According to R. Sarah Richardson, "The title of Ferren's A Rose for Gertrude Stein...is likely a reference to the American author's famous aphorism 'a rose is a rose is a rose.' Ferren met fellow American Gertrude Stein while living and working in Paris from 1931 to 1938...while in France, Ferren aligned himself more closely with French artists....Stein herself described Ferren (in characteristically elliptical fashion) in her book Everybody's Autobiography of 1937: 'He is the only American painter foreign painters in Paris consider as a painter and whose painting interests them.'" (A.D. Carlozzi, K. Baum, eds., Blanton Museum of Art: American Art Since 1900, Austin, Texas, 2006, p. 90)
相关文章
Sorry, we are unable to display this content. Please check your connection.
Unlined. The tacking edges are covered with tape. Frame abrasion along the edges. Scattered surface cracking and pigment separation. The surface is slightly dirty. Under ultraviolet light, no apparent inpainting.