Dawn

Maxfield Parrish • Painting, 1922, 67.3×114.3 cm
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About the artwork
This artwork was added since it is referred to in the materials below
Art form: Painting
Subject and objects: Landscape, Nude, Genre scene
Style of art: Symbolism
Technique: Oil
Materials: Wood
Date of creation: 1922
Size: 67.3×114.3 cm
Content 18+
Artwork in selections: 14 selections

Description of the artwork «Dawn»

"Dawn" - one of the most famous and popular paintings by the American artist, this is a real phenomenon of commercial success. The history of the creation of the work is as follows. In 1920, Stephen Newman of The House of Art commissioned the artist for a large work. Overwhelmed with work, Parrish was able to start painting only two years later, although he assured clients that "a beautiful white panel prepared for her is always on the wall in front of me ..." to the customer by December 1922.

Parrish's secret was the gradual elaboration of the painting, thorough brush strokes and intermediate varnishing of the work. So he created his famous turquoise color of heaven: mixing cobalt blue and white primer, he covered them with varnish, which under the influence of ultraviolet gave the lower layer of paint a yellow-green tinge. In honor of the artist, this almost unreal shade of heavenly blue was named after him - "Parrish Blue". When the artist finished the next picture, - on its smooth surface there was not a single brushstroke visible.

However, the guarantee of success of the picture is not only in the technique of its execution. Perfection of composition and exciting plot are important components. "I know that the public wants a story to know more about the picture than the picture tells it," the artist noted. "But, in my opinion, if the picture does not tell its own story, it's better to have a story without a picture ... picture says all that is necessary for itself, there is nothing more. "

Three years later, a contemporary of Parrish wrote: “In 1925, one in every four families in the United States owned a copy of a Parrish painting in their living room. The number of her reproductions surpassed the paintings of any other artist of this time, with the exception of works Cezanne and Van Gogh". Lithographs of "Dawn" left behind the circulation of works Andy Warhol and Leonardo da Vinci, bringing huge profits to Reinthal & Newman. The original was acquired by an anonymous buyer and she disappeared from the public eye; however, the number of lithographic copies fully compensated for the lack of an opportunity to admire the original. Only fifty years later it became known that Breaking Dawn became the property of William Jennings Bryan, a prominent politician and representative of the populist wing of the Democratic Party. Brian paid a large sum for the painting and did not want his image of a fighter for the rights of the poor to be spoiled by such an expensive purchase. Brian's granddaughter, Katie Spence, was one of Parrish's favorite models; from her, he painted the figure of a lying girl, and for a nude figure bending over her, the artist's daughter, Jane, who later became a landscape painter, posed.

It was Dawn that broke the price record for Parrish's paintings: in 2006, the work was sold at Christie's auction for $ 7.6 million, and the wife of actor Mel Gibson, Robin, acquired the painting. Four years later, the picture moved to another private collection, but for a smaller amount - "only" for 5.2 million. Maxfield Parrish's "Dawn" was one of the storylines in the clip of Michael Jackson's "You Are Not Alone" (1995).
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