GEORGE GROSZ (1893-1959)
GEORGE GROSZ (1893-1959)
GEORGE GROSZ (1893-1959)
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GEORGE GROSZ (1893-1959)

A la Troisième Avenue

细节
GEORGE GROSZ (1893-1959)
A la Troisième Avenue
stamped with signature 'GROSZ' (lower right); with Nachlass stamp and numbered '4 49 2' (on the reverse)
pen and India ink on paper
Image size: 17 1⁄8 x 17 3⁄8 in. (43.5 x 44.1 cm.)
Sheet size: 22 ¾ x 18 1⁄8 in. (57.8 x 46.1 cm.)
Drawn in New York in 1941
来源
Estate of the artist.
Sheldon Ross Gallery, Birmingham, Michigan.
Acquired from the above by the family of the present owner, 1981.
出版
B. Hecht, 1001 Afternoons in New York, New York, 1941, p. 307 (illustrated).
展览
Birmingham, Sheldon Ross Gallery, George Grosz: Drawings and Watercolors, April-May 1981, no. 1.
更多详情
Ralph Jentsch has confirmed the authenticity of this work.

荣誉呈献

Jakob Angner
Jakob Angner Associate Vice President, Specialist, Head of Impressionist and Modern Art Works on Paper Sale

拍品专文

Drawn in 1941 shortly after his arrival in New York, A la Troisième Avenue belongs to George Grosz’s celebrated suite of illustrations for Ben Hecht’s 1001 Afternoons in New York. The two first met in Berlin in 1918, when Hecht—then a correspondent for the Chicago Daily News—was introduced by Grosz to the city’s avant-garde Dada circle. A lasting friendship followed, with Hecht becoming an early champion of Grosz’s work and even bringing drawings back to the United States. Their collaboration in 1941 thus reflects a longstanding artistic dialogue, culminating in Grosz’s production of 86 large-scale illustrations for Hecht’s book at the height of wartime displacement.

Depicted in the present work, M. Le Moal’s café on Third Avenue—described by Hecht as a place where “Paris still breathes”—becomes a stage for émigré life: sailors, refugees, and exiles gathered in a fragile enclave of memory and resilience. Rendered with Grosz’s incisive reed pen and ink, the composition captures both immediacy and psychological tension, exemplifying his American period at its most distilled. Combining the biting social acuity of his Berlin years with a newfound clarity of line, the work stands as a poignant record of wartime New York, where dislocation and identity converge within a quietly charged urban interior.

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