larry-rivers-american-1923-2002-i-last-civil-war-veteran-i
Lot 3051
Larry Rivers (American, 1923-2002), Last Civil War Veteran
Lot Details & Additional Photographs
Lithograph in colors, 1978, pencil signed and marked as artist's proof lower right, retains gallery label, with full margins, framed.

Image size 33 3/4 x 24 1/2 in.; Sheet size 43 x 30 1/4 in.; Frame dimensions 47 1/4 x 35 1/8 in.

Private Collection, Charleston, South Carolina

According to the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, who houses a similar painted scene: "Rivers frequently worked in series and The Last Civil War Veteran is one of three major paintings, in addition to smaller paintings and prints, inspired by a perhaps apocryphal story published in Life Magazine in 1959. According to Rivers, the artist Ray Parker sent him the article with a note that simply read: 'Go!' The photograph illustrating the article depicted a man named Walter Williams (1854–1959) lying in bed, with a gray uniform and the flags of both the Confederacy and the United States hanging on the wall behind him. Williams claimed to have enlisted in the Confederate Army as a young child. Rivers deemphasizes the figure and even Williams’s identity, obscuring his features into a pink blur that rhymes with a Matisse-like decorative border on the top of the painting. Instead, the work foregrounds the flags, those easily identifiable icons that stand in for both the antagonisms of the Civil War and the bitter divisions that roiled the Civil Rights era during which Rivers worked. Like Jasper Johns—who first painted the American flag in 1955 because it was something 'the mind already knows'—Rivers uses these flags as images upon which the viewer can project their own experiences, accruing meaning between the painting and the present day. The subject of this work can be seen as both a reflection of time passing into history and as a signifier of the cruel and eternal resonance of a haunted past in a present where the Confederate flag is still a painful symbol for many."

Some toning around margin edges; not examined out of frame.