George L. K. Morris

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George L. K. Morris
1905-1975
Totems #2
1937
Graphite pencil and birch bark collage on paper.
11 3/4 x 8 3/4 inches (29.8 x 22.2 cm)
Gift of Andrew Kohler and Michael Koch.
2021.123
Notes: 

Artist and writer George L.K. Morris was a staunch advocate for American modernism. While in Paris in the late 1920s he briefly studied with Léger and met artists such as Braque, Picasso, and Mondrian. Nicknamed "Park Avenue Cubist," Morris embraced a form of abstraction that combined the structural order of Cubism with specifically American imagery. In 1936, he was a founding member of the American Abstract Artists Group. Totem #2 typically combines geometric abstraction with Native American motives, including birch bark fragments. (Native to northern U.S. states, the tree was used by Indigenous Americans for many products, from footwear to canoes.) Morris believed that from a synthesis of international and national elements an authentic American art could emerge.

Inscription: 

Signed at lower right, Morris; dated at lower left, 1937.

Provenance: 
The artist (Hirschl and Adler Gallery); private collection (mid-1970s); Andrew Kohler.
Century: 
Classification: