Anne Truitt's Life as Color
The major exhibit at the Hirshhorn Museum this fall, Anne Truitt: Perception and Reflection, is a great way to spend a couple blissful hours lost in thought. Although Truitt grew up in Easton, on Maryland's eastern shore, and worked for most of her career right here in Washington, D.C., her work flew under the radar. Most of what I knew about her before this show is because of Tyler Green's pieces at Modern Art Notes.
In her Cleveland Park studio from the 1970s until her death in 2004, Anne Truitt quietly created sculptures in an emblematic style. In her preference for geometric shapes and solid colors, Truitt is related to the Washington Color Field School, just in three dimensions instead of two. Really, it's four dimensions when you experience her sculptures as she intended, according to her writings in Daybook and elsewhere, taking in all sides of the piece as they unfold to a circumambulating viewer over time. "The emotional impact of the work depends on memories accumulated as one walks around the sculpture," she said. "The impact is cumulative, available to remembered experience rather than immediate visual impression." The object carries in it the potential image, like a Sumerian cylinder seal, waiting to be realized as an image when it is impressed on the pliant clay of a willing viewer's mind.
Anne Truitt, Daybook |
In her last decade Truitt had the chance to travel and saw in person some of the works she realized had been an influence on her, including those of Giotto and Piero della Francesca, in which architectural elements like columns and segmented façades are used to assist formal organization of the picture plane. Outlines of houses and buildings, from her upbringing on the Chesapeake shore, also appear, both in drawings and silhouette pieces. Her work combines the seemingly contrasting feelings of solid groundedness and upward-yearning flight, of "wanting to set color free in three dimensions for its own sake," as Truitt wrote, adding "as if in some mysterious way I felt myself to be color."

Anne Truitt: Perception and Reflection will be on view at the Hirshhorn Museum in Washington, D.C., through January 3, 2010. Sadly, it will not travel to other museums.
2 comments:
this is a great show for an artist we should remember...
very nice pictures
Post a Comment