
Untitled (Bolsena)
<p>Cy Twombly is best known for a synthesis of drawing, painting, and writing that balances abstract with suggestively pictorial impulses. His inimitable scribbles and scrawls are at once intuitive and sublime, casual or even crude and refined. Twombly made the dynamic, brooding <em>Untitled</em> as one in a suite of fourteen large-scale paintings during the summer of 1969 while ensconced at Palazzo del Drago on the shores of Lake Bolsena in central Italy. Against a rich, creamy ground, he elaborated on the cascades of planar and tubular shapes that had emerged in his painting the year before, using diagram-like forms to imbue the canvas with a sense of spatiotemporal flow, as well as a certain airiness. On the other hand, the white field—darkened here and there by passages of erasure—also takes on the aspect of a heavily revised mathematical worksheet. Twombly was immersed both in his work and in his particular location, titling these paintings with the place-name Bolsena. But while typically he might find inspiration in the history of his ancient rural retreat, in this case he was as attuned to that summer’s defining moment: the <em>Apollo II</em> moon landing. Such context enhances our reading of the painting’s enigmatic visual language of measurement, drift, and direction.</p>
Catalogue
- Year
- 1969
- Dimensions
- 199.4 × 240 cm (78 1/2 × 94 1/2 in.)
- Collection
- Art Institute of Chicago
More
More by this artist
Untitled
2005 · Plaster, paint, wood, cardboard, metal, paper, cloth, twine, and pencil
The Four Seasons: Spring, Summer, Autumn, and Winter
1993 · Synthetic polymer paint, oil, house paint, pencil and crayon on four canvases
Untitled
1992 · Wood, plaster, plastic leaves, wire, cloth, sand, and paint
By the Ionian Sea
1988 · Bronze, wax crayon, and oil-based paint
Untitled, Bassano in Teverina
1987 · Wood, plaster, nails, clay, glue, white paint, traces of red paint, red crayon, and blue crayon
Untitled
1984 · Wood, plaster, nails, and paint
Record
Verified by WattsOS- Year
- 1969
- Dimensions
- 199.4 × 240 cm (78 1/2 × 94 1/2 in.)
- Watts ID
- WW-1969-013583
Source
- Collection
- Art Institute of Chicago
- Source
- aic
- Reference
- View at source
- Status
- verified





