Oh, Where are the Bright Birds?
Date1944
Maker
Morris Graves
American, born Fox Valley, Oregon, 1910; died Loleta, California, 2001
Label TextGraves once revealed that this painting represented the death of the artist. It is emblematic of what must have been Graves’ complete embitterment. A multi-headed bird here is all confusion—one head emerges from its tail, another is clutched in the bird’s own talons in a parody of self-willed destruction.
One head has succumbed, and the remaining several heads are all seeking direction.
Caught between two opposing but equally devastating forces, the bird in this moment must decide which way of death to choose, before one or the other pulls it into the destructive vortex.
Object number2009.52.17
ProvenanceHoward Graff, Townsend, Massachusetts; [Skinner, Inc. Bolton, Massachusetts, sale 1399, September 6, 1991, lot 327]; sold to Marshall and Helen Hatch, Seattle
Photo CreditPhoto: Elizabeth Mann
Exhibition HistoryThe Drawings of Morris Graves, Sept. 21, 1973 - Sept. 12, 1975.
Washington, D.C., The Phillips Collection, Morris Graves: Vision of the Inner Eye, Apr. 9 - May 5, 1983.
Tacoma, Washington, Tacoma Art Museum, Northwest Mythologies: The Interactions of Mark Tobey, Morris Graves, Kenneth Callahan, and Guy Anderson, May 3 - Aug. 10, 2003.Credit LineGift of the Marshall and Helen Hatch Collection, in honor of the 75th Anniversary of the Seattle Art Museum
Dimensions24 5/8 x 49 1/8 in. (62.5 x 124.8 cm)
MediumCharcoal, ink, and transparent and opaque watercolor on Japanese paper mounted on linen
Morris Graves
1935 or 1936
Object number: 2016.16