Title
untitled
Artist
Year
c. 1947
Technique
etching with watercolor washes
Image Size
12 1/8 x 10 1/4" platemark
Signature
pencil, lower left
Edition Size
not stated
Annotations
signed in plate, lower right
Reference
Paper
smooth, stiff antique-white wove
State
published
Publisher
artist
Inventory ID
17523
Price
$350.00
Description
Norman Carton had sold his share of the fabric design company he had cofounded in Philadelphia, opting to focus on building his fine art and education career. His early work had been more realist in nature at the beginning of his career, but after visiting France on a fellowship to study the modern artists of France and Spain, his attention turned to Abstraction. Particularly, Abstract Expressionism, a term first coined by artist Elaine de Kooning in the early 1950s. This untitled abstract of a female figure shows the beginning of his transition from hard Abstraction, with clearly defined shapes and lines, into something more impressionistic, with deliberate blurring of the colors through the use of the wiped plate and brief, delicate textures that read softer than most Abstract Expressionist pieces popular at the time.