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                        American  
                        (1880–1963)
                        
                        
                        
                        
                        
                        
                           
                              
                           
                        
                        
                    
                
	
	
   
      Two Worlds
    
                
                    circa 1921
                
      
                
                    
                        
                        Oil on canvas
                    
                
                
                    33.5 x 29.5 x 1.75 in.
                
                
                    
                        
                        Gift of the Marie Eccles Caine Foundation
                    
                
                
                    
                        
                        1988.91
                    
                
        
        
        
            
                
An early California modernist, Henrietta Shore created accomplished works of art in a career that spanned the first half of the twentieth century. During a sojourn in New York in the early 1920s, she developed a series of what she termed “semi-abstractions,” to which her remarkable painting, Two Worlds, belongs. Described in a 1923 art review as “an abstraction with an astronomical basis,” this piece clearly refers to the cosmos. Its luminous orbs, seemingly moons, command a celestial field, defined by concentric rings of ethereal blue that issue from a light nuclear core and become progressively deeper in tone and expansive in reach as they approach the picture’s frame.
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