By Marion Osborn Cunningham
Located in Santa Cruz, CA
Signed lower center, 'Marion Cunningham' (American, 1908-1948), dated 1948 and inscribed, 'SF'. Additionally stamped, verso, with certification of authenticity.
Paper dimensions: 17.75 x 16 inches
A masterful, mid-century Hawaiian landscape showing a view of a secluded, tropical glade with two women bathing in a pool surrounded by lush vegetation and colorful wildlife. Above a waterfall, two figures carry a canoe across a rope bridge between verdant cliffs. To realize this complex work, Cunningham used as many as one dozen, hand-drawn silkscreen layers, each of which varied in pigment, hue and opacity. Created during the extraordinary creative ferment that characterized the last year of the artist's life, this work represents a remarkable achievement for both artist and medium.
Born in Indiana, Marion Osborn Cunningham moved to California in 1911. She first studied art with the American Impressionist, Ruth Heil Emerson, before continuing her education at Santa Barbara City College and receiving her Bachelor of Arts from Stanford University. She subsequently furthered her studies at the California School of the Fine Arts and at the Art Students League in New York City, where she met and married the American abstract artist Ben Cunningham. Returning to San Francisco, she opened a studio on Montgomery Street, the center of San Francisco’s art colony, where she continued to paint and create graphic works for the remainder of her life. Over the course of a distinguished career, Marion Cunningham exhibited widely and with success, including at the National Serigraph Society, the Association of San Francisco Women Artists, the San Francisco Art Association, the San Francisco Museum of Art Inaugural (1935); the Golden Gate International Exposition (1939); San Francisco Watercolor...
Category
1940s Modern Marion Osborn Cunningham Art