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    Celebrated American painter Cy Twombly dies at 83

    ROME (AP) โ€” Celebrated American painter Cy Twombly, whose large-scale paintings featuring scribbles, graffiti and references to ancient empires fetched millions at auction, died Tuesday. He was 83.

    Twombly, who had cancer, died in Rome, said Eric Mezil, director of the Lambert Collection in Avignon, France, where the artist opened a show in June. Twombly had lived in Italy since 1957.

    "A great American painter who deeply loved old Europe has just left us," French Culture Minister Frederic Mitterrand said in a statement. "His work was deeply marked by his passion for Greek and Roman antiquity, and its mythology, which for him was a source of bottomless inspiration."

    Twombly was known for his abstract works combining painting and drawing techniques, repetitive lines, scribbles and the use of words and graffiti. He is often linked to the legendary American artists Jasper Johns and Robert Rauschenberg, whom he met as a student in New York in the early 1950s.

    "Whether it's making sculpture or working across canvas or making small drawings with quite elaborate and detailed elements in them, you have this very strong sense of the physical presence of these paintings and sculptures, and you have the sense of an artist at work," the Tate's director Nicholas Serota said in an in-house interview ahead of a 2008 show of his work.

    Though recognition came late for his work โ€” and he was often overshadowed by the famous company he kept, like Johns and Rauschenberg โ€” Twombly was asked to paint a ceiling of the Louvre museum in Paris in 2010, the first artist given the honor since Georges Braque in the 1950s.

    For that work he chose something simple: a deep blue background punctuated with floating disks and emblazoned with the names of sculptors from ancient Greece, apt for a gallery of bronzes.

    "I got into something new in old age," he said of his choice of color, which was unusual.

    The Lexington, Virginia-born artist said he was inspired by the colors he found in a Chinese print as well the blue of early Italian Renaissance artist Giotto, who used paint made from lapis lazuli.

    "I was just thinking of the blue with the disks on it, it's totally abstract. ... It's that simple," Twombly told The Associated Press at the time.

    Simple or not, his work fetched millions at auction: An untitled Twombly painting set an auction record for the artist at a 2002 Sotheby's sale, fetching euro5.6 million. Before that, a 1990 Christie's auction set a record for Twombly, with his 1971 untitled blackboard painting going for $5.5 million.

    His canvases also ignited the passions of his followers. In 2007, a woman was arrested in France for kissing an all-white canvas he painted, worth about $2 million. Restorers had trouble getting the lipstick off, and she was ordered to pay hundreds of dollars to the owner and the gallery โ€” and $1.50 to the artist himself.

    Born Edwin Parker Twombly in 1928, the artist got his nickname from his father, who was a baseball player for the Chicago White Sox and had been called Cy after another famous slugger, "Cyclone" Young. Eventually Twombly Jr. got the same nickname.

    Between 1942-46, he studied modern European art under Pierre Daura, a Spanish artist who was living in his hometown of Lexington, according to a catalog for a 2009 Twombly exhibit in Rome organized by the Tate Modern and Rome's National Museum of Modern Art.

    In 1950, he won a scholarship to the Art Students League in New York, where he was exposed to the works of Rothko, Pollock and others. There he met Rauschenburg, a few years his senior but also a student at the League. On Rauschenburg's advice, Twombly enrolled at Black Mountain College in North Carolina, the experimental school whose alumni are a Who's Who of contemporary arts.

    He opened his first solo exhibit at the Seven Stairs Gallery in Chicago in 1951 and a year later sailed from New York with Rauschenburg for his first trip to Europe โ€” which would eventually become his home โ€” and North Africa, the catalog said.

    In 1954, he was drafted and trained as a cryptographer in the U.S. Army. While serving, he would draw in the dark โ€” following a Surrealist technique โ€” and the practice was later evident in his work.

    Three years later he moved to Rome and never really left. Later in life, he spent more time in the seaside town of Gaeta south of the Eternal City.

    In 1959, he married Luisa Tatiana Franchetti and they had a son, Alessandro Cyrus, the catalog said.

    Twombly, who had a gallery in his name at the Menil Collection museum in Houston, Texas, won a series of awards, including a knight in France's Legion of Honor bestowed at the inauguration of the Louvre ceiling.

    He won Japan's highest and most prestigious art award in 1998, the Praemium Imperiale prize, which honors fields not covered by the Nobels.

    In 2001 he snapped up the prestigious Golden Lion award at the Venice Biennale, where he first exhibited his work in 1980.

    The same year, he opened his first major sculpture show at the National Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C. The exhibit was still able to ignite the old controversy about whether what he made was really art and whether what he possessed was really talent.

    To some it looked like the debris in a carpenter's shop with planks and crudely nailed boxes slathered with white paint and plaster. For others, it was an eloquent reminder of the ancient Mediterranean.

    "In painting, drawings and sculpture, Cy Twombly constantly held himself apart from the great conflicts that would upset the artistic scene of the 20th century," Mitterrand said.

    Mezil, the Avignon gallery director, said that his work only got better with time. Twombly's June show there was "the most beautiful exhibit before his death," he said.

    Funeral arrangements were not immediately known.

    ___

    Alessandra Rizzo in Rome, Cecile Brisson in Paris and Dolores Barclay in New York contributed.

     

    86 comments

    • Kw  •  10 mths ago
      an artist is worth a million politicians.
    • Kyle  •  10 mths ago
      "I bind my soul to my art because I know that I am mortal and will one day die"- Michaelangelo.

      Cy you have done what a true artist should have. You have put your signature on this world and your work will live on. The world will miss you. Goodbye sweet prince.
      • anonymous 10 mths ago
        Yours is the only comment that is worthy of such a great artist. Great quote, truly one of the only real reasons to be an artist. Thanks for helping me to reflect on his work and talent- from another pop public artist. Rest in Peace, Cy.
    • Stinkyboy  •  10 mths ago
      I "LOVED" his ink blot pictures. I tried to duplicate them, but all the pages got stuck together.
      • Scott71267 10 mths ago
        That's because you need to use ink. ~
    • Marty the Fish  •  10 mths ago
      Be yourself, whatever you may be. Have your thoughts and values. Express these as you see them. Uphold these. To hell with the comments of the others! You will win.
    • 3.14  •  10 mths ago
      its kinda like fishin'...throw it out there and see if they'll bite...
    • Echo  •  10 mths ago
      Sadly, Art appreciation is not Americas strong point.RIP
      • Big Shelly's Tamale B ... 10 mths ago
        Snotty, aren't we?

        I know art when I see it
      • dc 10 mths ago
        Just a bit stereotypical don't you think?
      • J. Scott 10 mths ago
        I think not, Dc. Americans are products of their educational system. I doubt you have any knowledge in the humanities.
    • Tim  •  10 mths ago
      Art is subjective. I, for one really liked his work. It's along the lines of Basquiat, so it's not for everyone. Oh well, to each their own.....R.I.P. Mr. Twombly
      • Crash 10 mths ago
        Tim- that would be, "to each, his own", unless of course you are being all-inclusive, then it will be, 'to all, their own'.
      • Tim 10 mths ago
        Thanks, grammar nazi. You get my point though.
    • Mothers of invention  •  10 mths ago
      Hope he rests in peace.
    • Boomer  •  10 mths ago
      I loved an interview with Andy Warhol when the interviewer asked him what he thought of peoples' opinion of his art as pure crap. He said something like, "I think they're right..." as he laughed all the way to the bank.
    • RWordplay  •  10 mths ago
      Requiescat in pace.
    • Seriously  •  10 mths ago
      i saw some of his work at a museum in philadelphia. to me, his $$$#%#%% scribbles were laughable. i guess i find it hard to admire "art" that is so similar to what my daughter "creates" on a regular basis. to each his own.
    • DavidM  •  10 mths ago
      Abstract art is often describes as art that a child can create. However this statement is made most by people who have no interest in art. As to thr monetary value of a painting, it is worth whatever anyone is willing to pay for it. What makes you qualified to judge the mans work? What have you created that people will remember? When you die will it be posted as news worthy? Stop downgrading others worth and instead focus on building your own.
    • Alicia  •  10 mths ago
      Art is in the eye of the beholder. And with that said, alot of people (particularly in America) are "blind" so to speak.
    • Grim Reaper  •  10 mths ago
      I never heard of the man. As have most working class people.
    • Rockets Red Glare  •  10 mths ago
      Like Andy Warhol said: "Art is anything you can get away with."
    • I Dont Count  •  10 mths ago
      Frankly, one is supposed to die by 83!
    • Crash  •  10 mths ago
      tsk. the good always die young.
    • ALMUSTAPHA  •  10 mths ago
      IS HE BETTER THAN MICHEL EILSHEMIUS, AFTERNOON WIND
    • Inez Deborah Emilia Altar  •  10 mths ago
      The molesting medical profession, why couldnยดt he try out natural health and medicine especially the type which eschews medication, it is stupendously efficacious if properly followed
    • A Yahoo! User  •  10 mths ago
      I'm sorry someone has died, and condolences to his family... but his 'art' was hideous. The fact that his art is worth millions is ridiculous (way overpriced). Any 4-year old could produce works on par with or better than Cy Twombly's. Look up images of his art and decide for yourself...
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