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artists

Rodolfo Abularach
Peter Agostini
Karel Appel
Thomas Beckman
Seymour Boardman
Ilya Bolotowsky
Ernest Briggs
Lawrence Calcagno
Nicolas Carone
Perez Celis
Bruce Checefsky
Nassos Daphnis
Haydn Davies
Lynne Drexler
Friedel Dzubas
Amaranth Ehrenhalt
Claire Falkenstein
Agustin Fernandez
Joseph Fiore
John Hultberg
Carol Hunt
Buffie Johnson
Albert Kotin
Ibram Lassaw
Jenny Lee
Martee Levi
Michael Loew
William Manning
Jeanne Miles
Leonard Nelson
Louise Nevelson
Tom Nonn
Jeanne Reynal
Misha Reznikoff
Richards Ruben
William Saroyan
William Scharf
Ethel Schwabacher
Thomas Sills
Nancy Steinson
Antoni Tapies
Yvonne Thomas
Erik Van der Grijn
Wilfrid Zogbaum
ODDS & ENDS

William Saroyan
William Saroyan
February 11 1963 SF, 1963
Watercolor on paper, 20" x 25"
 
William Saroyan
William Saroyan
February 8 1963 SF, 1963
Watercolor on paper, 20" x 25"
SOLD
 
William Saroyan
William Saroyan
February 22 1963 SF, 1963
Watercolor on paper, 20" x 25"
SOLD  
William Saroyan

The Anita Shapolsky Gallery is pleased to present several works by William Saroyan on paper. Although Saroyan is best known for his prolific output as a playwright and a novelist, his place in American Abstract Expressionism is not to be overlooked.

Born in 1908 in Fresno California to Armenian immigrant parents, William Saroyan would go on to become one of the top writers of the mid twentieth century. An incredibly talented writer, Saroyan tried his hand successfully at almost everything. Novels, plays, songs, and short stories all grace this writer's resume.

His birthplace of Fresno and his experiences in the San Joaquin Valley proved useful to his later writing. His father died when he was three years old, after which he was sent to an orphanage for four years. He left school at the young age of 15 and decided to become a writer. This decision was based partly on his own father's attempts at writing. His experience with death at such a young age, his time spent in the orphanage, and in later years, his formal schooling, created the "joyous sorrow" which characterizes Saroyan's works.

He started to make his living from writing in 1934, after 1934's short story "The Daring Young Man on the Flying Trapeze". In 1939 My Heart's in the Highlands opened to critical acclaim. His next big step came with the play Time of Your Life later in the same year, which was given the Pulitzer Prize for Drama. Though he refused the prize for himself on grounds that art should not be given awards, especially by the rich who had no understanding of such things. However, he did accept the Drama Critic's Circle Award in that same year. Shortly after, in 1940, he again established himself in the genre of short stories with his collection titled My Name is Aram. 1940 also found Saroyan at MGM filming The Human Comedy. This novel turned movie won the Academy Award for best picture and original story for the play.

Saroyan joined the Army during World War II. His absence from Broadway during the war would prove fatal for his career as a playwright. After the war, public interest in his work was quickly declining due to changes in opinion and taste. Cave Dwellers was the one exception to his exodus from New York, the play opened in 1957.

He married socialite Carol Marcus in 1943. They had two children, Aram and Lucy, and divorced after six years. Though they were to remarry, the union was one doomed to failure. They divorced for the second and final time two years later.

Though interest in his work declined, Saroyan remained a popular figure and continued to write. He began to write in the style of the memoir, Bicycle Rider of Beverly Hills (1952) Short Drive, Sweet Chariot (1966). His last major book Obituaries (1979) received a National Book Award nomination.

Saroyan died in 1981 in his birthplace of Fresno, California, a hero of Armenian-American people. Half his ashes were shipped to Armenia for burial. In 1991, Saroyan was honored by the U.S. and U.S.S.R. Postal services when a joint stamp was issued in his honor. Saroyan leaves behind a bibliography of over fifty published works and more unpublished. For more information about William Saroyan, visit The William Saroyan Foundation Web Site.