Sep 20, 2018 - Sale 2485

Sale 2485 - Lot 266

Price Realized: $ 16,250
?Final Price Realized includes Buyer’s Premium added to Hammer Price
Estimate: $ 15,000 - $ 20,000
GRANT WOOD
Sultry Night.

Lithograph, 1939. 225x292 mm; 8 7/8x11 1/2 inches, full margins. Edition of 100. Signed in pencil, lower right. A very good impression of this scarce lithograph.

Wood, best known for his depictions of rural American life, was one of the original members of a Midwestern American art movement in the 1930s known as Regionalism. He was dedicated to spreading his artistic tenets and founded an artist's colony near Cedar Rapids, Iowa, in 1932 before he became a fine art professor at the University of Iowa and the state director of the Public Arts Fund in 1934. As Wood was so heavily involved with teaching, and because his technique was meticulously time-consuming, he only produced approximately 50 paintings and 19 lithographs over the course of his lifetime.

His lithographs, which represent the bulk of his output at the end of his career, were made in limited editions of 250, published by Associated American Artists (AAA), New York, and advertised through a national catalogue for $5 a piece. However, Sultry Night is a particularly significant, controversial lithograph because of its blatant, realistic depiction of the male nude (which is coincidentally the only nude represented by a Regionalist artist). The male nude was so shocking that the New York postmaster refused to send what were deemed indecent lithographs--therefore, only 100 impressions of Sultry Night were produced and sold "over the counter" at AAA. Cole 6.