Figure and the City is a seminal 1950 oil on canvas painting by the American visual artist Joan Mitchell.[1]

Chronologically it is the final work by Mitchell in which a representation of a human figure is included. Mitchell herself later said of the work "I knew that it would be my last figure".[2]

The painting was included in the 2021-2022 retrospective of her oeuvre held at the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art and then the Baltimore Museum of Art in Baltimore, Maryland. SF MoMa curator Sarah Roberts said of the canvas's importance to the exhibition that it was 'a touchstone for us".. and that .."it was very much about the psychology and the mood of the figure, and the landscape around her". [Mitchell].[3][4]

The work is part of the collection of the Joan Mitchell Foundation.[5]

References

  1. "The intense life of abstract expressionist Joan Mitchell". www.cbsnews.com. 12 June 2022.
  2. "Joan Mitchell's Resplendent Paintings: How the Abstract Expressionist Resolved the Unresolvable". September 1, 2021.
  3. Cascone, Sarah (September 20, 2021). "'We Wanted to Unmoor Her From the 1950s': A Joan Mitchell Retrospective at SFMOMA Shows the Artist as You've Never Seen Her Before". Artnet News.
  4. Abraham, Sarah (June 26, 2022). "Joan Mitchell: landscapes absorbed". Vin de Vie Wine of Life.
  5. "Figure and the City". Joan Mitchell Foundation.
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