Oct 26, 2011 - Sale 2258

Sale 2258 - Lot 431

Price Realized: $ 2,400
?Final Price Realized includes Buyer’s Premium added to Hammer Price
Estimate: $ 2,000 - $ 3,000
MILTON AVERY
My Wife Sally.

Drypoint, 1934. 141x211 mm; 5 1/2x8 1/4 inches, full margins. Signed, dated and numbered 54/100 in pencil, lower margin. Printed at Atelier 17, New York. Published by Laurel Gallery, New York. From Laurels Number Two. A superb, evenly-printed impression.

Milton Avery (1885-1965) was sometimes thought of as the American Matisse. His work never fully resembled that of his contemporaries, the Cubists or Surrealists, but his palette did. His distinct modernism that eschewed both abstraction and realism is rather more closely related to the Color Field Abstract Expressionists (Rothko, Gottlieb, Hoffman and Newman), whose development he likely influenced, through the use of boldly juxtaposed colors in a flat planar style. Many of the subjects within his work, and his prints in particular which first appear in 1933, are of close friends and family. The domesticity of the quiet home and its inhabitants, such as his wife Sally in the present print, very much appealed to Avery.

Avery experimented with drypoint during the early 1930s, foregoing the use of color for which he is more commonly known, to explore the energy of the line through printmaking. His first drypoint scratches were on zinc and copper plates acquired from the refuse scraps of a photoengraver; this accounts for the irregularly-sized plates in his early prints. He proofed the plates roughly and sometimes set them aside until years later when they were printed in numbered editions. Hayter's Atelier 17 printed My Wife Sally> which was issued in a pair of 1947 portfolios published by the Laurel Gallery in New York (along with prints by Miró, Hayter, Peterdi, Ryan, Barnet and others). Lunn 5.