Wanda Gág’s World

Mar 28–Dec 2, 2024


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“I am out on the hills every day now”

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Gág wrote of her desire to convey what she called “the principle”—a compositional balance in which a landscape’s forms move both independently and harmoniously. She explained how she grappled with this idea in a 1926 letter to her gallerist Carl Zigrosser:

“I am out on the hills every day now, in pursuit of the old Principle. He still is elusive tho ubiquitous. But I take a grab here and a grab there, and make him yield up a fragment of a secret each day. Yesterday, while trying to catch him . . . I had an exhilarating struggle with him. I was literally limp at the end of it, but came out of it with what I think is a solid drawing. . . . Today the sky is very blue, the trees unbelievably brilliant, and the air is so clear it appears to be brittle. I must eat my lunch and dash out on the hills. Who knows what the Principle may yield up on a day like this!”

Country Road, 1925

Black and white woodcut of a stylized forest scene with bold lines and contrasting patterns, signed by Wanda Gág.
Black and white woodcut of a stylized forest scene with bold lines and contrasting patterns, signed by Wanda Gág.

Wanda Gág, Country Road, 1928. Linoleum cut, 12 3/4 × 10in. (32.4 × 25.4 cm). Whitney Museum of American Art, New York; purchase, with funds from The Lauder Foundation, Leonard and Evelyn Lauder Fund 96.68.103



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Maya Man, A Realistic Day In My Life Living In New York City

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