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ROSS BRAUGHT.


"Ross Braught (1898-1983): A Visual Diary" reintroduced a little-known yet remarkable figure in the history of American art. The paintings, drawings, and lithographs on view charted the development of a highly original and thoroughly modern talent. Called by his friend Thomas Hart Benton "the greatest living American draftsman," Braught owed more to Van Gogh than to nineteenth-century American painting. Gestural landscapes and boldly colored, sharply angular depictions of organic forms make up much of the work from the '20s and '30s. From 1936 to 1946 the artist lived in the British Virgin Islands British Virgin Islands

A British colony in the eastern Caribbean east of Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands. Road Town, on Tortola Island, is the capital. Population: 21,700.

Noun 1.
, Dutch Guyana (Surinam), and Puerto Rico and made exquisitely detailed drawings of the flora and folk of these regions. In Braught's later paintings, light-infused fantasies in which cool pastel hues come to predominate, the artist's geometric and formal concerns are most evident. Yet his evolution seems more one of style than substance, as the works from each period share technical as well as metaphysical preoccupa tions expressed particularly in his handling of color, light, and form-- as if the artist were continually honing his vision of the world.

The most immediately impressive of the paintings are the large landscapes of the American West that predate the decade Braught spent in the tropics. In Badlands badlands, area of severe erosion, usually found in semiarid climates and characterized by countless gullies, steep ridges, and sparse vegetation. Badland topography is formed on poorly cemented sediments that have few deep-rooted plants because short, heavy showers  of South Dakota, ca. 1932-36, a steep, craggy canyon wall exhibits an astonishing a·ston·ish  
tr.v. as·ton·ished, as·ton·ish·ing, as·ton·ish·es
To fill with sudden wonder or amazement. See Synonyms at surprise.
 variety of earthen hues--brown, mauve, taupe taupe  
n.
A brownish gray.



[French, from Old French, mole, from Latin talpa.]


taupe adj.

Noun 1.
, chalk--blended and juxtaposed jux·ta·pose  
tr.v. jux·ta·posed, jux·ta·pos·ing, jux·ta·pos·es
To place side by side, especially for comparison or contrast.
 with seemingly infinite subtlety. Colorado Canyons, ca. 1932-36, is another masterwork mas·ter·work  
n.
See masterpiece.
 of this period: Light and shadows spill across a parched parch  
v. parched, parch·ing, parch·es

v.tr.
1. To make extremely dry, especially by exposure to heat: The midsummer sun parched the earth.
 canyonscape that joins purple plains and mountains in the far distance, the horizon line partly blurred in a cloudy haze as sky and earth seem to merge. These works, Braught's most realistic, draw from what seems nature's own alien lyricism; if they border on abstraction and the surreal, it is only because the landscape itself does. What's interesting is that Braught expressed this affinity with nature--a Romantic endeavor in the strictest sense--in a thoroughly modern painterly language. The more strictly geometrical and formal innovations of earlier wo rks like Dead Chestnut, 1927, which even seems to share affinities with Cubism, serve to richly and accurately depict these stark landscapes.

Braught would achieve a more detailed, even gothic expression of natural form in his drawings of the tropics, where his circumstances obliged him to use pencils. Works such as Ancient Cistern cistern /cis·tern/ (sis´tern) a closed space serving as a reservoir for fluid, e.g., one of the enlarged spaces of the body containing lymph or other fluid. , 1940, also reveal an increasingly personal sense of the mystical and, as in Javanese Puppet Show, 1946, the phantasmagoric phan·tas·ma·go·ri·a   also phan·tas·ma·go·ry
n. pl. phan·tas·ma·go·ri·as also phan·tas·ma·go·ries
1.
a. A fantastic sequence of haphazardly associative imagery, as seen in dreams or fever.

b.
. It's not that Braught hadn't revealed this sensibility before, but an earlier work like Mnemosyne and the Four Muses, 1936, his mural for the Kansas City Music Hall, appears more classical, not so uniquely his own.

Yet it seems that after living in the tropics Braught would never again feel quite as close to nature, and he began to temper his depictions of it with more mythic concerns, as in Reflecting Pool, ca. 1948-49. While note has been made of his affinities with Benton and O'Keeffe, a painting like Still Life with Mirror, ca. 1950-60, also recalls de Chirico, and Decline of the West, 1943, seems like the vision of a Yankee Chagall. Perhaps the strongest of the late works is Sunflowers, ca. 1950-60, in which the artist returns to natural subject matter. In it his themes--nature, form, geometry, the peculiarities of light's sharpness or diffusion--combine most intimately.

Given the mythic subject matter of so many of the later paintings, one senses that Braught was conscious of the anthropomorphism anthropomorphism (ăn'thrəpōmôr`fĭzəm) [Gr.,=having human form], in religion, conception of divinity as being in human form or having human characteristics.  of the landscapes and trees in his earlier work. Perhaps his later and more purely revelatory works are a fitting apotheosis of the career of this authentic visionary.
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Author:Breidenbach, Tom
Publication:Artforum International
Article Type:Brief Article
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Jun 22, 2000
Words:606
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