







Framed: 13 1/2 x 12 1/2 inches
artist
Lee Gatch was born outside Baltimore, Maryland in 1902. He enrolled in the Maryland Institute of Art where he began his formal artistic training. While enrolled he had the opportunity to study under Leon Kroll and John Sloan. After graduation and armed with a traveling scholarship Gatch enrolled in the American School at Fontainebleau, France. However, he became dissatisfied with the classes there, and so in 1924 he moved to Paris, where he enrolled at the Académie Modern with Moise Kisling and André Lhote, a cubist academician. While in France, Gatch came in contact with the paintings of Andre Derain, Edouard Vuillard, and Pierre Bonnard. He greatly admired their application of color to create a sense of space. Gatch returned to the United States in 1925. He had his first one-man show in 1932 in New York. He spent the summer of 1935 in Yaddo, an artists' colony in Saratoga Springs, N.Y., with the Precisionist artist Elsie Driggs, whom he later married. The couple moved to Lambertville, N.J., where he lived the rest of his life on a secluded farm. The landscape of western New Jersey provided his source of subject matter during most of his career. Like his contemporaries such as Avery, Dove, and Knaths, Gatch attempted to create a personal individual style which was drawn on the American representational tradition but which transcended this tradition in order to find meaning through design and color.
Throughout the 1940s and 1950s Gatch's work was widely exhibited, including representation in the Venice Biennales of 1950 and 1956. His paintings were popular, and the artist received many awards from American museums. In 1965 he received a grant from the American Academy of Arts and Letters and was inducted into the Academy the following year. He continued to work steadily until his death in 1968.
Description
Interior brings together many of Gatch’s signature concerns with form, texture, and symbolism. The composition is structured through fine but definitive lines that divide the plane into distinct sections, recalling the logic of collage. Within these compartments, recognizable elements emerge: a silhouetted figure, a dangling light bulb, and a serpentine white form evocative of another figure. Patterns and tonal shifts complicate the reading of figure and ground, creating a layered, ambiguous space where abstraction and representation overlap. The result is a dynamic and evocative image one that embraces the tension between order and mystery.