Curator

  • Art Institute Chicago
  • Harvard art museum
  • My Exhibition
A work made of gouache on cream wove paper.

Crypt

1945–47

Adolph Gottlieb American, 1903-1974

United States

In 1941 Adolph Gottlieb began a series of paintings and drawings called Pictographs. The pictographs represent the artist’s first efforts at reconciling elements of abstraction with an exploration of the unconscious drawn from Surrealism. His aim was to create a new, uniquely American expression that would bring significant content to abstraction. The ideas Gottlieb explored in Pictographs are so varied and complex that the series occupied him for more than 10 years. Crypt was created in the course of Gottlieb’s intensive exploration of the pictograph theme.

Gouache on cream wove paper

Prints and Drawings