1960-1970
In this work colored pigment is laid down on the paper, wiped off, laid down again, and frequently (according to her daughter) the paper was ironed by Schendel in between paint applications. The result is a level of watery saturation in which it feels as if the fibers of the paper are practically drowning and swollen with pigment. The geometric design mimics mosaic work or tesserae, and this decorative rather than representational approach to the picture plane is redolent of a kind of Kabala-like decorative strategies. This drawing is notable for its verdant palette, which in its sprightliness summons all of the energies of spring. The silver disks that hover in the image, however, bring a mineral, earthly, and even "timeless" quality to the otherwise fleeting sensibility of the spring-like green. The drawing teeters and totters between these naturalistic references and sensibilities and a clear and strong interest in geometrical forms and the kind of all-over composition pioneered by an artist like Mondrian. The tension between the organic and the inorganic is a hallmark of Schendel's oeuvre, and this drawing is a wonderful example of her pursuit of the resolution of that which is putatively diametrically opposed.
35.5 x 22 cm (14 x 8 11/16 in.)
Mira Schendel created 1960s/70s, through inheritence; to artist's daughter, Ada Schendel, until 2010, sold; [through Galeria Millan, Sao Paulo, Brazil]; to Harvard Art Museum, May 2010.

Graphite on cream laid paper
20th centuryAmericanColored marker on paper

Black and colored chalk on heavy cream wove paper
20th centuryAmericanBrown marker on graph paper
20th centuryAmerican
Black ink and colored chalk on off-white wove paper
20th centuryAmerican
Watercolor and graphite on off-white wove paper
20th centuryAmericanBlack pen on paper
Black chalk on buff antique laid paper
17th centuryItalianBlack marker on paper
20th centuryGermanBrown wash and graphite on cream antique laid paper
18th centuryDanish
Red crayon, red wash, and graphite on cream wove paper
20th centuryAmericanWatercolor
German