Human Forest (Forêt humaine)
1946
Ossip Zadkine
French, born Vitebsk, present-day Belarus (former Russian Empire), 1890-1967
European Art
Ossip Zadkine, known primarily as a modernist sculptor, made this gouache of metamorphosing, interconnected human-plant figures after he returned to France from New York, where he had fled in 1941 after the Nazis seized Paris. When the Museum purchased it, he described the circumstances around its creation in a letter to the curatorial department: “When I returned back in October 1945 I found France in a pathetic state, to say little. . . . . I was a sculptor with no house, no workshop, a . . . sort of a D.P. [displaced person]. The human forest seemed to me strange and hostile and inhospitable. I went to the country where I have a house, the only one left to me where I did a group of drawings and gouaches representing this flora of today.”
- Maker/Artist
- Zadkine, Ossip
- Classification
- Watercolor
- Formatted Medium
- Opaque watercolor, pen, and black ink over graphite on wove paper
- Locations
- Place made: France
- Dimensions
- sheet: 36 × 22 in. (91.4 × 55.9 cm)
- Departments
- European Art
- Accession Number
- 47.111
- Credit Line
- Museum Collection Fund
- Rights Statement
- © artist or artist's estate
- Museum Location
- This item is not on view
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