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Marsden Hartley
Recognized as one of the foremost American modernists, Marsden Hartley created a highly individualized body of work influenced by his frequent experimentation with abstraction and figuration, a search for spirituality in art and nature, and a nomadic lifestyle.
Hartley spent the early part of 1932 in Mexico, where he embarked on an extensive study of Aztec history and culture. This painting is one of four from that period depicting Popocatépetl, one of Mexico’s highest active volcanoes. Meaning “smoking mountain” in the indigenous Nahuatl language, Popocatépetl was named for a warrior who took his own life after the death of his betrothed and was later transformed into the mountain.
Recognized as one of the foremost American modernists, Marsden Hartley created a highly individualized body of work influenced by his frequent experimentation with abstraction and figuration, a search for spirituality in art and nature, and a nomadic lifestyle.
Hartley spent the early part of 1932 in Mexico, where he embarked on an extensive study of Aztec history and culture. This painting is one of four from that period depicting Popocatépetl, one of Mexico’s highest active volcanoes. Meaning “smoking mountain” in the indigenous Nahuatl language, Popocatépetl was named for a warrior who took his own life after the death of his betrothed and was later transformed into the mountain.