
The Second Part of the Return from Parnassus
<p>Cy Twombly often titled his early 1960s works with florid evocations of art, myth, and allegory. These paintings, for example, refer to Mount Parnassus, the fabled home of Apollo and the Muses, which became known as the center of poetry, music, and learning in ancient Greece. These early paintings mix regular, system-based forms, numbers, and grids together with irregular, nature-based pictograms and suggestive or intuitive references to corporeal processes—sexual and otherwise. These are aspects of a general practice in which Twombly juxtaposes such marks to connote the dualities of mind and body. In their exuberant scale and color, the artist’s works of 1961 also reflect his response to the great architectural spaces of Rome, embracing the city’s grandeur and decadence in its ancient, Baroque, and modern incarnations.</p>
Catalogue
- Year
- 1961
- Dimensions
- 200 × 260.5 cm (78 3/4 × 102 1/2 in.)
- Collection
- Art Institute of Chicago
More
More by this artist
Untitled
2005 · Plaster, paint, wood, cardboard, metal, paper, cloth, twine, and pencil
The Four Seasons: Spring, Summer, Autumn, and Winter
1993 · Synthetic polymer paint, oil, house paint, pencil and crayon on four canvases
Untitled
1992 · Wood, plaster, plastic leaves, wire, cloth, sand, and paint
By the Ionian Sea
1988 · Bronze, wax crayon, and oil-based paint
Untitled, Bassano in Teverina
1987 · Wood, plaster, nails, clay, glue, white paint, traces of red paint, red crayon, and blue crayon
Untitled
1984 · Wood, plaster, nails, and paint
Record
Verified by WattsOS- Year
- 1961
- Dimensions
- 200 × 260.5 cm (78 3/4 × 102 1/2 in.)
- Watts ID
- WW-1961-135804
Source
- Collection
- Art Institute of Chicago
- Source
- aic
- Reference
- View at source
- Status
- verified





