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!”

Snow Drifts, 1934

Surreal pencil drawing of distorted figures and objects with flowing lines and contrasting textures.
Surreal pencil drawing of distorted figures and objects with flowing lines and contrasting textures.

Wanda Gág, Snow Drift, 1941. Lithograph, 10 13/16 × 8 5/16 in. (27.5 × 21.1 cm). Whitney Museum of American Art, New York; Purchase, with funds from The Lauder Foundation, Leonard and Evelyn Lauder Fund 96.68.120. © Estate of Wanda Gág



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

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