Charles Ephraim Burchfield (aka Charles E. Burchfield)
American, 1893–1967
An inscription on the back of this work indicates that it was painted near Washingtonville, Ohio, and thus is an early work made before Burchfield moved to Buffalo, New York in 1921. Titled "Black-Eyed Shed", it shows an apparently abandoned storage building, its coloration and surroundings suggesting that it may have been charred by fire. The title was most likely suggested by a window near the eave of the building that appears to have a ghostly, stylized face peering from within.
Throughout his career, Burchfield reveled in the simplest, most direct expressions of his reactions to the world around him. His forms and his brushwork were the vocabulary he utilized to express his wonder at all creation in its’ states of genesis as well as decay. This is particularly true in paintings such as "Black-Eyed Shed"; as with most of his early paintings there is an overwhelming sense of impending change and evolution, whether for good or ill is often unclear.
American, 1893–1967
The Black-Eyed Shed
1918
Object Type:
Painting
Creation Place:
North America, American
Dimensions:
18 3/8 in. x 25 15/16 in. (46.67 cm x 65.88 cm)
Medium and Support:
Watercolor and graphite on paper
Accession Number:
2009.0017
Credit Line:
Gift of Anne Helburn Straus
An inscription on the back of this work indicates that it was painted near Washingtonville, Ohio, and thus is an early work made before Burchfield moved to Buffalo, New York in 1921. Titled "Black-Eyed Shed", it shows an apparently abandoned storage building, its coloration and surroundings suggesting that it may have been charred by fire. The title was most likely suggested by a window near the eave of the building that appears to have a ghostly, stylized face peering from within.
Throughout his career, Burchfield reveled in the simplest, most direct expressions of his reactions to the world around him. His forms and his brushwork were the vocabulary he utilized to express his wonder at all creation in its’ states of genesis as well as decay. This is particularly true in paintings such as "Black-Eyed Shed"; as with most of his early paintings there is an overwhelming sense of impending change and evolution, whether for good or ill is often unclear.
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