©Estate of Kay Sage / Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York
On view
Theodora Walton William Walton III Pavilion
I Saw Three Cities,
1944
More Context
Campus Voices
<p>The striking contrast between the ambiguous subject matter and the meticulously painted architectural forms in this vast landscape creates a disorienting effect. A sense of isolation suggests that this dreamlike place once was filled with life but later was abandoned. In the foreground, a sensuous yet inanimate figure recalls the ancient Greek statue Nike of Samothrace, bearing witness to past civilizations. Kay Sage escaped from Paris with her husband, the French Surrealist painter Yves Tanguy, after the onset of World War II, and settled in Connecticut. She created numerous landscapes evoking the unfamiliar and the depths of the unconscious mind before her depression eventually led her to take her own life.</p> <p>Veronica White, Curator of Academic Programs<br></p>
Handbook Entry
Like other works by American Surrealist Kay Sage, <em>I Saw Three Cities</em> is at once realistic and mysterious. Presiding over the haunting, abandoned landscape seen here is a guardian whose fluid drapery and sinuous curves recall those of the ancient Greek statue Nike of Samothrace. Sage’s sentinel lacks the Nike’s effervescence, however. Its drapery is animated, but its core remains rigid and static. This uncanny presence — neither dead nor alive, neither man nor woman — reflects the Surrealists’ fascination with robots and other forms of mechanization. Sage, whose husband was the French Surrealist Yves Tanguy, helped several French artists reach the United States after the outbreak of World War II.
Information
1944
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- Princeton University Art Museum: Handbook of the Collections (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Art Museum, 2013), p. 285
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