SIPG34_090307_090
Existing comment: Karl Fortress -- Island Dock Yard (1934):
Trains, trucks, and industrial buildings were what Karl Fortress envisioned when the Public Works of Art Project suggested that he depict "the American scene." The artist left his home in the picturesque artists' colony of Woodstock, New York, and traveled ten miles to Kingston to make this painting. Kingston had long been a thriving Hudson River port town that supplied Pennsylvania coal and local brick, stone, and cement in New York City. The Depression slowed shipping, but a newly invented concrete mixture stimulated the local cement business. Fortress's pictorial research at Kingston was demanding, as he noted, "Inclement weather and bad roads have made it impossible to go into Kingston as often as necessary."
Fortress described his painting as "a view of the Kingston Point railway yard, showing track intersections, [a] station, freight trains, ... shacks, and [a] background of buildings with a suggestion of a plain and barren winter trees [on] a grey day." The artist emphasized the angular geometry of the structures. He played the predominant shadowy gray colors against spots of intense red, yellow, and blue. Trucks and trains hurry to and fro, but the action proceeds without the presence of a single visible human figure.
Modify description