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Francis Criss

Waterfront 1940, Detroit Institute of Arts

Francis Hyman Criss (1901 - 1973) was an American painter. Criss's style is associated with the American Precisionists like Charles Demuth and his friend Charles Sheeler.

"Francis Criss". John Simon Guggenheim Foundation. Retrieved 3 September 2021.</ref>

The work from his best-known years, the 1930s and 1940s, is characterized by imagery of the urban environment, such as elevated subway tracks, skyscrapers, streets, and bridges. Criss rendered these subjects with a streamlined, abstracted style, devoid of human figures, that led him to be associated with the Precisionism movement. With distorted perspectives and dream-like juxtapositions, as in Jefferson Market Courthouse (1935), these empty cityscapes also suggest the influence of Surrealism.[citation needed]

A turn towards more commercial work later in his career—including a November 1942 cover for Fortune Magazine—led to a decline in his reputation.[citation needed] Criss died in 1973 in New York City.[1]

His work is in the collections of the Brooklyn Museum,[2] the Detroit Institute of Arts,[3] the Philadelphia Museum of Art,[4] the Smithsonian American Art Museum,[1] and the Whitney Museum of American Art.[5]

In 2021 Criss' painting Alma Sewing was featured in an essay by the art critic Sebastian Smee in the Washington Post. Smee considers Alma Sewing to be Criss' finest work.[6] The painting in the collection of the High Museum of Art in Atlanta, Georgia.[7]

References

  1. ^ a b "Francis Criss". Smithsonian American Art Museum. Retrieved 3 September 2021.
  2. ^ "City Landscape". Brooklyn Museum. Retrieved 3 September 2021.
  3. ^ "Waterfront". Detroit Institute of Arts. Retrieved 3 September 2021.
  4. ^ "Words and Music of Two Hemispheres". Philadelphia Museum of Art. Retrieved 3 September 2021.
  5. ^ "Francis Criss | Astor Place". Whitney Museum of American Art. Retrieved 3 September 2021.
  6. ^ Smee, Sebastian. "Francis Criss painted 'Alma Sewing' as a study of composure, and unruliness". Washington Post. Retrieved 3 September 2021.
  7. ^ "Alma Sewing". High Museum of Art. Retrieved 3 September 2021.

External links