Join The Collection to save, track, and explore works like this.

Herman Maril — Berkshire Hills
Herman Maril

Berkshire Hills

1935

Herman Maril's "Berkshire Hills," painted in gouache on paper in 1935, captures the rolling Massachusetts landscape with a bold economy of form that speaks directly to the artist's early modernist sensibilities. Completed when Maril was in his mid-twenties, the work reveals a painter already confident in his ability to distill observed nature into flattened planes of color and simplified contours, drawing on the influence of the American Scene movement while pushing toward something more purely pictorial. The Berkshires, a destination that attracted generations of artists seeking refuge in its gentle terrain, here become a vehicle for exploring how color relationships and compositional rhythm can carry emotional weight without recourse to labored detail. Gouache suited Maril's instincts particularly well in this period, its opacity allowing for clean, assertive passages of color that hold their own against the intimacy of the paper support. The relatively modest dimensions of the sheet belie the expansiveness of the image, a quality that testifies to Maril's gift for suggesting wide-open space within tight parameters. The work is signed and presented framed, ready for display, and represents a desirable early moment in the career of a painter who would go on to earn sustained critical recognition. Offered through Debra Force Fine Art, this is a carefully preserved example of American modernist works on paper at their most direct and assured.

Medium
Gouache on paper
Overall
Framed
Signed
Yes

For Sale — $6500

Start the Discussion

Request access to join the discussion

Collectors with works by Herman Maril

About this work

Herman Maril, Berkshire Hills, 1935

Herman Maril's "Berkshire Hills," painted in gouache on paper in 1935, captures the rolling Massachusetts landscape with a bold economy of form that speaks directly to the artist's early modernist sensibilities. Completed when Maril was in his mid-twenties, the work reveals a painter already confident in his ability to distill observed nature into flattened planes of color and simplified contours, drawing on the influence of the American Scene movement while pushing toward something more purely pictorial. The Berkshires, a destination that attracted generations of artists seeking refuge in its gentle terrain, here become a vehicle for exploring how color relationships and compositional rhythm can carry emotional weight without recourse to labored detail. Gouache suited Maril's instincts particularly well in this period, its opacity allowing for clean, assertive passages of color that hold their own against the intimacy of the paper support. The relatively modest dimensions of the sheet belie the expansiveness of the image, a quality that testifies to Maril's gift for suggesting wide-open space within tight parameters. The work is signed and presented framed, ready for display, and represents a desirable early moment in the career of a painter who would go on to earn sustained critical recognition. Offered through Debra Force Fine Art, this is a carefully preserved example of American modernist works on paper at their most direct and assured.

Medium
Gouache on paper
Dimensions
overall: 21.6 x 29.8 cm • framed: 33 x 41.3 cm
Year
1935
Signed
Hand-signed by the artist
Seen at
Debra Force Fine Art

More works by Herman Maril

Collected by

Jonathan Murray, Arthur Cohen