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New York at Night

Primary (Belostok, Russia (now Bialystok, Poland), 1881–Great Neck, New York, 1961)
NationalityAmerican, North America
Date1915
MediumOil on canvas
DimensionsFramed: 35 1/2 x 23 3/8 in. (90.2 x 59.4 cm)
Canvas: 34 1/4 x 22 in. (87 x 55.9 cm)
Credit LineBlanton Museum of Art, The University of Texas at Austin, Gift of Mari and James A. Michener, 1991.338
Collection AreaModern and Contemporary Art
Object number1991.338
On View
On view
Locations
  • exhibition  BMA, Gallery, B3 - Huntington Gallery
Label Text
Max Weber was one of the first American artists to fully synthesize the principles of European modernism and adapt them to a specifically American subject matter. Well acquainted with the debates and practices of Gertrude Stein, Pablo Picasso, Henri Matisse, Henri Rousseau, and other leading European artists and intellectuals whom he met while living in Paris, Weber helped introduce their avant-garde ideas to artists working in the United States when he returned to New York. His own influential pulpit was Alfred Stieglitz’s journal Camera Work. In its pages he proposed his most important concept, the notion of a fourth dimension, or the extension of space into another realm beyond the three dimensions of the visible world. His speculative ideas found clear expression in the paintings he executed around 1910, which incorporated representations of movement and time. New York at Night, completed five years later, reduces his impressions of time and place to a basic vocabulary of colorful geometric shapes and intersecting planes seen from multiple perspectives and enhanced by illusions of motion and reverberating sound. In works like this, Weber conveyed the speed, the action, and the dynamic energy of the city more abstractly than ever before in American painting.
Exhibitions
Repose No. 2
Max Weber
1950
This image is for study only, and may not accurately represent the object’s true color or scale…
Max Weber
1930
Concerto Grosso
Max Schnitzler
circa 1969
Unentitled (Movement In Space)
Max Schnitzler
circa 1950
New York, 10/35
Charles Joseph Biederman
1935
New York Street
Theresa Bernstein
circa 1913
Imprint 3
Max Gimblett
1970
Window 15
Max Gimblett
1969
Night Town
Raymond Saunders
1963
November Night Song
Shirley Fuerst
1965