Hayden Herrera Introduces New Book About Artist
Arshile Gorky
Mitchell Peters
Staff Writer
California State University, Fresno, was honored to
host Hayden Herrera, the author of an extensive new biography, Arshile
Gorky: His Life and Work (Farrar, Straus and Giroux), telling the
story of one of the vanguards of modern painting of the twentieth
century, Arshile Gorky.
In her talk, sponsored by the Armenian Studies Program and Armenian
Students Organization, Herrera touched on the main points of her
767 page book, focusing mainly on Gorkys childhood, heritage,
secretive personality, and the tragic events that ultimately led
to his suicide at the age of forty-five.
Born Vosdanig Adoian, Gorky was raised in Van, Armenia where he
faced the horrors of the Armenian Genocide and the painful death
of his mother, who died of starvation in his arms. As a result of
this trauma, Adoian changed his name to Gorky and often posed as
a Russian after arriving in the United States.
He didnt want to be associated with the starving Armenians,
Herrera said in an interview with Professor Barlow Der Mugrdechian.
That was a term used a lot in the 1920s. He thought
it would be a better thing to be Russian in terms of having success
as an artist.
Gorkys ancestry and childhood also played a major role within
his art. Although he was vague about his heritage (his wife didnt
even know he was Armenian) and childhood, he still kept the two
very close to his heart.
In a questionnaire for the Museum of Modern Art asking what his
heritage meant to his art, Gorky replied, Everything.
All of Gorkys artistic subject matter came from his
childhood experiences, said Herrera.
Herreras lecture concluded with an explanation of the series
of disasters that Gorky faced in the last few years of his
life that led to his suicide in 1948.
The first major tragedy he faced was a studio fire that destroyed
27 of his paintings. Then he was diagnosed with colon cancer, which
was followed by a car accident where his painting arm was paralyzed.
Herrera believes the final devastating blow, however, was the ending
of his marriage after he found out his wife had an affair with one
of his best friends.
Ive always thought that if he had not had the traumas
that he had in Armenia, he might have been able to cope with all
of these things that happened at the end of his life, Herrera
said.
Herreras motivation for writing this biography was prompted
by the fact that her father married Gorkys widow, Agnus Magruder
(Mougouch). She recalls Gorkys painting being on the walls
of her house while she was growing up, and being fascinated by them.
There was a long fascination with this man really coming from
family connection, she stated. He was an incredibly
sensuous painter.
Trained as an art historian, Herrera is also the author of Frida:
A Biography of Frida Kahlo. She currently resides in New York City.