In the
final, absorbing volume of his Three Paintings Trilogy, philosopher and critic
Morgan Meis explores the art of Joan Mitchell and in particular one of her
crowning achievements, the Grand Valley series. Mitchell, a
twentieth-century American artist who found herself living and working in
France, is a figure of contradictions?at once formidable and fragile, solitary
and hungry for human connection.
The Grand
Valley paintings, born from a memory not her own, become a focal point for
understanding Mitchell's approach to abstraction and landscape. Meis examines
the pain and, at times, even violence within Mitchell's work, connecting it to
her turbulent life and the critical interpretations of her art (including her
struggle to be treated as seriously as her male peers).
As with
the previous acclaimed volumes in this trilogy, Meis begins with a work of art
and moves outward toward history, philosophy, and religion to provide context
and insight. With his characteristically disarming wit and linguistic
playfulness, Meis investigates the idea of the artist's self, drawing upon the
mystical aspects of Carl Jung's thought and discovering parallels between
Mitchell and obsessive creators like Claude Monet and Gertrude Stein.
Humorous
and accessible, yet always willing to grapple with the most vexing and
challenging issues of human finitude, The Grand Valley brings an
innovative trilogy to a rich and satisfying conclusion.