Wednesday, April 6, 2011

Kay Sage

In my recent salivating attention to the artist Dorothea Tanning, I may have neglected to give proper attention to another one of my favorite surrealist painters, Kay Sage.  Sage's paintings are reminiscent of those of Girogio de Chirico, with their hauntingly simple and seemingly unfinished manmade architecture, and far off horizons deep with despair. I would credit Kay Sage as one of the original inspirations for my attraction to surrealist art.  Her painting "In the Third Sleep" is the influence for a painting idea which I've had in my head for many years, but have never created (I think because it is just TOO similar to Sage's painting and needs work!).  There's something romantic about sitting in a musty old library, looking through worn books covering the lives of such special artists as Kay Sage.  It makes me wonder why I couldn't have lived in her world and time. 


Kay Sage was married to the surrealist painter Yves Tanguy, and was a good friend of Dorothea Tanning (I'll surely write more about Tanguy in a future post).  Like Tanning, Sage used subdued colors in her paintings, which I think gave her work a wonderful "aged" look.  Her colors have a creamy and smooth gradation, reminding me of something which might be edible.  Kay struggled for any recognition of her talent, and even her husband Yves was apparently prone to belittling her (if you've ever seen Yves' haircut, you might question how he could poke fun at someone else).  Sage struggled with depression and failing eyesight after her husband died of a stroke in 1955.  


Kay Sage died in 1963, from a self-inflicted gunshot to the heart.  It's disturbing to know that someone so talented and immersed in a world loved by many, could be persuaded to end her life.  It's tempting when looking at the tragic lives of artists such as Kay Sage, Arshile Gorky and Frida Kahlo, to wonder what might have been, if events hadn't cut them down so wrongly.  But then, isn't it silly to expect more than we have been given by these artists already?  Did not these artists achieve greatness regardless of obstacles?  In the same way that it took the immensity and chaos of the universe in order to create the unique Earth, so too were the trials and heartbreak in the lives of our favorite artists, the necessary catalysts of the works that we appreciate.  There could be no more great paintings.  The artists did what they could, and all that was really necessary, and then they were gone.


Some more of Sage's paintings can be seen here.

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