Goodridge Roberts Canadian, 1904-1974
protected by museum glass
Further images
Goodridge Roberts’ Seated Figure Turning Away is a striking charcoal nude study that centres on mass, shadow, and quiet introspection. The woman is shown seated in a twisting pose, her torso turned partly toward us while her head angles away, so that her face is largely concealed in darkness. This withholding of identity gives the composition a private, inward mood. Roberts models the body with broad passages of light and shade, allowing the shoulders, breasts, waist, and bent legs to emerge in soft, luminous tones against the deep, smoky background.
In Seated Figure Turning Away, Goodridge Roberts focuses less on precise anatomical detail than on the weight and presence of the figure. The dark ground presses in around the body, making the pale flesh appear sculptural and substantial. One hand rests on the surface beside her while the other arm falls back along the seat, creating a stable but slightly tense arrangement of forms. The whole image feels atmospheric and immediate, as though Roberts was intent on capturing a fleeting turn of the body and the emotional stillness that came with it.
Provenance
- Gifted from Mr. John De Wolf to the Art Gallery of Ontario- Heffel Gallery, Vancouver
- Private Estate, Vancouver