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  1. Motherwell intended his Elegies to the Spanish Republic (over 100 paintings, completed between 1948 and 1967) as a "lamentation or funeral song" after the Spanish Civil War. His recurring motif here is a rough black oval, repeated in varying sizes and degrees of compression and distortion.

  2. Beginning about 1948, Motherwell began making oil sketches and paintings that evolved into a series of more than one hundred variations on a theme he called Elegies to the Spanish Republic. Initially inspired by the Spanish Civil War (1936–39) and contemporary poetry, his Elegies constitute an extended abstract meditation on life and death.

  3. 15 de mar. de 2022 · Canción fúnebre visual. Robert Motherwell. Estados Unidos, 1967. Expresionismo Abstracto. Título original: Elegy to the Spanish Republic, 108. Museo: MoMA, Nueva York (Estados Unidos) Técnica: Óleo (208,2 x 351,1 cm.) Escrito por: Miguel Calvo Santos.

  4. Title: Elegy to the Spanish Republic No. 35. Artist: Robert Motherwell (American, Aberdeen, Washington 1915–1991 Provincetown, Massachusetts) Date: 1954–58. Medium: Oil and Magna on canvas. Dimensions: 80 1/4 in. × 8 ft. 4 1/4 in. (203.8 × 254.6 cm) Classification: Paintings.

  5. Robert Motherwell Elegy to the Spanish Republic, 54 1957-61. Not on view. Medium. Oil on canvas. Dimensions. 70" x 7' 6 1/4" (178 x 229 cm) Credit. Given anonymously. Object number. 132.1961. Department. Painting and Sculpture. Robert Motherwell. has 169 works online. There are. 2,424 paintings online.

  6. Robert Motherwell. Elegy to the Spanish Republic, 108. 1965-67. Oil on canvas, 6' 10" x 11' 6 1/4" (208.2 x 351.1 cm). Charles Mergentime Fund. Art critic and historian, Dore Ashton: Motherwell was a true blue American. His father was a banker, which always embarrassed him. Unlike the others, he had gone to university.

  7. 20 de may. de 2023 · Elegy to the Spanish Republic No. 110 is part of a series comprising more than 140 paintings, which Motherwell worked on throughout his long career. The series functioned as the artist's memorial to the Spanish Civil War, an event that had come to symbolize for him the human tragedies of oppression and injustice.