Honore Sharrer American, 1920-2009
Woman Listening, c. 1960
Casein on paper
15 x 20 inches
Signed lower right
Honoré Sharrer’s Woman Listening (c. 1960) presents a solitary female figure standing at the threshold of a dense and verdant garden, her body turned away from the viewer as if...
Honoré Sharrer’s Woman Listening (c. 1960) presents a solitary female figure standing at the threshold of a dense and verdant garden, her body turned away from the viewer as if absorbed by an unseen presence. Rendered in luminous casein with a palette of saturated greens, reds, and delicate floral accents, the composition evokes an atmosphere that is both inviting and unsettling. Throughout her career, Sharrer combined elements of realism, allegory, and dream imagery to create works that resisted easy interpretation. The artists career prospered in the 1940s and 1950s—including her celebrated critique of postwar American culture in Tribute to the American Working People—Sharrer often infused ordinary scenes with psychological complexity, allowing symbolism and narrative ambiguity to coexist. In Woman Listening, the act of listening itself becomes the central subject, transforming the figure from a participant in the landscape into a witness to forces beyond immediate perception.
The subject of the "garden" carries particularly rich symbolic associations within the Surrealist tradition, which deeply informed many artists of Sharrer’s generation. For Surrealists, gardens functioned as metaphors for the unconscious mind: enclosed spaces where memory, fantasy, desire, and anxiety could emerge in unexpected forms. Unlike the orderly gardens of traditional landscape painting, Surrealist gardens were often sites of mystery and transformation, where familiar natural forms concealed hidden meanings. In Sharrer’s composition, the thick foliage appears almost animate, enveloping the figure in a world that is simultaneously nurturing and enigmatic. The winding path and lush vegetation suggest an interior journey, while the woman’s attentive posture implies a search for knowledge or revelation concealed within the landscape itself.
Viewed through the political climate in which it was created, and the artists own persecution, Woman Listening also resonates with the anxieties of the McCarthy era and its aftermath. During the late 1940s and 1950s, artists, writers, and intellectuals navigated a culture marked by surveillance, suspicion, and the fear of being overheard. Sharrer herself was no stranger to political engagement and skepticism toward authority. In this context, the garden can be understood as both a refuge and a place of uncertainty—a private realm where thought and imagination survive beyond public scrutiny. The solitary figure, listening intently amid the dense growth, may embody the tension between personal freedom and social conformity that defined the period. Rather than offering a direct political statement, Sharrer employs the language of allegory, using the timeless symbolism of the garden to explore questions of perception, secrecy, and the fragile boundaries between inner life and the pressures of the outside world.
The subject of the "garden" carries particularly rich symbolic associations within the Surrealist tradition, which deeply informed many artists of Sharrer’s generation. For Surrealists, gardens functioned as metaphors for the unconscious mind: enclosed spaces where memory, fantasy, desire, and anxiety could emerge in unexpected forms. Unlike the orderly gardens of traditional landscape painting, Surrealist gardens were often sites of mystery and transformation, where familiar natural forms concealed hidden meanings. In Sharrer’s composition, the thick foliage appears almost animate, enveloping the figure in a world that is simultaneously nurturing and enigmatic. The winding path and lush vegetation suggest an interior journey, while the woman’s attentive posture implies a search for knowledge or revelation concealed within the landscape itself.
Viewed through the political climate in which it was created, and the artists own persecution, Woman Listening also resonates with the anxieties of the McCarthy era and its aftermath. During the late 1940s and 1950s, artists, writers, and intellectuals navigated a culture marked by surveillance, suspicion, and the fear of being overheard. Sharrer herself was no stranger to political engagement and skepticism toward authority. In this context, the garden can be understood as both a refuge and a place of uncertainty—a private realm where thought and imagination survive beyond public scrutiny. The solitary figure, listening intently amid the dense growth, may embody the tension between personal freedom and social conformity that defined the period. Rather than offering a direct political statement, Sharrer employs the language of allegory, using the timeless symbolism of the garden to explore questions of perception, secrecy, and the fragile boundaries between inner life and the pressures of the outside world.