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| 653. Eda Sterchi (American,
b.1885), "Indian Brave", c.1919;
oil/canvas, 18" x 12", signed and dated, nicely framed. Sterchi,
deeply influenced by the European avant-garde, bonded
contradictory elements to develop a universal manifesto against 19th
century certainties in art forms. Sterchi herself was an icon of the
modern woman: she was the first among her circles to cut her hair in a
bob, she was the first to get divorced, and the first to smoke
cigarettes, yet her painted images were unmoving, peaceful, and direct;
a virtual asylum from the stressful, whirling modern life.
Deliberate simplicity and large fields of color replaced material detail
and fanciful depictions of a subject. Sterchi visited Taos, New
Mexico in the 1910s, and began exhibiting southwest subject matter at
the Art Institute of Chicago by the late 1910s. The modern,
European influence on her painting style brought an interesting, original
look to traditional southwest subjects. Sterchi had begun living
in Arizona permanently by 1930.
Provenance: The estate of the artist. 2000-3000 |
| Lot 653 |
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