Milton Avery
Framed: 23 in x 19 in
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Milton Avery’s White Hen exemplifies the artist’s extraordinary ability to transform ordinary subjects into compositions of profound formal elegance and quiet emotional resonance. Painted in 1954 during one of the strongest periods of Avery’s mature career, the work distills form, color, and space into a deceptively simple image that reflects the artist’s singular contribution to twentieth-century American painting.
Born in Altmar, New York in 1885, Avery developed a highly personal visual language that bridged American modernism and the emerging sensibilities of Abstract Expressionism. Though representational throughout his career, Avery approached painting through relationships of color, shape, and spatial balance rather than descriptive realism. His work profoundly influenced younger artists including Mark Rothko, Adolph Gottlieb, and Barnett Newman, who admired Avery’s ability to create emotional intensity through simplified form and chromatic structure.
In White Hen, Avery reduces the figure of the bird to broad, flattened areas of color and silhouette. The composition is remarkably economical, yet every element feels carefully calibrated. The white body of the hen stands against a muted geometric ground of warm ochres and soft browns, creating a subtle tension between figure and space. The simplified form possesses an almost sculptural clarity while retaining the gentle humor and warmth characteristic of Avery’s finest work.
Particularly striking is the painting’s balance between abstraction and representation. The hen is immediately recognizable, yet the composition functions equally as an arrangement of shapes, tonal relationships, and negative space. Avery’s restrained palette and matte surface create an atmosphere of calm stillness, while the slight asymmetries and delicate linear accents preserve a sense of spontaneity and intimacy.
Like many of Avery’s most successful paintings, White Hen reveals the artist’s remarkable ability to elevate humble subject matter into something timeless and meditative. The work demonstrates his mastery of reduction, where simplicity becomes a vehicle for subtle emotional and visual complexity rather than minimal description.
Beautifully preserved and presented in an elegant period frame, White Hen stands as a compelling example of Avery’s mature painting practice and his enduring influence on the development of modern American art.Milton Avery (American, 1885-1965) was an American painter celebrated for his lyrical use of color and simplified forms that bridged American modernism and Abstract Expressionism. Born in Altmar, New York, Avery was largely self-taught and worked various factory jobs before studying art in Hartford, Connecticut. During the 1920s and 1930s, he became associated with artists in New York while developing a highly personal style characterized by flattened space, bold color relationships, and reduced compositions. Avery frequently painted landscapes, seascapes, still lifes, animals, and intimate scenes of family life, transforming ordinary subjects into calm, harmonious arrangements. Although his work remained representational, his emphasis on color and abstraction strongly influenced younger artists, including Mark Rothko and Adolph Gottlieb. Avery’s paintings are known for their quiet mood, subtle humor, and balance between structure and spontaneity. Throughout his career, he maintained a distinctive visual language that helped shape the direction of twentieth-century American painting and expanded the possibilities of modern color-based abstraction. His work is held in major museum collections including the Museum of Modern Art, the Whitney Museum of American Art, the Metropolitan Museum of Art, and the Phillips Collection.
