Peyton Wright Gallery is pleased to announce Stanton Macdonald-Wright, an exhibition of
work by this renowned pioneer of abstract art. The exhibition commences on Friday,
September 2, 2016 and continues through October 3, 2016. There is no opening reception.
Stanton Macdonald-Wright was one of America’s leading modernist painters and an early
pioneer of abstract art. Born in Virginia and raised in southern California, he settled in
Paris in 1907, studying at the Sorbonne and exhibiting at the Salon d’Automne and at the
Salon des Indépendents. Together with fellow American
expatriate Morgan Russell, he co-founded the avant-garde
painting movement Synchromism, which produced
luminous and rhythmic compositions of swirling and
serpentine forms infused with a rich chromatic palette. As
Macdonald-Wright later described it, “Synchromism simply
means ‘with color’ as symphony means ‘with sound’, and
our idea was to produce an art whose genesis lay, not in
objectivity, but in form produced in color”.
After repatriating himself to the United States in 1915,
Macdonald-Wright resided
in New York, where he
participated in the Forum
Exhibition in 1916 and had
his first one-man show at Alfred Stieglitz’s “291” gallery
in 1917. Having become dissatisfied with what he saw as
the “sterile artistic formulism” of modern art and the
“academicism” of his own work, Macdonald-Wright
permanently settled in Santa Monica in 1919 and
withdrew from the commercial scene, working as a
director at the Art Students League and for the WPA Art
Project. During this same period, he wrote a student
textbook on color theory and continued his artistic
pursuits, which turned heavily toward Eastern representational models, especially
Chinese painting. After a hiatus of more than thirty years, Macdonald-Wright returned to
nonobjective painting in the mid 1950s with renewed vigor and enthusiasm, producing some of his finest canvases. These Neo-Synchromist works surpassed the artist’s earlier
paintings by way of a heightened luminosity and augmented spatiality thus creating a
deeper spirituality.
The institutional, corporate, and private collector market has
come to recognize Stanton Macdonald-Wright as a pioneer in
20th-century American art, with recent auction results in the
millions of dollars for his early Synchromist compositions.
Macdonald-Wright's works can be found in numerous public
collections around the world, including the Brooklyn
Museum of Art, the Carnegie Museum of Art, the Detroit
Institute of Arts, the Hirschorn Museum and Sculpture
Garden at the Smithsonian Institution, Los Angeles County
Museum of Art, Metropolitan Museum of Art, National
Portrait Gallery at the Smithsonian Institution, Crystal
Bridges Museum of American Art, Philadelphia Museum of Art, Walker Art Center, and
the Whitney Museum of American Art.
Peyton Wright Gallery is the exclusive representative of the Stanton Macdonald-Wright
Estate.
For more information, please contact: Kevin Paul or Bebe Schooley at 505-989-9888.