A seminal modernist and member of Alfred Stieglitz’s groundbreaking circle, Marsden Hartley painted easel-sized landscapes, portraits, still-lifes, and abstract compositions based on pre-World War I German military paraphernalia and medals. He was deeply attached to nature, and his solidly-painted forms evoke a primordial geologic power and poetic sense of isolation that transcends observed reality. Exaggerated form, strong outline, and flattened space are among Hartley’s signature strategies. During his peripatetic life he painted many of the places he visited, including Paris, Germany, Mexico, New York, New Mexico, Cape Cod, and the south of France. Although working primarily in oil, Hartley also produced a number of pastels over the course of his career and experimented with painting directly on glass.
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