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Nicholas Krushenick, Untitled, 1980
Untitled
Nicholas Krushenick, Untitled, 1980
Nicholas Krushenick, Untitled, 1980
DepartmentAmerican Art

Untitled

Artist (1929 - 1999)
Date1980
Mediumsilkscreen on rag paper
DimensionsFrame: 39 5/16 x 48 3/16 x 2 3/4 in. (99.9 x 122.4 x 7 cm) Image: 30 3/4 x 39 1/2 in. (78.1 x 100.3 cm) Image (visible, to mat): 29 7/8 x 38 3/4 in. (75.9 x 98.4 cm)
SignedKrushenick 1980
Credit LineGift of Jean Crutchfield and Robert Hobbs
Copyright© The Estate of Nicholas Krushenick/ Gary Snyder Gallery
Object number2002.6.6
DescriptionNicholas Krushenick, a lifelong New Yorker, once explained how his creative process began as a reaction to the city: “I walk around the city an awful lot. I just walk around the city and get visually stimulated over the way a fire escape is hanging or a neon light that’s blinking someplace. And not really, most of the time it’s just a slight something or something that will hit me and it will sort of record in my brain. I may never use it but it just sits there, and somehow I suspect that when I sketch, some of these things come back to me in different ways.” [1]

This untitled composition is strongly suggestive of a landscape with an implicit ground plane running the width of the composition. There is a centrally placed vertical form that rises the full extent of the composition and is suggestive of a tall, attenuated tree. It overlaps the black outline that establishes an open rectangle unbounded at the bottom. This shape is suggestive of a door and it projects into a rounded shape with a jagged sawtooth outline, resembling a setting or rising sun, or a shrub. The flat color areas and thick black outline flatten the image despite the aforementioned illusionistic references. Krushenick’s color palette rejects any naturalistic representation of nature; the ground plane and vertical form are orange-red and the jagged-edged dome shape is a fluorescent yellow-green against a metallic silver background.

Art critic John Yau commented that “Krushenick defies painting’s single most important issue as a figure-ground problem whose implications are finally metaphysical.” Yau further summed up Krushenick’s artistic achievement: “From the outset, he was adamantly anti-formalist without being nostalgic or reactionary. He believed it was the artist’s right and responsibility to be independent, and he determinedly explored and defined a territory that was all his own.” [2]

Notes:
[1] Krushenick, 1967 statement included in artist’s biographical information sent to Reynolda House Museum of American Art by Julia Krushenick on March 25, 2004.
[2] John Yau, “Nicholas Krushenick,” The Brooklyn Rail: Critical Perspectives on Arts, Politics, and Culture (June 2007), 7. http://www.brooklynrail.org/2007/06/artseen/nicholas-krushenick
ProvenanceTo 2002
Robert C. Hobbs and Jean Crutchfield, Richmond, VA [1]

From 2002
Reynolda House Museum of American Art, Winston-Salem, NC, given by Robert C. Hobbs and Jean Crutchfield on December 27, 2002. [2]

Notes:
[1] Letter, December 9, 2001, object file.
[2] Letter, December 27, 2002, object file.
Exhibition History2006-2007
Modern Fun! Prints from the 70’s and ‘80s
Reynolda House Museum of American Art, Winston-Salem, NC (10/3/2006-1/28/2007)

2008
New World Views: Gifts from Jean Crutchfield and Robert Hobbs
Reynolda House Museum of American Art, Winston-Salem, NC (5/20/2008-8/31/2008)

Published References
Status
Not on view
Nicholas Krushenick, Untitled, 1983
Nicholas Krushenick
1983
Robert Gwathmey, Belle, 1965
Robert Gwathmey
1965
Anni Albers, Red Meander, 1969
Anni Albers
1969
Arthur Dove, Dancing, 1934
Arthur Dove
1934
A. Ammons, Untitled, 1979
A. R. Ammons
1979
Georgia O'Keeffe, Pool in the Woods, Lake George, 1922
Georgia O'Keeffe
1922
Horace Pippin, The Whipping, 1941
Horace Pippin
1941
Thomas Eakins, A. W. Lee, circa 1905
Thomas Eakins
circa 1905
Skylab by Minicam
Roger Brown
1979
Max Weber, The Dancers, 1948
Max Weber
1948
Richard Artschwager, Table (Two) and Window, 1982
Richard Artschwager
1982