VMFAUS_100530_0851
Existing comment: Ralston Crawford
Construction #5, 1958
Ralston Crawford, like his senior colleague Charles Sheeler, established a critical reputation in the 1930s New York art world with crisply defined precisionist paintings of the American industrial landscape. However, his most inventive compositions followed the emergence in the late 1940s of abstract expressionism, a movement that all but sidelined the artist's subjective geometric work. This image dates from a pivotal moment in Crawford's career when he was perfecting a bold abstract style characterized by a simplified cubism and restricted color scheme.
Construction #5 is linked to a commission from the Diesel Construction Company (one of the era's largest general contracting firms) for ten New York artists to interpret its current skyscraper project, then rising at 100 Church Street in Lower Manhattan. According to the artist's son Neelon Crawford, he and his father visited the site on various occasions, "climbing to the highest point possible during the erection of the steel structure." The experience inspired a series of abstract paintings (as well as drawings and photographs -- two examples of which are also owned by the museum), Construction #5 being the most dynamic and pictorially complex.
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