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Marianne Moore and Her Mother

Object Details

Exhibition Label
Born Kirkwood, Missouri
Author of more than a dozen volumes of verse, Marianne Moore received virtually every major literary award—including the Pulitzer Prize and the National Book Award—that the United States had to offer. Moore was acclaimed by her contemporaries, including T. S. Eliot, who cited the “original sensibility and alert intelligence” of her poetry. Using unconventional metrical schemes and focusing on such no-nonsense virtues as courage, loyalty, and patience, her innovative and exquisitely crafted verse secured her a leading position among modernist writers.
This portrait by Marguerite Zorach—Marianne Moore and Her Mother—redolent with the bright fauvist colors and faceted cubist planes that the artist picked up from four years in Paris, records Moore at an important moment in her rise to fame. Moore’s mother played a significant role in her work as an editor. Although the canvas bears a date of 1919, recent scholarship suggests that sittings likely took place in 1925.
Provenance
(Middendorf Gallery, Washington, D.C.); purchased 1987
Data Source
National Portrait Gallery
Artist
Marguerite Thompson Zorach, 25 Sep 1887 - 27 Jun 1968
Sitter
Marianne Moore, 15 Nov 1887 - 5 Feb 1972
Mary Warner Moore, 1862 - 1947
Date
1925
Credit Line
National Portrait Gallery, Smithsonian Institution
Medium
Oil on canvas
Dimensions
Stretcher: 102.2 x 77.5 x 3.8cm (40 1/4 x 30 1/2 x 1 1/2")
Frame: 125.4 x 101 x 7.6cm (49 3/8 x 39 3/4 x 3")
Type
Painting

Featured In

  • A Celebration of Poetry in the Collections
  • American Women Writers—and Readers
  • Picturing Motherhood
  • Twentieth Century Americans: 1900-1930
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