The Soul of the Soulless City explained

The Soul of the Soulless City
Artist:C. R. W. Nevinson
Year:1920
Medium:Oil on canvas
Height Metric:91.5
Width Metric:60.8
Metric Unit:cm
Imperial Unit:in
City:London
Museum:Tate Britain

The Soul of the Soulless City, originally titled New York – an Abstraction, is a 1920 painting by the English artist C. R. W. Nevinson. It depicts a fictional part of the elevated railway in Manhattan, painted in a style influenced by cubism and futurism.[1]

Creation

Nevinson visited New York City for the first time in 1919 and was immediately impressed by the city. He made many sketches of which some were turned into paintings. He painted New York – an Abstraction after his return to London and before his second visit to New York in October 1920. The second visit however left him embittered, possibly due to the poor reviews of his exhibition at Frederick Keppel & Co.

Provenance

New York – an Abstraction was first exhibited at the Bourgeois Galleries in New York in 1920. When it was exhibited at the Faculty of Arts Exhibition in London in 1925, Nevinson's disillusionment with the city had caused him to rename it The Soul of the Soulless City.

The painting was acquired by Tate in 1998 and is on display at Tate Britain. In 2014 Tate presented a virtual version of the painting in the video game Minecraft.[2]

Further reading

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Treves. Toby. May 2000. The Soul of the Soulless City ('New York - an Abstraction'). Tate. 2018-04-08.
  2. Collins. Katie. 2014-11-20. Tate creates interactive Minecraft maps inspired by artworks. Wired UK. 2018-04-08.