Plan your visit. 225 Madison Avenue at 36th Street, New York, NY 10016.

Plan your visit. 225 Madison Avenue at 36th Street, New York, NY 10016.

Al Taylor's drawings on pages of the book "Florentine Art Treasures" by Rosa Maria Letts (London: Roydon, 1970)

061. pp. 128–129
062. pp. 130–131
063. pp. 132–133
064. pp. 134–135
065. pp. 136–139
066. pp. 140–145
067. pp. 146–147
068. pp. 148–149
069. pp. 150–151
070. pp. 152–153
071. pp. [154–155]
072. pp. [156–157]

Active in New York in the 1980s and 90s as a sculptor and draftsman, Taylor found inspiration for his lyrical and witty abstract compositions in banal objects and everyday situations. In this unusual object, Taylor drew over text and images in a book on Florentine Renaissance painting. He altered the meaning of the text by blacking out parts of it and offered new interpretations of the paintings through his additions of black ink and white correction fluid. The puddle-like motifs and wordplays relate to the drawings Taylor was making at the same time, such as the 1992 Peabody series, of which the Morgan owns an important example (acc. no. 2011.7).