Wanda Gág’s World

Mar 28–Dec 2, 2024


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“There is, to me, no such thing as an empty place in the universe”

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For Gág, the space surrounding an object was just as active as the object itself. Writing in her diary in 1929, she explained:

“I am still as deeply absorbed in the form of the atmosphere around objects as I was several years ago and I have tried this and that way of expressing this feeling. . . . There is, to me, no such thing as an empty place in the universe—and if Nature abhors a vacuum, so do I—and I am just as eager as nature to fill a vacuum with something—if with nothing else, at least with a tiny rhythm of its own, that is a rhythm created by its surrounding forms. . . . When a space can be as definite, as surely invested with volume and character as a tangible object—what is one going to do about it?” 

Philodendron Pertusum, 1944 (printed 1947)

Black and white etching of a potted plant with large, twisted leaves by a window, casting dramatic shadows.
Black and white etching of a potted plant with large, twisted leaves by a window, casting dramatic shadows.

Wanda Gág, Philodendron Pertusum, 1944, printed 1947. Lithograph, 15 11/16 × 12 1/8in. (39.8 × 30.8 cm). Whitney Musuem of American Art; purchase, with funds from The Lauder Foundation, Leonard and Evelyn Lauder Fund 96.68.125. © Estate of Wanda Gág



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