SIPGPO_110405_11
Existing comment: Allen Ginsberg (with Peter Orlovsky).
As a twentieth-century portrait painter, Raphael Soyer continued to work in a realistic vein even as abstraction came to rule the art world. He was noted for his empathetic and sympathetic likenesses, especially of family and friends, such as the poet Allen Ginsberg. Soyer and Ginsberg were part of the post-World War II cultural scene in New York, and they became friends after meeting in 1965. Ginsberg by then was famous as the author of "Howl"-the quintessential statement of postwar rebellion-and many subsequent works. Soyer signals Ginsberg's poetic career by painting him holding a list that includes "Howl" and "Kaddish." But Soyer really painted this dual portrait to commemorate the poet's long relationship with Peter Orlovsky, with whom he lived and worked for nearly forty years. This is NPG's first oil portrait of Ginsberg, who had previously been represented in photographs and drawings.
Raphael Soyer, 1980
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