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Theodore Roszak

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(1907-1981) First generation New York abstract expressionist artist

sculptor, painter, draughtsman

Theodore Roszak

  • Biography
  • Exhibitions
  • Drawing
  • Painting (1929-47)
  • Construction (1932-45)
  • Sculpture (1945-69)
  • Public Commission (1955-78)
  • Photogram (1932-41)
  • Lithography
  • Bibliography
  • Contact
1948_Recollections_Large.jpg

Recollections of the Southwest, 1948

"I have visited my mother in the southwest--she lives there for her health-- and it was an opportunity to see Texas and get acquainted with the environs of San Antonio. I observed these various cactus specimens around that vicinity and this one was largely determined by the century plant that blooms every one hundred years and at night. That gives you a sense of the delicacy of the structure. If it were to bloom during the day it would just shrivel up. It took a century for that to occur and what I was fascinated by were all the environmental accouterments of this plant life, really very menacing, very tough and hardy and could perhaps survive any number of circumstances that even a hardy plant could never quite cope with, then suddenly after a century it gives out with this beautiful bloom at night. It is quite a moving thing to experience."

[Theodore Roszak, Interview with Elliott, 1956, p. 19]

Recollections of the Southwest, 1948

"I have visited my mother in the southwest--she lives there for her health-- and it was an opportunity to see Texas and get acquainted with the environs of San Antonio. I observed these various cactus specimens around that vicinity and this one was largely determined by the century plant that blooms every one hundred years and at night. That gives you a sense of the delicacy of the structure. If it were to bloom during the day it would just shrivel up. It took a century for that to occur and what I was fascinated by were all the environmental accouterments of this plant life, really very menacing, very tough and hardy and could perhaps survive any number of circumstances that even a hardy plant could never quite cope with, then suddenly after a century it gives out with this beautiful bloom at night. It is quite a moving thing to experience."

[Theodore Roszak, Interview with Elliott, 1956, p. 19]

Recollections of the Southwest, 1948

Recollections of the Southwest, 1948

 

Welded steel

30.62 X 49.75 x 22.5 in (77.77 X 126.36 x 57.15 cm)

Private Collection

Provenance:

Gift of Arnold H. Maremont to the Art Institute of Chicago

 

 

Recollections of the Southwest, 1948

Recollections of the Southwest, 1948

 ink and pencil on paper

10.8 x 14 inches (27.4 x 35.6 cm)

Collection: National Museum Warsaw, Poland. 

Recollection of the Southwest, 1948

Recollection of the Southwest, 1948

Ink on paper

8 13/16 x 11 3/4 in. 

Collection: Chazen Museum of Art. Madison, Wisconsin. Terese and Alvin S. Lane Collection (2012).

Unless specified all images

© Estate of Theodore Roszak / Licensed by VAGA at Artists Rights Society (ARS), NY.