Milton Avery
Interior with Flowers
1943
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Milton Avery
Interior with Flowers
1943
Physical Qualities
Oil on canvas, 32 x 48 in. (81.3 x 122 cm)
Credit Line
Gift of Roy R. Neuberger
Object Number
1951.33
An interior view of what is probably Milton Avery’s Manhattan apartment captures his wife Sally and his daughter March at ease in comfortable armchairs beneath an outsized vase of flowers. In 1935, Avery joined the Valentine Gallery, a New York dealership that also handled Henri Matisse. Thereafter, Avery’s arbitrary fields of color took on a brighter saturation. He deployed his non-naturalistic palette to capture a mood – in this case, one of relaxed domesticity. Here, pearly grey and rich wine red are sparked by turquoise, blue, pink, yellow, and scarlet. In his memorial address, artist Mark Rothko observed, “Avery is first a great poet” able to fashion “unheroic” subjects into canvases imbued with “a gripping lyricism” that often achieved “the permanence and monumentality of Egypt.” The painting retains its original frame.
The Baltimore Museum of Art by gift, 1951; from Roy R. Neuberger, NY
AMW Reinstallation 2014
American Wing Rotations 2020
American Wing Rotations 2021
BMA News, June 1, 1951, p. 3, ill.
BMA News, December 1952-January 1953, ill. p. 9.
Inscribed: Signed, UL [vertically], "MILTON/AVERY" above "1944" [horizontally]
