them and the formation of The Ten allowed each of the artists to mature considerably in only a few years. The Tenās last exhibition took place at the Bonestell gallery late in 1939.The 1940āsIn the same year, Solman left New York for a year teaching at the Spokane Art Center in Washington, and this is a point of significant transition for the artist. Separated from the city which he had so thoroughly explored and painted, he turned more inward, painted some self-portraits and, for the first time since he was a student, became seriously engaged in still life studies.When he returned to New York, he moved into a spacious loft on 28th street which had an entire wall of mullioned windows above a wide sill. These two features, plus the studioās sparse furnishings, would fuel his creativity for the next ten years. Solman has said āWhen I came back the streets seemed to vanish and I accepted and appreciated the mundane objects around me.ā Within this more intimate focus, there is gradually less emphasis upon shape-making and more diffusion of color to convey local atmosphere. In Solmanās 1942 exhibition at the Bonestall Gallery, Sidney Janis wrote in a preface to the announcement: āHis viewpoint it has been reversed, and with it, the lights and darks of all he gazes upon. The style as well has altered, being neither abstract nor expressionist, but rather diffusion of the two.āThe decade was also marked by large one-man shows in New York and in Washington D.C. His work was purchased by notable collections, including the Phillips Memorial Gallery , Pepsi-Cola, Joseph Hirshhorn, and Brandeis University.The 1950āsSolmanās long association with the ACA Gallery began in 1950, and a year later Dorothy Seckler was to write of his Interior paintings in Art News āHis characteristic bent-wire line ā black mixed with green ā was sensitive but never impulsive as he set down the contours of objects, feeling patiently fr the most expressive relationship, the edge that would imply a plane, clarify space and provide a resonance to the big rhythms.ā While his Studio Interiors still held the attention of critics and public, the growing number of portraits issuing from Solmanās studio presaged an increasing preoccupation with this, by then, neglected form. His devotion to portraits at a time when commissions were hard to come by, struck his friends as a foolish pursuit. Portrait painting, they pointed out, was obsolete; the camera had seen to that.Solman, however, appeared not to be listening. On his mindās eye, he saw the construction of a painting that would use what he considered to be the greatest resource for any artist: the human figure. He was proven out when, despite gloomy predictions that an exhibition of his portraits could not hope for any sales, an exhibition of the work at the ACA Galleries in 1954 resulted in The Hirshhorn Collection acquiring four paintings and six more sold to other collectors.Ruth and Joesph Solman made their first visit to Europe with the money realised from the sales and the artist finally was able to see many of the masterpieces that had inspired and influenced him in person. It was a deeply moving experience for him.In the later 1950ās, Solman also started producing a series of āSubway Riderā pencil drawings, executed on newspaper pages while he was riding the trains, to which he later added gouache colour ā at first in monochrome, just to cover up the printed newspaper matter within the outlines of the drawings, and eventually adding colour to these areas.The 1960āsThe 1960ās bought an influx of new young people to the neighbourhood now called the East Village in New York City. Solman warmed to the colourful ensembles he passed on the street and would stop and ask especially āpaintableā subjects to pose for him resulting in some prime examples of his more colourful portraiture.In 1967, through a few commissions and selling some paintings to a few dealers, Solman bought a summer house and studio in Rockport, MA. This is where he began to try monotype printing ā using glass plates, oil paints thinned with turpentine and marks made with sponges and stylus to produce unique prints on paper. He spent 4 months each year working on these, and the rest of his time back in New York painting with oils.The 1970ās and 1980āsThe 1970ās and 1980ās saw a resurgence of interest in Solmanās art with a number of both gallery and museum exhibitions as well as being the recipient of several prestigious awards. Several 50 year retrospectives were held in Washington and New York, all of which were well reviewed and received.Solman continued to paint his portraits, New York scenes, subway sketches, and monotypes throughout the period. A trip to Venice in 1979 provided many opportunities to produce monotypes of his second favourite city. A book of his monotypes was published in 1977 by Da Capo Press.In the mid-1980ās, the importance of Solmanās place in the history of American art was starting to be understood with an especial resurgence of interest in his 1930ās WPA period gouache paintings. The Washington Post wrote, in 1985 āā¦these small paintings are filled with the warmth of remembrance, of nostalgia for bits of city life now goneā¦.almost miraculously, none of these works has become in any way ādatedā ā the ultimate test of any work of art.āThe Later YearsIn his later years, Solman continued to remain active painting, sketching and monotype printing with interest in his works continuing to grow with a number of shows at the Judi Rotenberg Gallery in Boston and even more so with his move to be represented by the Mercury Gallery in Boston. Solman was also exhibited several times on the West Coast of the US with a number of exhibitions at the Eleonore Austerer Gallery in San Francisco. He also had his first show in Europe since āThe Tenā showed in Paris in 1936.His book āMozartiana, Two Centuries of Notes, Quotes and Anecdotes about Wolfgang Amadeus Mozartā gathered opinions, remembrances, letters, and more from Albert Einstein, Virginia Woolf, Friedrich Nietzsche, Leonard Bernstein, Maurice Sendak, and some 200 others blended with his own sketches and drawings of the great composer, was published in 1990.In 1995, a dedicated and colour illustrated monograph of Solmanās work was published covering examples of his work from the late 1920ās through to the date of publication with tributes from Dore Ashton, John Simon, Sidney Janis, Larry Campbell, and Stuart Preston.His New York scenes of this later period focussed less on the detailed architecture of the buildings and more on the contrast of light between the buildings (the so called āNew York Canyonsā) and the sky between them. Solman explained āWhat intrigues me, is the space and color of the sky between buildings, which I see when I ride the bus around twilight.āHaving visited a gallery and, along with a friend, washed down a light dinner with Scotch in Midtown Manhattan, Joseph Solman passed away peacefully on the 16th April 2008 at his home and studio in New York City.Michael Kimmelman wrote in his obituary for the The New York Timesā¦.āOne of the last painters from a bygone generation, Mr. Solman reflected on his trajectory in an interview several years ago in his studio, unfinished portraits and oil sketches of the city scattered everywhere, with a view uptown through the tall windows behind him and the smell of corned beef wafting from the deli below.ā āOver all these years, Iāve never felt the need to go entirely abstract,ā he said. āThere are just too many things in the world that I want to paint.āJoseph Solman (January 25, 1909 ā April 16, 2008)
Price: 1350 USD
Location: Orange, California
End Time: 2024-10-20T00:24:45.000Z
Shipping Cost: 25 USD
Product Images
Item Specifics
All returns accepted: ReturnsNotAccepted
Artist: Joseph Solman
Unit of Sale: Single Piece
Signed By: Joseph Solman
Image Orientation: Landscape
Size: Medium
Signed: Yes
Title: "World of the Antique"
Period: Post-War (1940-1970)
Material: Paper
Original/Licensed Reprint: Original
Region of Origin: New York, USA
Framing: Matted & Framed
Subject: Busts, Figures, Italy, Ladies, Men, Monument, Mythology, Silhouettes, Statue, Still Life, Women, Greece
Type: Print
Year of Production: 1960
Item Height: 17 3/8 in
Theme: Architecture, Art, Continents & Countries, Cultures & Ethnicities, Exhibitions, Famous Places, History, Mythological, People, Portrait
Style: Abstract, Cubism, Expressionism, Figurative Art, Modernism, Portraiture
Features: 1st Edition, Limited Edition
Production Technique: Monotype & Monoprint
Country/Region of Manufacture: United States
Handmade: Yes
Item Width: 21 in
Time Period Produced: 1960-1969