Wall of the Forlorn

Skip to main content
© Renée Stout. Image courtesy of the Ruth and Elmer Wellin Museum of Art at Hamilton College, C…
Wall of the Forlorn
© Renée Stout. Image courtesy of the Ruth and Elmer Wellin Museum of Art at Hamilton College, Clinton, NY.
Artist/Maker (American, born 1958)
Date2022
MediumOil and acrylic on wood panel
DimensionsOverall: 36 × 48 in. (91.4 × 121.9 cm)
Credit LinePurchase, William G. Roehrick '34 Art Acquisition and Preservation Fund
Object number2023.3
Not on view
DescriptionPer the artist via Marc Straus, New York: This is a very personal painting inspired by the reuniting of my 84- and 87-year-old parents who divorced when I was in my 30s, then remarried when I was in my 40s but would never live together again in our family home for the next 30 years, until May of 2022. For the last 16 of those 30 years they had lived on opposite coasts and had not physically seen each other. In April of 2022 I returned to my hometown of Pittsburgh to attend the funeral of my father’s companion of 10 years and at that time I went to my family home, which I had not been in for over a decade. Upon entering I realized that our home was in serious disrepair and that my father had become a hoarder. Upon returning home to Washington DC, I called my mother and informed her about the passing of my father’s “lady friend” and the state of the house, which was shocking. I knew that he was most likely going to have a rough time processing his friend’s death, especially since her cozy home had been his escape from the environment that had clearly become a reflection of his inner turmoil or “demons.” I knew that it would not be good for him to be there alone. My parents had recently expressed to me separately that they did not want to die without seeing the other. Once I told my mother about the situation, she was back in Pittsburgh within two weeks, having traveled across the country by train from California, even though she’s an agoraphobe with a fear of traveling by herself. My mom has always been a nurturer in search of someone to rescue and I knew that her coming home to “fix” the situation would give her purpose. She is pulling it all together and so proud of what she’s accomplishing, even though she complains. Wall of the Forlorn was created out of the simultaneously overwhelming, bittersweet, sad and humorous feelings that this dysfunctional love story evoked within me. I knew that all kinds of emotions were swirling for everybody, including my sister who my mom had been living with in Stockton for the 16 years she’d been away from Pittsburgh. The painting reflects the family home’s state of disrepair. The young man represents my father, while the stains and tears in the “photograph” represent the time that has passed and his regrets. The florals on the stained and water-damaged wallpaper represent my mother’s feminine, healing touch and the hope within the story that continues to be written. Additional information provided by Aniko Erdosi from Marc Straus gallery, from Renee’s written notes on the the painting (1/7/23): "Love/Mystery/Attraction…this refers to the idea that love has always seemed like an elusive, undefinable and unpredictable “situation” to me personally and watching the evolution and arc of my parent’s relationship is what has generated the text and the overall work. The words “partial ingredients” refers to some materials used in the making of perfumes which are often used in the art of seduction. I collect perfume materials, along with healing herbs and these are often hidden within some of the three-dimensional works I create. The text is there to lead the viewer to the idea that a romance has or is taking place, but the title also suggests that this romance is not without some tension or sorrow."

Additional Details

Provenance 2023: Hamilton College (Ruth and Elmer Wellin Museum of Art), by purchase from Marc Straus, LLC, New York, NY
Inscribed Verso, upper right quadrant (black marker): "WALL OF THE FORLORN / RENÉE STOUT / (2022) / OIL & ACRYLIC ON PANEL / 36 X 48 INCHES"
Photograph by David Revette.
Carrie Mae Weems
Date: 1990 (printed 2010)
Medium: Gelatin silver print
Object number: 2011.5
Photo by John Bentham.
Walter Williams
Date: 1966
Medium: Color woodcut
Object number: 1984.393
© Mark Klett. Image courtesy of Light Work, Syracuse, NY. For educational purposes only.
Mark Klett
Date: 1999
Medium: Platinum print
Object number: 2020.8.21
Photo by John Bentham.
Walter Williams
Date: 1964
Medium: Color woodcut
Object number: 1984.394
© Jeffrey Gibson. Image courtesy of the Ruth and Elmer Museum of Art at Hamilton College, Clint…
Jeffrey Gibson
Date: 2018
Medium: Single-channel video
Object number: 2018.6
Photograph by John Bentham.
Wright Morris
Date: 1940
Medium: Gelatin silver print
Object number: 2016.17.38
Photograph by John Bentham.
Philip Guston
Date: 1966
Medium: Lithograph on paper
Object number: 1989.18
Photograph by John Bentham.
Helen Frankenthaler
Date: 1985 (published 1987)
Medium: Aquatint and sugar lift etching, lithograph and screenprint
Object number: 1989.13
© Beverly Pepper.
Beverly Pepper
Date: c. 1980
Medium: Weathering (Cor-Ten) steel
Object number: 2017.6
The Republic in Danger, from "Harper's Weekly"
Thomas Nast
Date: published May 1, 1875
Medium: Wood engraving on newsprint
Object number: 2019.13.281
The ‘Funny’ Little Boy in Trouble, from "Harper's Weekly"
Thomas Nast
Date: published November 28, 1874
Medium: Wood engraving on newsprint
Object number: 2019.13.262
Image courtesy of the Ruth and Elmer Museum of Art at Hamilton College, Clinton, NY. Photo by J…
Raphael Soyer
Date: 1968
Medium: Lithograph
Object number: 2017.14