Armenia GDP Down 18% In Jan-Sept

ARMENIA GDP DOWN 18% IN JAN-SEPT

Interfax
Nov 2 2009
Russia

Armenia GDP fell 18.3% in January- September 2009 year-on-year to
2.123 trillion dram, the National Statistics Service reported.

Output in the construction sector plummeted 43.8% in the period
year-on-year to 364.6 billion dram.

Industrial output contracted 11.4% in the nine months to 459.7 billion
dram, while agricultural output fell 1.3% to 407.9 billion dram.

Electricity production was down 12.6% to 4.152 billion kWh.

Armenians purchased services worth 533.2 billion dram in the nine
months, 1.2% less than in the same period last year. Retail turnover
rose 0.8% to 697.6 billion dram. The average nominal monthly salary
in the nine months rose 12% to 98,369 dram.

Trade turnover amounted to 978.5 billion dram (down 30.7% year-on-
year), including exports totaling 173.3 billion dram (down 41.5%)
and imports totaling 805.2 billion dram (down 27.9%). The trade
deficit narrowed to 631.9 billion dram, 10% less than the deficit in
the first nine months last year.

The official exchange rate on October 30 was 386.37 dram/$1.

SSJ-100 Delivery To Armavia Delayed – Company

SSJ-100 DELIVERY TO ARMAVIA DELAYED – COMPANY

Interfax
Nov 2 2009
Russia

The delivery of Russian Sukhoi Superjet-100 aircraft to the Armenian
airline Armavia has been postponed, Armavia owner Mikhail Bagdasarov
said while presenting the airline’s new route to Bahrain.

"We have purchased two SSJ-100 jets. The delivery is delayed for
certification reasons," he said.

It was planned initially to bring the jets to Armenia in December 2009.

Certification tests will be complete by the end of this year, and
the deliveries will start. The first planes will be sent to Armavia
and Aeroflot (RTS: AFLT).

An experimental SSJ-100 has completed certification flights in the
Armenian highlands.

Armenian Diaspora Does Not Support Yerevan’s Efforts To Improve Rela

ARMENIAN DIASPORA DOES NOT SUPPORT YEREVAN’S EFFORTS TO IMPROVE RELATIONS WITH TURKEY – EU SPECIAL ENVOY

Interfax
Nov 2 2009
Russia

Opposition of the ratification of the Armenian-Turkish protocols is
being actively supported by an external force, the Armenian diaspora,
said European Union Special Envoy for the South Caucasus Peter Semneby.

Opposition to stabilization with Turkey is coming mainly not from
within Armenia but from ethnic Armenians who live outside the country,
he said in an interview with the Vremya Novostei newspaper published
on Monday.

Although there should be no implosion within Armenia, this is a serious
problem for the Armenian government as it has sparked controversy among
the diaspora, which plays a big role in Armenia, the diplomat said.

We need to secure the consent of the diaspora, while taking into
account the interests of the Armenians who live in this country and
have concerns of their own, mainly that of a socio-economic nature,
Semneby said.

Hopefully, the parliaments of Armenia and Turkey will ratify
the protocols on improving bilateral relations, though it cannot
be guaranteed 100%, said the EU special envoy, adding that he is
nevertheless convinced that it will happen because it is in the best
interests of both Armenia and Turkey.

Armenian Budget Deficit At 4.4% Of GDP In Jan-Sept

ARMENIAN BUDGET DEFICIT AT 4.4% OF GDP IN JAN-SEPT

Interfax
Nov 2 2009
Russia

Armenia’s budget deficit totaled about 93.5 billion dram or 4.4% of
GDP through the first nine months of 2009, the National Statistics
Service reported.

Budget revenue totaled 475.3 billion dram or 22.4% of GDP, down 13.5%
year-on-year in the nine months.

Tax revenue totaled 357.4 billion dram (16.8% of GDP), which is 18%
less than a year earlier, including VAT receipts totaling 175.2 billion
dram (down 23.7% year-on-year), pretax profit – 63.7 billion dram
(down 3.2%), excise taxes – 30.7 billion dram (down 10.4%).

Revenue from the individual income tax rose 9.9% year-on-year to 42.4
billion dram.

Budget spending was up 5.6% in January-September year-on-year to
568.8 billion dram or 26.8% of GDP, including spending equal to 8.4%
of GDP on the social safety net, 4.2% on defense and 3.6% on education.

Armenia’s 2009 budget stipulates 905.4 billion dram in revenue and
945.4 billion dram in spending for a deficit of 40 billion dram or
0.96% of GDP.

The official exchange rate on October 30 was 386.37 dram/$1.

IMF Completes Second Review Under Stand-By Arrangement With Armenia

IMF COMPLETES SECOND REVIEW UNDER STAND-BY ARRANGEMENT WITH ARMENIA

Targeted News Service
November 2, 2009 Monday 4:47 PM EST

IMF Completes Second Review Under Stand-By Arrangement with Armenia,
Approves Request for Waiver of Nonobservance of Performance Criterion,
Modification of Performance Criteria, and Rephasing of Purchases

The International Monetary Fund issued the following news release:

The Executive Board of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) has
completed the second review of Armenia’s economic performance under
a program supported by a Stand-By Arrangement (SBA) and approved a
request for a waiver of nonobservance of end-September 2009 fiscal
balance performance criterion, modification of the quantitative
performance criteria for end-December 2009 to reflect the revised
macroeconomic framework and rephasing of purchases to make the amounts
scheduled to become available following the second and third review
available upon completion of the second review.

These decisions enable the immediate release of SDR 37.72
million (about $60US million), bringing the total disbursed
to SDR 301.94 million (about $479US million). The 28-month
SBA was approved on March 6, 2009 (see Press Release No. 09/68
( pr0968.htm)), with
access augmented on June 22, 2009 (see Press Release No. 09/228
( /pr09228.htm)).

Following the Executive Board’s discussion on Armenia, Mr. Takatoshi
Kato, Deputy Managing Director and Acting Chair, stated:

"The global crisis has continued to have a serious impact on the
Armenian economy. While output appears to be stabilizing, the fall
in remittances and the collapse in the construction sector have
caused a more severe economic contraction and lower fiscal revenue
than anticipated in the first review. The authorities have fully
implemented their economic program, which calls for the continuation
of fiscal and monetary easing and a flexible exchange rate.

"In light of continuing weak domestic demand, the authorities will
maintain fiscal easing this year, with external resources taking up
the revenue slack. Expenditure will focus on undertaking anti-crisis
measures, increasing capital spending, and protecting social spending.

The authorities are committed to starting fiscal consolidation in
2010, with a view to ensuring medium-term debt sustainability. The
program allows for additional spending should more donor financing
become available to smooth the withdrawal of fiscal stimulus.

"An accommodative monetary policy stance remains appropriate given
low inflation. The move to a more flexible exchange rate has served
Armenia well, helping the economy avoid significant overvaluation and
increasing the effectiveness of monetary policy. However, given the
remaining weaknesses in the monetary transmission mechanism, targeted
measures now being implemented to stimulate credit are crucial.

"The short-term outlook remains challenging. As external conditions
improve, growth is expected to resume gradually in 2010, although
risks remain, including a slower recovery of the global economy.

Continued reforms, particularly in the areas of tax policy and
tax reform administration, the financial sector, and the business
environment will be necessary to boost the medium-term growth potential
of the economy," Mr. Kato said

http://www.imf.org/external/np/sec/pr/2009/
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sec/pr/2009

Azeri Men’s Handball Team Destroy Armenia 33-16

AZERI MEN’S HANDBALL TEAM DESTROY ARMENIA 33-16

State Telegraph Agency of the Republic of Azerbaijan
November 2, 2009 Monday

Azerbaijan men’s handball team have crushed Armenia 33-16 in the
Challenge Trophy tournament in Chisinau, Moldova.

The win put the Azeri team third in their group followed by Armenia.

BAKU: Azerbaijani Amb Gives Interview To Kuwaiti Newspapers

AZERBAIJANI AMBASSADOR GIVES INTERVIEW TO KUWAITI NEWSPAPERS

State Telegraph Agency of the Republic of Azerbaijan
November 2, 2009 Monday

Azerbaijani ambassador to Kuwait Shahin Abdullayev was interviewed on
October 29 by Kuwait`s leading newspapers Al-Rai, Arrouiah, Al-Watan
and An Nahar. Ambassador told of Azerbaijan-Kuwait relations and
answered the questions concerning regional and international problems.

Shahin Abdullayev touched on the history and situation of the
Nagorno-Karabakh conflict. Ambassador praised Kuwait`s fair stance
towards resolution of the conflict during discussions in the UN,
OIC and other international organizations

When asked about mediation opportunities for Ankara in the light of
the rapprochement between Armenia and Turkey, Abdullayev said Turkey
spares no effort to solve the problem. He noted Azerbaijan Foreign
Ministry`s statement said rapprochement contradicts national interests
of Azerbaijan. Nonetheless, Azerbaijan is not going to interfere in
Turkey`s internal affairs. Ambassador said during his speech in the
parliament of Azerbaijan, Turkish Prime Minister Erdogan pledged not
to open border with Armenia unless Nagorno-Karabakh problem is solved.

Abdullayev pointed out President Ilham Aliyev`s visit to Kuwait
and documents signed between the two countries gave an impetus to
bilateral relations.

Ambassador noted an invitation letter to pay an official visit to
Azerbaijan was presented to Emir of Kuwait Sheikh Sabah IV Al-Ahmad
Al-Jaber Al-Sabah, adding this visit is of particular importance to
Azerbaijan. He expressed hope that this visit would take place.

Ambassador briefed about the ongoing reforms and development in
Azerbaijan.

When asked about Palestine problem, ambassador Abdullayev noted
Azerbaijan backs fair resolution of the problem.

He also dwelt on the Azerbaijan-Iran relations and its development
prospects.

Turkey Making All The Right Moves

TURKEY MAKING ALL THE RIGHT MOVES
by Arthur I. Cyr

Sentinel & Enterprise (Fitchburg, Massachusetts)
November 2, 2009 Monday

What’s in a name? Plenty, and the same goes for a nation’s flag.

The national flag remains a potent emotional symbol, demonstrated this
month by intense — and underreported — conflict among Turkey, Armenia
and Azerbaijan. The flag flap has important bearing on international
relations, especially U.S. foreign policy.

Azerbaijan flags were removed from a stadium in Bursa, Turkey, where
a World Cup match between Armenia and Turkey was being held. They
were found in a trashcan. In retaliation, Azerbaijani officials in
Baku removed Turkey’s flag from a war memorial commemorating Turkish
troops who fell in fighting for Azerbaijan independence in 1918. On
Oct. 27, the flags were raised again.

Turkey is making strong efforts, so far reciprocated, to resolve
fundamental conflict with Armenia, dating back to the Armenian genocide
early in the 20th century. On Oct. 10, the two nations signed a
protocol to open their shared border. Turkey closed the border in
1993 as a gesture of solidarity with Azerbaijan. In mid-October,
President Serkh Sarkisian became the first head of state of Armenia
to travel to Turkey.

Armenia-Turkey rapprochement in turn has antagonized Azerbaijan,
which has been losing to Armenia in a border dispute involving the
territory of Nagorno-Karabakh. This has occurred despite repeated
assurances from national officials in Ankara that relations with Baku
would remain strong.

This interplay may be difficult to follow, involving complex politics
as well as obscure geography, but Turkey’s vital strategic importance
provides a powerful incentive to understand developments. Despite
current tensions between a religious government and a secular
constitution and state, Turkey remains a strong, stable representative
democracy. Eventually, the nation may serve as a bridge between East
and West that brings essential economic and political modernization
to the Arab world.

Turkey’s relative isolation within Europe is a problem. The European
Union has turned the nation’s application for membership into seemingly
endless agony. No doubt, concern about Islamic extremism contributes
to caution, but more general, long-standing European prejudice against
outside populations undeniably is involved.

Condescension is combined with inertia.

Developments within Turkey overall have been reassuring. The people
remain committed to representative government, an effective counter
against al-Qaida and other extremist movements. To date, terrorist
acts in Turkey have boomeranged.

The government in Ankara has placed priority on good relations with
Israel as well as with Arab states. Turkey commands vital sea lanes
and trade routes, including the Straits of Bosporus, and potential
oil and gas lines from the Caucasus.

Ankara-Washington cooperation is strongly rooted. Turkey has been
actively engaged in Afghanistan, including major military command
responsibilities. During the first Persian Gulf War, U.S. B-52 bombers
were deployed on Turkish soil, a potentially risky move by Ankara.

Turkey played a vital Allied role during the Korean War; the UN
military cemetery at Pusan contains a notably large number of Turkish
graves.

This background is of even greater importance given that ties between
Turkey and the United States are currently badly strained. The Bush
administration invasion of Iraq was bitterly opposed by Ankara.

Attacks by anti-Ankara Kurdish terrorists based in Iraq have led to
Turkish military strikes into the northern region of that country.

The Obama administration is giving some priority to rebuilding frayed
relations with Turkey, along with Israel, our most important ally in
the region. This may reinforce positive steps in Southeast Europe.

Arthur I. Cyr is Clausen Distinguished Professor at Carthage College.

Russia Has Extensive Interests In S. Caucasus

"RUSSIA HAS EXTENSIVE INTERESTS IN SOUTH CAUCASUS"
Ivan Sukhov

WPS Agency
What the Papers Say (Russia)
Russia
November 2, 2009 Monday

Highlight: Peter Semneby: Russia’s behavior shows that it expects
changes in the South Caucasus; An Interview with EU special
Representative for South Caucasus Peter Semneby.

Turkey and Armenia signed protocols on diplomatic relations
establishment in Zurich, Switzerland, on October 10. Here is an
interview with EU Special Representative for South Caucasus Peter
Semneby on what effect the Armenian-Turkish rapprochement will have
on its participants themselves and their neighbors.

Question: Moscow’s comments on the Armenian-Turkish rapprochement are
quite favorable even though the impression is that this rapprochement
will reduce Russian clout with the South Caucasus to a certain extent.

And what is your opinion of the process in question?

Peter Semneby: The situation with the relations between Armenia and
Turkey as it was so far could not last, of course. Something had to be
done about it in terms of the opening of borders, normalization, etc.

It is necessary to consider ways and means of promotion of one’s
interests in the region in this new situation. The war in Georgia
reminded everyone of the existence of grave risks in connection with
the latent territorial conflicts in the region. Awareness of these
risks provided an additional impetus to the Armenian-Turkish relations.

As for Russia, its very behavior shows that it has been expecting
changes in the situation in this part of the Caucasus. Russia invests
into Armenian economy. It builds railways there. Investments of this
kind are made only when the investor is fairly confident that he will
get his money’s worth back, and that means when the borders are open.

Question: Shall we assume that the rapprochement with Ankara is
something the Armenian diplomacy should take credit for? Did Yerevan
manage to disassociate the matter of rapprochement with Turkey from
the problem of Nagorno-Karabakh?

Peter Semneby: It was not Armenia alone providing the necessary push
that set things in motion. (Even though it was always clear that
doing so is in the interests of Armenia, that is.) We have to admit
meanwhile that some political forces in Armenia question expediency
of this move. Some heated debates are taking place in Turkey too,
as we know. Turkey understands that it may become one of the central
players in all of the region only if and when this particular matter is
addressed and taken care of. This conflict with Armenia tied Ankara’s
hands in the South Caucasus.

As for the Armenian-Turkish relations and the conflict over
Nagorno-Karabakh, these are two different conflicts that should not be
mixed. An attempt to mix them will interfere with the normalization
trend we’ve been seeing. It is clear that any development in each of
these matters has an effect on the general atmosphere. It behooves
us therefore to do whatever it takes to make sure that this effect
is positive.

Question: What concessions can Armenia and Azerbaijan go for in the
matter of Karabakh conflict resolution right at this point?

Peter Semneby: By and large, I believe that it is necessary to aspire
to a situation where both parties will make some sort of concession
to the other and leave major issues including that of the status of
Karabakh for later.

Question: Is there a chance that this rapprochement with Turkey will
spark street protests and foment mass disturbances in Armenia?

Peter Semneby: Opposition to normalization of the relations with
Turkey is external rather than domestic. What I mean is that it is
mostly Armenian diasporas abroad that have been raising objections.

And yet, this is a serious problem for the Armenian administration
because of the part in the life of the country diasporas traditionally
play.

Question: When can we expect the opening of the Armenian-Turkish
border?

Peter Semneby: The countdown will begin with ratification of the
protocols by national parliaments. It should occur two months after
the exchange of ratifications.

Question: Will the protocols be ratified?

Peter Semneby: Nobody can say for sure, of course, but I’m convinced
that they will be ratified, all the same.

Question: What effect will this Armenian-Turkish rapprochement have
on the regional economic architecture based on and centered around
Azerbaijani and Central Asian oil and gas export?

Peter Semneby: Normalization of the relations will open new
opportunities, facilitate regional security, and have a generally
positive effect on the economy of the region.

Question: Leaders of Armenia, Azerbaijan, and even Karabakh visit
Moscow in the wake of every new development in the Armenian-Turkish
rapprochement and in the course of the Karabakh talks. Why would they?

Whose initiative is it?

Peter Semneby: It is clear that Russia has extensive interests in the
South Caucasus and that it is prepared to defend and promote them. It
is natural. It is a positive factor, in general, that Russia clearly
associates its interests with progress in the matter of conflict
resolution. We can only welcome Russia’s resolve to play an energetic
role in these matters.

Question: And yet, the opening of the border is bound to turn Armenian
economy to Turkey. Lacking ground routes connecting it with Armenia,
Russia is bound to perceive a certain weakening of the ties with the
country it has regarded as its principal ally in the South Caucasus
for years. And yet, Moscow supports and abets the negotiations under
way. Isn’t that paradoxical?

Peter Semneby: Russia has vast interest in Armenia, and particularly
economic interests. Since Russia invested colossal sums in Armenia,
in its energy infrastructure and so on, it is naturally interested in
development of the Armenian economy. Its dynamic development meanwhile
necessitates certain conditions. An open border with Turkey is the
most important factor facilitating economic development of Armenia.

Even diversification of the Armenian economy will benefit Russia.

Question: This solution to the Armenian-Turkish problem… shall
we call it Armenia’s step in the direction of European and Atlantic
integration?

Peter Semneby: Armenia participates in a great deal of EU’s programs
like the neighborhood program or, for example, the Eastern Partnership
initiative. Negotiations over associated membership in the European
Union might begin soon because that’s what we offer to all Eastern
Partnership participants. It will continue regardless of whether or
not the border with Turkey is opened.

Twentieth-Century Man; An Arshile Gorky Retrospective

TWENTIETH-CENTURY MAN; AN ARSHILE GORKY RETROSPECTIVE.
Peter Schjeldahl

The New Yorker
November 2, 2009

The safest and loneliest place in the world, for a devotee of
modern art, is within arm’s length of any first-rate painting by
Arshile Gorky, the subject of a galvanically moving retrospective
at the Philadelphia Museum of Art. In that zone, where the artist’s
decisions register kinesthetically, awakening your sense of touch as
well as enchanting your eye, it is hard to doubt the value of the
modernist adventure: a bet on the adequacy of sheer form, in the
right hands, to compensate for a lost faith in established orders
of civilization. No other artist has invested more ardor in naked
technique: how to activate an edge, how to rhyme a color. Gorky was an
academic painter in a modern academy of one. Take "Scent of Apricots
on the Fields" (1944). A pileup of loosely outlined, thinly painted
fragmentary shapes, like plant or body parts, embedded in passages of
golden yellow, hovers above a green suggestion of a table and below
a skylike expanse of brushy rose red.

Dabs of raw turpentine cause runny dissolutions, as if some forms
were melting into their white ground. The downward drips yield a
paradoxical sensation of buoyancy. The picture’s visceral shapes
seem to ascend like putti in a Renaissance firmament. The dynamics
are at once obvious and inspired, stroke by stroke and hue by hue,
and deliriously affecting-when viewed near at hand.

>From a distance, the work flummoxes evaluation. Its style fits only
too comfortably into a period vogue of surrealistic abstraction-that
of minor figures like André Masson and Roberto Matta, backed by
the giants Picasso, Kandinsky, and Miró. Its content-romanticizing
supposed memories of a boyhood that Gorky regularly lied about-is
"poetic" in ways that turn treacly and banal when you try to appreciate
them. Art history and biography are blind alleys in Gorky’s case. His
art feels contemporary, because no discursive account of the past
can contain it. That also makes it a lonely enthusiasm, difficult
to espouse. Still, he is the twentieth-century painter dearest to
my heart.

Of what use is biography in assessing someone who made himself up?

Gorky told people, including his wife, that he was Russian, a cousin
of the writer Maxim Gorky (evidently unaware that "Maxim Gorky"
was a pen name), born in the Caucasus in 1905 and educated in France.

Actually, he was an Ottoman Armenian, Vosdanig Adoian, born circa
1902, in a village near Van. He couldn’t speak Russian and never saw
France. His father emigrated to America in 1908. His mother died
in Yerevan, perhaps of starvation, in 1919, four years after the
remaining family had fled the Turkish massacres of Armenians. In 1920,
Adoian and a sister joined relatives in Watertown, Massachusetts. The
first evidence of his new identity appears as the signature "Gorky,
Arshele," on "Park Street Church, Boston," a skillful pastiche of
Neo-Impressionism that he painted in 1924, while teaching at an art
school in Boston. He admired the work of John Singer Sargent before
latching onto Cézanne, as a god of art second only, later, to Picasso.

Early imitations of Cézanne, in the show, are astonishingly acute.

Cézanne is the foremost of painters who unfold their majesty to
close-up inspection. (Gorky stumbled in his tyro emulations of Matisse
and De Chirico, artists more reliant on over-all design.) With Gorky,
influence is no incidental issue. I think he never ceased to regard
his own creations vicariously, through the conjured eyes of heroes-he
cited Uccello, Grunewald, Ingres, Seurat. He spoke with scorn of
"originality" as a criterion of artistic value. His friend and
self-declared disciple Willem de Kooning reported Gorky’s remarking
to him, "Aha, so you have ideas of your own." De Kooning recalled,
"Somehow, that didn’t seem so good."

The tall, preposterously handsome Gorky, who moved to New York in
1924 and took a studio on Union Square in 1930, was revered for his
gifts, enjoyed for his clowning, and resented for his bossiness in
the poverty-ravaged downtown art scene. Many women adored him. I
incline to a partly cynical view of his famous images of himself as
a painfully shy lad with his haunted-looking mother, based on a 1912
photograph. Gorky’s suffering was surely real, but the pathos of the
pictures strikes me as calculated to seduce. He wanted mothering. In
politics, he was a loose cannon among radicals, an admirer of Stalin
who pronounced social realism "poor art for poor people." In 1936,
he produced W.P.A. murals, later mostly destroyed, for Newark Airport.

(Photographs show him explaining the work to a visibly unimpressed
Fiorello La Guardia.) Remnants of the murals, in the Philadelphia
show, deploy a dashing, generic modern-artiness like that of his
friend Stuart Davis. But Gorky’s ambition centered on an intimate and
desperate grappling with Picasso, whom he didn’t so much emulate as
channel, in a spirit nicely characterized by the critic Robert Storr
in the show’s catalogue: that of "a gifted pianist who habitually
forgets in the middle of performing a canonical sonata that he has
not composed it himself."

Gorky’s Picassoesque works of the thirties are commonly scanted in
favor of the pictures with which, from about 1940 until his suicide,
in 1948, he anticipated the triumphs of Abstract Expressionism. (His
end was terrible, in a madness brought on by a studio fire that
destroyed much of his recent work, an operation for rectal cancer,
his beloved wife’s affair with his best friend, and a crippling
car crash.) But the drama of, say, "Enigmatic Combat" (1936-37),
a sprightly patchwork of amoeboid and spiky shapes, rivets me. Its
thickly layered surface bespeaks long, onerous toil for a kind of
effect that Picasso brought off with ease. The task seems absurd.

Gorky’s self-abnegating success with it has the equivocal glory of
a saint’s welcomed martyrdom.

The Philadelphia show, curated by Michael R. Taylor, is probably
overcrowded and definitely underlit (a consequence of interspersing
paintings with drawings, which, in standard museum practice, require
dim illumination). And it’s wacky, in the big section representing
the early forties, when Gorky abandoned his downtown friends for
the relatively glittering society of refugees-including Léger and
Duchamp-who embraced him. Walls painted with a wraparound, jagged band
of gray, evoking exhibition styles that were a la mode at that time,
emphasize a revisionist thesis that Taylor spells out in a catalogue
essay-assigning Gorky’s breakthrough works to European Surrealism
rather than American abstraction. I’m sorry, but that’s wrong. Gorky
is ours. The exiles inspired him; André Breton celebrated him as
"the only painter in America"; Matta taught him a crucial trick of
divorcing crisp line from atmospheric washes of color. But the younger
Surrealists, like Matta, were mediocrities on the down slope of a
movement. De Kooning, Pollock, Rothko, and other locals grasped and
developed the revolutionary implications of what Gorky did, which was,
roughly, to scale every inch of a painting to the impact of the whole.

American eyes saw through the lingering Surrealist clichés in his
work-often sketchily abstracted sex organs-to a new, expansive,
burstingly songful type of pictorial unity.

Textures of intensely sensitive touch, making forms quiver and squirm,
are the most eloquent element in late Gorky. Color comes second, yet
it, too, is extraordinary, evoking bodily wounds and inflammations
and ungraspable subtleties of nature. Drawing, though busily abundant,
feels incidental, like fleeting thoughts of a mind in the grip of an
extreme emotion. I am convinced that, had Gorky lived, he would have
suppressed line, perhaps in a way that, absent him, fell to Rothko. He
would also undoubtedly have undertaken bigger canvases, in the budding
New York School manner. "Untitled" (1943-48), a medium-sized and not
quite resolved painting, of scrappy shapes jittering in a surface of
hot orange scumbled over a muted yellow, feels pregnant with promises
of engulfing wonderment. The closing chords of Gorky’s unfinished
symphony remain incipient.