Impressionism
1964
61.0 x 51.0 cm원하는 크기와 액자로 주문 제작되는, 작가들이 직접 캔버스에 손으로 그린 유화 작품입니다. ( 프린트 주문으로 전환
이미지로 전환)
작품의 원본 비율을 유지하는 미리 설정된 크기 중에서 선택하세요.
특정 프레임이나 공간에 맞도록 직접 크기를 입력할 수 있습니다. 선택하신 크기가 원본 이미지의 비율과 일치하지 않는 경우, 작품을 자르거나 추가적인 손으로 그린 요소를 사용하여 그림을 확장합니다. 제작 시작 전 승인을 위해 디지털 목업을 보내드립니다.
화면 미리 보기는 실제 자르기 또는 확장을 반영하지 않습니다. 최종 구성은 목업을 통해서만 정확하게 확인하실 수 있습니다.
맞춤 크기 제작도 가능하지만, 원본 비율을 유지하기 위해 사전 정의된 목록에서 크기를 선택하시는 것을 권장합니다.
Etching Press
복제본 크기
Arthur Allen Cohen was a man of profound intellectual depth, a polymath whose life spanned the rigorous realms of theology, literature, and art criticism, yet it was in the quiet, luminous strokes of his oil paintings that he found a unique form of expression. Born in Manhattan in 1928 and raised in the Bronx, Cohen’s early years were marked by an extraordinary creative impulse; he was a child who drew prodigiously, capturing the world around him long before he would tackle the complexities of philosophy. His artistic journey was deeply intertwined with his academic pursuits at the University of Chicago, where a significant intellectual crisis regarding faith and identity shaped his worldview. While he became a renowned scholar of medieval Jewish philosophy and a respected publisher of rare books, his canvases remained a private sanctuary—a place where the weight of theological inquiry could dissolve into the pure, tactile experience of light and color.
Following the Second World War, Cohen sought to formalize his visual language through studies at prestigious institutions such as Cooper Union and the Art Students League. Under the guidance of masters like Edwin Dickinson and Reginald Marsh, he developed a technique characterized by transparent layers of paint that seemed to breathe with an internal vitality. He did not seek the spotlight of the mid-century New York art scene, often viewing himself as an outsider; instead, he painted to satisfy an intrinsic need for observation. His work is defined by a remarkable sensitivity to the materiality of perception, where the distinction between subject and medium begins to blur. As Cohen himself famously remarked, “The paint is its and its own subject, and light is almost all of the answer.”
Cohen’s oeuvre is anchored by two primary geographic anchors: the bustling, architectural density of New York City and the ethereal, maritime expanses of Provincetown. In his depictions of New York, he captured iconic landmarks such as the Brooklyn Bridge and the Flatiron Building, not merely as steel and stone, but as vessels for reflected light and urban atmosphere. These works often possess a structural elegance that mirrors his scholarly precision, yet they are softened by an atmospheric quality that suggests the fleeting nature of time.
In contrast, his landscapes of Provincetown harbor offer a more meditative experience. These paintings frequently depict thin filaments of land wedged between vast stretches of sea and sky, creating a sense of a place existing outside of chronological time. His domestic interiors, often featuring his wife Elizabeth, an accomplished concert pianist, provide a third pillar to his visual narrative. In these intimate scenes, the intensity of music-making is silhouetted against floods of light, capturing moments of profound stillness and domestic grace. Through these varied subjects, Cohen achieved a singular ability to make the ephemeral feel eternal.
The historical significance of Arthur Cohen lies in his ability to bridge the gap between the analytical mind and the intuitive eye. While his literary contributions—ranging from novels like The Carpenter Years to his influential essays on Jewish identity—cemented his place in the intellectual history of the twentieth century, his visual legacy continues to resonate through its sheer emotive power. His work has been honored with prestigious recognitions, such as the Adolf and Clara Obrig Prize from the National Academy, and his paintings are preserved in the permanent collections of esteemed institutions including:
Ultimately, Cohen’s art serves as a testament to the power of quiet observation. He left behind a body of work that functions as a pathway to deeper perception, inviting the viewer to look past the surface and find the light that resides within the paint itself. His life remains a beautiful contradiction: a scholar of complex dogmas who found his ultimate truth in the simple, unadorned beauty of a sunlit horizon.
1928 - 1986 , United States of America
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