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Quiet One

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Quiet One

Artist Mark Tobey (American, 1890-1976)
Date1950
DimensionsH: 44 in. (111.9 cm); W: 28 in. (71.1 cm)
MediumOil on paper board
ClassificationPaintings
Credit LineMuseum Purchase
Object number
1952.128
Not on View
Label Text"An artist must find his expression closely linked to his individual experience or else follow in the old grooves resulting in lifeless forms." —Mark Tobey Though Mark Tobey is best known for his abstract compositions that resemble calligraphic writing, he also continued to paint the figure at a time—the mid-20th century—when the pure abstraction of the Abstract Expressionists was the dominant force in the American art world. Based in Seattle, where he had lived since 1923, Tobey was also physically removed from the center of Abstract Expressionism, New York City. He did, however, have important exhibitions in New York, including a retrospective at the Willard Gallery in 1951, which featured Quiet One.Published ReferencesThe Toledo Museum of Art Museum News, no. 140, Dec. 1952, p. 4, repr.

Art Digest, vol. 27, no. 16, May 15, 1953, p. 3, repr. on cover.

Toledo Museum of Art, The Toledo Museum of Art, American Paintings, Toledo, 1979, pp. 107-108, pl. 251.

Exhibition HistoryToledo Museum of Art, 39th Annual, 1952, no. 79.

New York, Willard Gallery, Retrospective Exhibition, 1951.

Milwaukee Art Center, Ten Americans, 1961.

Toledo Museum of Art, The Unseen Art of TMA: What's in the Vaults and Why?, September 12, 2004-January 2, 2005 (no catalogue or checklist).

October
Mark Tobey
1970/1971
Volto
Mark Tobey
1974
Untitled
Mark Rothko
1960
Landscape
Odilon Redon
1870-1875
Corn-Shelling
Eastman Johnson
1864
The Song
Charles Webster Hawthorne
about 1912
Monhegan Surf
Frederick Judd Waugh
1913
Landscape
Thomas Moran
1860s(?)
Head of a Girl
Fritz Boehmer
late 19th-mid 20th Century
Near Durness, Scotland
William Trost Richards
mid 19th-early 20th Century
Uruguayan Carnival Dance
Adolfo Halty-Dube
about 1952

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