Charles Burchfield exhibit at the Hammer Museum in Los Angeles

200910291102
(Two Ravines. 1934. Watercolor on paper.)

Doug Harvey of the LA Weekly writes about a Charles Burchfield exhibit at the Hammer Museum in Los Angeles called Heat Waves in a Swamp.

Between 1916 and 1918 he produced hundreds of watercolors -- half his lifelong output -- each one teeming with symbolic portent, decorative inventiveness and a dreamlike animism where the ominously anthropomorphic or blankly inert architecture of human civilization appears to be in a cosmic struggle with the wildly vibrating energies of the natural world. The Insect Chorus (1917), for example, affords only a background glimpse of the stylized gables of a house almost entirely engulfed in arabesque clouds of foliage, which, in turn, mutate indiscernibly into layered graphic patterns representing the songs of crickets, cicadas and katydids.
American Dreaming: Charles Burchfield

Read more 

Mark Frauenfelder

My latest book, Made by Hand, now in paperback. Follow me on Twitter.

Where not otherwise specified, this work is licensed under a Creative Commons License permitting non-commercial sharing with attribution. Boing Boing is a trademark of Happy Mutants LLC in the United States and other countries.