American, 20th century.
Born 1872, Poland; died 1946, New York City.
Morris Hirshfield was a classic American Outsider Artist, whose vivid, formally inventive paintings earned him unprecedented notoriety in America in the late 1930s. Born in Poland in 1872, Hirshfield was known to have carved a sculpture for his synagogue, the only record of his art activity before he emigrated to the United States at the age of 18. He settled in New York City, and worked in a women’s coat factory before going into business with his brother. They initially designed and manufactured women’s coats, but would go on to become a leading manufacturers of women’s slippers. Hirshfield retired in 1935, as a result of increasing health problems.
Not one to remain idle, Hirshfield began to paint, favoring oil on canvas. He devoted most of his attention to painting young women, portraying them in domestic, or otherwise intimate settings. He also painted both wild and domestic animals. His monumental figures typically occupy the center of each composition, and although hauntingly static, also radiate an uncanny
visual energy. Hirshfield’s women are often presented in meticulously styled dresses, and when depicted nude, they are foregrounded by richly layered backdrop, or inventive framing devices. His animals loom in quasi-natural settings that dissolve into abstraction. Although by his own admission, the artist intended to paint common themes, the results were inevitably fantastical.
Hirshfield’s self-taught penchant for abstract figuration and radically flattened compositions soon drew the attention of modern art aficionados. New York dealer and curator Sidney Janis was instrumental in bringing Hirshfield to the attention of the artworld. MOMA included two of his paintings in a group show in1939, and honored him with a solo show in 1943. Loved by modernists for his self-taught innovation, he might best be remembered as the American Henri Rousseau.
- Jenifer P. Borum
Selected Exhibitions
2018, Outliers and American Vanguard Art, National Gallery of Art, Washington DC
2010, The Museum of Everything, Pinacoteca Giovanni e Marella Agnelli, Turin
1998, Self-Taught Artists of the 20th Century: An American Anthology, Philadelphia Museum of Art, Philadelphia
1939, Contemporary Unknown American Painters, Museum of Modern Art, New York
Selected Collections
American Folk Art Museum, New York
Museum of Modern Art, New York
Philadelphia Museum of Art, Philadelphia
Selected Bibliography
The Museum of Everything, exhibition catalogue, Pinacoteca Giovanni e Marella Agnelli & Electa, Turin/Milan, 2010.
Self-Taught Artists of the 20th Century: An American Anthology, exhibition catalogue, Philadelphia Museum of Art & Chronicle Books, Philadelphia, 1998.
Maresca, Frank, and Roger Ricco, American Self-Taught: Paintings and Drawings by Outsider Artists, Knopf, New York, 1993.