DP: Recently, you helped mount the exhibit, Philip Guston: Paintings and Drawings 1964-1978. Guston was intensely focused on drawing, what he referred to as his ‘pure drawings.’
MM: The works were chosen from illustrations as well as some of the more intimate works that reflected my parents’ lives together during this critical period in my father’s work that roughly corresponds with the entries in my mother’s journals from 1966 to 1976. The exhibition begins a little earlier to illustrate the transition from abstraction to figuration and ends late with some of his more tender depictions of their marriage, encompassing the year following my mother’s stroke in early 1977. Anders Bergstrom, the Hauser & Wirth director most associated with Guston, and I selected the works in the show and their display.
DP: Coinciding with this exhibition is the publication of the book you edited of your mother’s journals, Life with P. Journals, 1966-1976. How did this come about?
MM: I’ve always felt that my mother’s writings ought to be more widely known. I had a small press publish a volume of her poetry and other writings, Alone with the Moon. I’ve always wanted to publish her journals, but it wasn’t until the Guston Foundation staff scanned and organized her notebooks that I felt I could undertake that process. This Guston exhibition that includes some of the works reproduced in Life with P. seemed like a perfect way to launch the book.