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ExploreADAM WEINBERG: Arshile Gorky completed this abstract painting, The Betrothal, II, in 1947, a year before his death. If we look closely at the curving, biomorphic shapes, we can discern two highly abstracted figures—one on horseback, on the left side of the canvas, and another following behind. The title suggests a romantic or sexual connection between this pair, but the nature of the relationship, like the forms themselves, is ambiguous.
Julien Levy was Gorky’s dealer in America, and his friend:
JULIEN LEVY: He himself thought of himself as a surrealist. What he was trying to do was less to give a wild and uncontrolled expression of his emotions or his muscular activity as to give a rather interior conception of things that go beyond reality, as surrealism does, into psychological nuances and double meanings, and a climate in which one can live one’s subconscious rather than one’s conscious, and therefore the objectified reality is put to one side.
MAXWELL ANDERSON: Surrealism exerted a powerful influence on Gorky and many other American artists during the early years of World War II, as many artists and intellectuals fled Europe to escape the Nazis. A significant group of artists emigrated to New York, including André Breton, the formidable leader and founder of the Surrealist movement. Breton ultimately became one of Gorky’s biggest supporters.
Although this painting is a lyrical and fantastical vision, Gorky’s own world was literally coming apart. The last few years of his life were marked by tragedy and loss: a fire devastated his studio, he was seriously injured in an automobile accident that temporarily paralyzed his painting arm, and his wife separated from him. In 1948, less than a year after he completed this painting, Gorky took his own life.



