oil on canvas 31 h × 22 w in (79 × 56 cm)
Signed on the stretcher. Born in 1906, Leon Polk Smith was raised on farms and ranches among a large population of Choctaw and Chickasha Native Americans in what later became the state of Oklahoma. He came to New York in 1936, and was exposed to the new European Modernism of the likes of Jean Arp, Constantin Brancusi and Piet Mondrian. Smith was quick to admit the influence his time in the Southwest had on his art, writing in 1989, "New York City revealed its physical self to me through the mountains and canyons of the Southwest. There were the ups and downs--the hight peaks, the in-betweens, or the canyons, and topped with the great dome. ...I felt the city to be a perfect equation for a great abstraction." This untitled work of 1949, clearly showing Smith's strong affinity for Mondrian and his neoplastic style, was part of a group of works Smith called his "Indian Blanket" paintings, blending the traditional folk arts of the Native Americans with the utopian geometry of the European Modernists.
provenance: Estate Of The Artist; Private Collection; Robert Henry Adams Fine Art, Chicago, Purchased By The Present Owner From The Above.