Two Parrots On A Barren Tree

Technique: Giclée quality print
Recommended by our customers
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Finishing (pick one!)

More about this artwork

The painting depicts two parrots perched on the gnarled branches of a barren tree. The larger parrot, dominant in the foreground, is rendered in shades of vibrant green with subtle hints of yellow and blue feathering, and an expressive orange eye ringed in white, lending it a lively, alert expression. The smaller parrot, slightly behind and to the right of the first, shares the blue-green color palette but with more pronounced blue hues, particularly on its back and the edges of its wings. Both birds are situated against a muted beige background, standing out starkly due to their more vivid coloring. At the base of the tree, a large, rounded stone and sparse tufts of green and yellow grass suggest a sparse, natural setting, emphasizing the starkness of the tree.

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Charles Demuth (1883-1935) was one of the leading artists during the American Modernism era. He was distinguished for intimate watercolors and cubic architectural paintings. Demuth studied art at Académie Julian in Paris, where he was welcomed into the avant-garde art scene and met other American Cubism artists like Marsden Hartley. His watercolor figures have a weightless and surrealistic character with a sensitive linear style, in which he illustrated plays and novels such as Émile Zola's Nana. He also depicted an evolving gay scene of encounters at bath houses through watercolors for his close friends, like the "Turkish Bath", works that now are of great historical significance. Demuth later employed a cubist technique by painting industrial factories with complex structural planes, leading him to becoming a pioneer for the precisionist movement.