Norman Lewis American, 1909-1979
Block Island, 1973-75
Oil on linen canvas
50 x 60 in. (127 x 152.4 cm)
Signed and dated "1973" in oil, lower right. Signed and dated "'75" in oil, lower left recto. Titled in crayon, upper stretcher bar, verso.
Block Island is an impressive example of Lewis’ late-career paintings, and a progenitor of his last major body of work, Seachange (1975-79). Lewis reflects on imagery and memories of working...
Block Island is an impressive example of Lewis’ late-career paintings, and a progenitor of his last major body of work, Seachange (1975-79). Lewis reflects on imagery and memories of working as a seaman in South America, as well as on his frequent fishing excursions on Block Island, RI. This shimmering canvas anticipates Lewis' late career exploration of the abstract forms found in the sea, particularly at night. Lewis found inspiration from a wide range of nautical memories and experiences, including his parents' St. Kitts heritage, his father working as a longshoreman in Brooklyn and Lewis's own experiences working as a seaman on South American freighters in the early 1930s. Lewis often visited Block Island, found between the coasts of Rhode Island and Long Island, New York to fish in the summer.
Norman Lewis clearly revisited this canvas as it bears a pair of signatures and dates of 1973 and 1975. The latter dates the haze of purple or magenta which now defines most of the white linear drawing of the figures and boats in the composition. More high key and saturated colors appear in Lewis's large scale canvases after a visit with his wife Ouida to Jack Whitten's residence in Crete in the summer of 1973. The development of the Seachange series with more abstract compositions of vibrating, concentric circles took off in 1975.
Norman Lewis clearly revisited this canvas as it bears a pair of signatures and dates of 1973 and 1975. The latter dates the haze of purple or magenta which now defines most of the white linear drawing of the figures and boats in the composition. More high key and saturated colors appear in Lewis's large scale canvases after a visit with his wife Ouida to Jack Whitten's residence in Crete in the summer of 1973. The development of the Seachange series with more abstract compositions of vibrating, concentric circles took off in 1975.