Buildings/dwellings

In these works, Sara Richman Harris (1921-2016) shares her impressions, insights, emotions, and a fascination with buildings and place.

A 1940s watercolor of her parents New Hampshire guesthouse –which welcomed visiting artists, intellectuals and other visitors portrays fondness, joy, and, possibly, a sense of the financial precariousness her family was facing.

 

Another watercolor, of a woman standing on a porch, probably in 1940’s Chicago, in muted browns, grays, greens and reds, seems to convey with compassion the decay and despair of poverty.

 

 

 

 

 

A watercolor  of the Chicago skyline in subtle grays, greens and pinks shows the city at dusk.

 

 

 

In a 1950s oil painting of an old residential building on Clinton Avenue in Albany, NY, Sara used a palette knife to roughly lay on brown, green and pinkish tones –thus revealing  beauty and strength in a structure others might simply see as rundown.

 

A cheerier pastel of the same dwelling features undulating walls—perhaps a prescient or futuristic vision of architecture to come.   A watercolor provides  an even more freeform vision of the dwelling.

 

Another Albany building:

A watercolor of Cape Cod painted during a family visit to the Fishers’ cottage–link to commentary Stephen Fisher of Prague and Andrew Fisher III of New Jersey.

A farmhouse on a on a hill…

 

 

 

In the 1960s and 70s, Sara moved into more fantastical, even ghostly forms. In one painting, figures surround in what may be a red hospital building– reminiscent of work by Edvard Munch–possibly after a visit to the Munch Museum in Norway, in 1962, while on a professional trip to study facilities for the aged.

 

A blue, black and yellow geometric abstract of what may be a building, and black, red and white ink drawings, show Sara’s interest in structure.

 

 

 

Some works seem to convey  a mix of certainty and uncertainty—their contrasting shapes, colors and forms highlighting the beauty that Sara found in life.

–Anita M. Harris

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