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Study for Russian Ballet | musefully
Weber, Max. Study for Russian Ballet, 1914. Watercolor on laid paper, 18 3/4 x 24 3/4in. (47.6 x 62.9cm)
frame: 27 7/8 × 35 3/4 × 1 3/8 in. (70.8 × 90.8 × 3.5 cm). Gift of the Edith and Milton Lowenthal Foundation, 88.205. No known copyright restrictions.
The Russian-born American modernist Max Weber, who worked in a progressive, French-inspired mode of Cubist abstraction during the teens, employed preparatory works to explore compositional arrangements from which he would develop an abstract pictorial design. The intense sketchiness and exuberant expression of the figure subject in this watercolor demonstrate the artist’s dramatic departure from traditional figure styles of the late nineteenth century. His studies ultimately suggested to Weber broad patterns of light and dark and forces of dynamic movement, all of which he would translate into geometricized patterns of line and color. In the finished work, he remade the subject so dramatically that direct correspondences in form between study and final painting are difficult to identify.