Wednesday, March 15, 2017

Eight: One of a Kind

Tonight we're going to look at three artists whose talent and ambition go far beyond any classification.


Yoko Ono is one of the most important and most radical of the conceptual artists.

Since she felt that the concept was the most important aspect of a work of art, she might use any art form to realize her idea.

The bulk of Yoko's output has been experimental music. Her music is unconventional, but respected in certain quarters, and over the years she has had some major hits.

She has also produced many ground-breaking concept films. 

She is particularly well-known for producing "happenings," live events featuring some sort of surprising performance.

Some of her works are art installations featuring symbolic objects, such as might be shown in a gallery or museum.

Yoko was born and educated in Japan, but she has spent the majority of her adult life in New York, so she is sometimes considered Japanese-American.

Yoko collaborated with rock star John Lennon on several musical projects and happenings. 

Yoko and John were married in 1969; their marriage was notoriously tumultuous, highly publicized, and contentious. Yoko was reviled for breaking up the Beatles, but John's interest in conceptual art shows that he was moving beyond pop music anyway. 

Since John's murder in 1980, Yoko has preserved and promoted his legacy, but she has also resumed making music and maintains an active presence at peace events and on social media.

Note: Don't forget video



Niki de Saint Phalle was an artist whose huge talent manifested itself in just about every art form: sculpture, painting, performance art, conceptual art, and sculpture gardens.

Her most significant work was sculptures—from a small size for galleries to a huge size that can be entered and explored—and environments that showcase sculpture.

Her art was unified by an overwhelming desire to express women's values and to defy the standards of patriarchal society. Niki invented new forms, new processes, and new themes for art.

Since the male-dominated contemporary art world loved high seriousness, subtle conceptualism and formal use of color, Niki created art that was exuberant, cheerful, over-the-top, fantastical, superstitious, wildly colorful…and irresistible.

Niki was born in France, but raised in the U.S. As an adult, she lived in France and Italy, but she retired to Escondido, California.

Niki collaborated with Swiss sculptor Jean Tinguely on many projects. They were lovers for awhile, and eventually married, but they mostly lived separately because Niki was so obsessed with making art.




Judy Chicago was one of the most important artists of the 20th century, and she still retains that position in the 21st century.

Judy defined and promoted Feminist art, and asserted the value of women's bodies and women's point of view. Her designs were based on female sex organs, and she forced the art world to accept this imagery by the power of her work.

Judy innovated the idea of collaborative art, raising the old tradition of quilting bees to the level of fine art production. She created projects in which she employed many crafts people, while maintaining her identity as creator of the whole.

She promoted women's crafts—such as embroidery, ceramics, and tapestry—which had been considered unworthy of notice by the art world.

She originated Feminist Art Education. She devised a curriculum centered around women's achievements in the arts, and developed a program for college students in California.

Judy was a growth-oriented person who eventually came to feel that her original approach to Feminism was wrong because she assumed that all women were friends and all men were enemies. She came to see that some men were feminists, whether or not they used the term, and some women disrespected and undervalued themselves and other women. 

Note: Don't forget video


Conclude with a review.






Saturday, March 11, 2017

Seven: Sculpture, Part Two

Review:

Women entered the history of sculpture in the mid-1800s in America.

The first wave of women sculptors produced Neoclassical work in marble that depicted characters from mythology or fiction.

Harriet Hosmer

Zenobia, the Queen of Palmyra, c. 1859
St. Louis / Jan's photo, 2010

Emma Stebbins

Commerce, 1860
Hecksher / Jan's photo, 2012

Edmonia Lewis

The Death of Cleopatra, 1876
Smithsonian / Jan's photo, 2010

Anna Hyatt Huntington

Joan of Arc, 1915
Legion of Honor
Photo by Dan L. Smith, 2010

Abstraction:

In the mid-20th century, women sculptors turned to abstraction, and pushed sculpture in whole new directions.

Last week we covered 2 of them: Louise Nevelson and Barbara Hepworth.

Louise Nevelson
End of Day—Nightscape IV, 1973
Nelson-Atkins / Jan's photo, 2013

Barbara Hepworth

Sea Form (Atlantic), 1964
Dallas / Jan's photo, 2012

Preview of Tonight's Session:

This week we will cover two more sculptors who worked with abstract forms:
  • Beverly Pepper
  • Ursula von Rydingsvard

Next we'll look at 2 sculptors who created forms that represent their internal, psychological experience:
  • Louise Bourgeois
  • Kiki Smith

Then we'll look at a pair of living sculptors who have limited their subject matter:
  • Magdalena Abakanowicz
  • Deborah Butterfield

Finally, we'll look at sculptors in the Bay area:
  • Ruth Asawa 
  • Viola Frey
Abstraction, continued:

B. 1922: Beverly Pepper

Beverly Pepper is one of the most important living sculptors, now age 95.

She was one of the most versatile and ambitious sculptors in the last 4 decades of the 20th century.

She has created monumental abstract forms in a variety of materials; her simple forms call attention to the material itself, and especially to the texture of the surface.

In the 1970s Beverly started making large-scale earthworks, known as Land Art.

Beverly was born and educated in the U.S., but she has spent most of her adult life in Italy.

She was married for almost 70 years to a well-known journalist.

B. 1942: Ursula von Rydingsvard

Ursula von Rydingsvard is a world-renowned, living sculptor who carves abstract forms on massive stacks of red cedar planks.

Her most famous works are monumental forms that resemble geological formations, organic forms, or giant vessels.

She was born in Germany to parents of Polish descent, but her family moved to the U.S. when she was 8 years old, and she has spent her entire career in various studios in Brooklyn.

Ursula is married to Paul Greengard, a neuroscientist who is a winner of the Nobel Prize.

Expressionism:

Other women artists became interested in the expressive capabilities of sculpture. They wanted to represent their inner worlds through forms that were symbolic and moving.

1911-2010: Louise Bourgeois

Louise Bourgeois was one of the great sculptors of the 20th century because she produced a constant stream of highly influential innovations.

Louise introduced a whole new purpose for sculpture: expression of the artist's internal emotions and psychological traumas.

Her childhood trauma was centered around her father: he was domineering and temperamental, he was verbally abusive to Louise, and, unbeknownst to her, he installed his English mistress as governess for herself and her 2 siblings, a situation that continued for 10 years. When she discovered the truth, she tried to commit suicide.

Louise constantly changed her materials, her style and her symbols.

Her career took off in the 1960s with various exhibits, but she didn't receive full national recognition until the 1980s. At the age of 71, she was the first woman to have a full retrospective at the Museum of Modern Art.

Louise was born in Paris and came to the U.S. as an adult; she became a citizen.

She was married one time, to a prominent American art historian, and raised 3 sons during the early part of her career.


B. 1954: Kiki Smith

Kiki is one of the most influential sculptors of her generation.

She uses sculpture to express the general conditions of the human body, with an emphasis on feminine issues.

She works in many other media than sculpture, and is especially well known as a graphic artist.

For sculpture, Kiki generally produces works in bronze.

She first became famous in the 1980s, and has produced a constant stream of provocative work since that time.

Kiki is a single whose career networking blends into her social life.


Fixed subject:

Some artists limit their work to a particular subject, with variations that suggest various feelings or states of mind, as well as formal innovation.

B. 1930: Magdalena Abakanowicz

Magdalena is pretty much the first, and only, Polish artist to become a major star in the international art scene.

Her works are widely exhibited by U.S. museums.

Magdalena has limited her subject to monumental standing human figures that are headless and hollow. She creates the work from coarse sackcloth, stiffened with synthetic resins, then translates this form to bronze.

She grew up during the Communist era in Poland, and most of her work expresses what it felt like to live under Communism.

She lives and works in Warsaw. She is married to a civil engineer.

Her career started in the 1960s, but her signature works date from the 1990s to the present.

B. 1949: Deborah Butterfield

Deborah is one of the most widely collected living sculptors; many American museums exhibit her work.

She has restricted her subject to horses, while experimenting with material and technique.

The attraction of Deborah's work is that although it appears to be made of natural materials, such as branches and bark, it is actually cast in bronze, with a patina that mimics the texture of wood.

Deborah lives on a ranch in Montana where she tends several horses, practices riding skills, and supports community riding events.

She feels that the figure of the horse is a canvas or screen on which she can project her feelings, about herself, about horses, and about nature in general.

Her career has been important since the 1970s.

She is married to a very interesting artist named John Buck.


California Sculptors:

California, being a unique place, has a unique type of sculpture.

1926-2013: Ruth Asawa

Ruth Asawa was one of the great sculptors of the 20th century because of the innovative and engaging forms she created she created in wire.

Her famous wire works date from the 1950s and 1960s.

In the 1970s and 1980s she created many fountains for the city of San Francisco, and became known as the Fountain Lady.

In the 1980s and 1990s, Ruth was active in support of arts education.

Ruth was a well-known and beloved figure in San Francisco for 5 decades.

Ruth was married to a successful architect, and she raised 6 children in the beginning of her career.

1933-2004: Viola Frey

As an innovator of ceramic figurative sculpture, Viola Frey was a major star of the California art scene for 3 decades.

Viola's most important work consists of giant size figures of women and men in a funky, California style.

She innovated the practice of using the surface of the sculpture as a background for abstract expressionist painting.

Viola was a professor at the California College of Arts and Crafts in Oakland, where she got her own training.

Her life partner was one of her sculpture instructors.

Six: Sculpture, Part One

This is the first of two lectures on women sculptors. We're going to cover 14 artists whose works may be seen in American museums.

Sculpture is a much more challenging form of art than painting.

While tribal cultures make wonderful carvings in wood, the tradition of Western European sculpture values the durability of marble and bronze.

Both marble and bronze are expensive materials and difficult to work, and making a sculpture  usually requires the assistance of highly skilled craftsmen.

Because of this, there is much less sculpture to study and compare—fewer sculptors, slower development of styles, less sculpture on exhibit at museums.

Outline History of Sculpture

Sculpture was the preferred art form for the Greeks, and they favored nude standing figures of "ideal" proportions.

The Romans developed realistic portrait busts, but they also copied the famous Greek works, and tried to apply similar aesthetic values to new statues.

After the fall of the Roman Empire, sculpture was exclusively for churches and depicted religious subjects. Sculptors were part of the interior-decoration team of craftsmen.

During the Renaissance, secular figure sculpture was revived, but it tended to defer to the standards and subjects set by the Greeks and Romans.

In the 1600s, as the European economy grew, there was more sculpture and it tended to be more flamboyant. This was the Baroque period.

In the 1700s, sculptors again looked back to Greek and Roman models. This was the Neo-Classical period.

Women do not enter the history of sculpture until the 1800s in the U. S. There are simply no records of women making sculpture that was known to the public until then, either American or European.

Here are some examples of works that would have been iconic when women first started becoming professional sculptors.

Greek

This sculpture was intended to show the ideal proportions of an Athenian athlete.

Polykleitos
Doryphoros (Spear-Bearer)
Roman copy in marble of bronze work from 400s BC
Naples / Internet

Roman

The Augustus of Prima Porta is based on the Doryphorus. Augustus was the first emperor of Rome.

Augustus of Prima Porta
Internet

Renaissance—1500s

This is the first free-standing nude sculpture since ancient times.

Donatello
David, 1430-1432
Bargello Palace / Internet

Michelangelo
David, 1504
Accademia, Florence / Internet


Baroque—1600s

Gian Lorenzo Bernini
Apollo and Daphne, 1622-1625
Galleria Borghese, Rome / Internet


Neo-Classical

Antonio Canova
Perseus with the Head of Medusa, 1804-1806
95" tall
Metropolitan / Internet


19th Century Sculpture

In the 19th century the market for sculpture expanded significantly in the U.S. As the economy grew, more institutions required official statues, and there developed a class of wealthy people with cultural aspirations who collected and commissioned sculptures for their homes.

Sculptors generally modeled their works in clay first, and translated them into marble only when they received a commission. Sculptors' studios also served as showrooms where clients could see various clay or plaster models, called maquettes, and they could order a their own version in marble or bronze. To fill out their product line, sculptors also did portrait busts and medallions.

Rome was the center of the sculpture world because high quality marble was readily available, as well as stonemasons with centuries of experience. American sculptors would go there to train, and then set up their own studios for their careers. They were part of a large group ex-pat American artists and writers.

Another advantage of Rome was that everyone who could travel made it a destination. Many wealthy tourists stopped by the studios of sculptors—which were actually listed in tourist guides—and purchased or commissioned a sculpture, selecting from a display of maquettes. It was sort of a fad among a certain class of people.

In the 19th century, the dominant style of sculpture was Neo-classicism. Sculptors looked back to the sculpture of Greece and Rome and emulated their idealized proportions, their balanced compositions, and their mythological references.

Typical of male sculptors at the time are Hiram Powers and William Wetmore Story. Here are examples of their works.

Hiram Powers
California
Internet

Hiram Powers
Fisher Boy
Internet

Hiram Powers
America
Internet
William Wetmore Story
Libyan Sibyl, modeled 1861, carved 1868
Internet

William Wetmore Story
Orpheus with his Lyre
Internet

American Women of 19th Century Sculpture

In the 19th century, the U. S. economy and social philosophy had developed sufficiently that there was a class of wealthy and educated women who began to think and write about a woman's role in society, and specifically to suggest that the traditional role could be escaped and a woman could live as independently as a man.

Some women had sufficient financial independence that they dared to avoid marriage, so that their activities could be self-determined.

There came to be a class of women who rejected marriage, while engaging in a busy social life with other women. Intense friendships formed among the women, and in some cases these developed into romances.

Some of these independent women began to aspire to be professional artists, and to achieve the same excellence as the great sculptors they admired.

A cluster of American women sculptors was attracted to Rome and formed an active and nurturing community there. In Rome, women felt free to be open about their romances, as well as to dress and act in unconventional ways. They were far away from their families, and the Romans didn't care about them because they were outsiders.

Unfinished portrait
Charlotte Cushman
by Thomas Sully
The catalyst for the women's sculpture community in Rome was an actress named Charlotte Cushman. She was a highly celebrated performer in the U.S., especially noted for playing mens' roles, a common practice at the time.

When she retired from the stage (at the age of 36), she went to Rome, where she set up housekeeping with her current romantic partner, a successful writer named Matilda Hays, and others.

Charlotte had recently discovered the work of sculptor Harriet Hosmer, and she invited Harriet to join them, which she did in 1853. Charlotte used her active social life to promote the young artist.

In 1857 they were joined by an older sculptor, Emma Stebbins, who soon became romantically involved with Charlotte. As with Harriet, Charlotte promoted Emma's career.

In 1865 they were joined by Edmonia Lewis, an African-American sculptor who also had Native American heritage. She too enjoyed Charlotte's patronage.

Here is a closer examination of the biographies and work of these three sculptors.

Harriet Hosmer was the first woman sculptor to become a success in America.

Her peak period was the 1850s and 1860s.

She created marble sculpture in the dominant Neo-classical style that favored idealized figures and mythological or literary references.

Many of her sculptures depict women, both fictional and historical, who had been victimized sexually and abandoned by society.

She lived and worked in Rome.

Harriet lived a liberated lesbian lifestyle in Rome and was an ardent feminist.


1815-1882: Emma Stebbins

Emma Stebbins was among the first women to become successful sculptors in America.

She produced her most famous works between 1859 and 1869.

Emma worked in marble but her style was more realistic than Neo-classical. She was the first sculptor to depict contemporary subjects such as ordinary workmen.

For large commemorative works Emma created statues in bronze.

She spent her short career in Rome, then returned to the U.S.

Her most important relationship was with Charlotte Cushman, a famous American actress who was the center of the expat group of artists and writers in Rome.


1845-1911: Edmonia Lewis

Edmonia Lewis was the first African-American to be a successful sculptor. Her heritage was also part Native American.

Though she came from a disadvantaged background, Edmonia had a first class education, financed by her brother, who made his fortune as a barber in Bozeman, Montana.

She was part of the group of women sculptors who worked in marble and made their careers in Rome.

Edmonia applied the Neo-classical style to figures that represented her heritage. Sometimes she depicted Native American characters, and other times she depicted characters who represented African women.

Her peak period of productivity was the late 1860s and the 1870s.


Early 20th Century


In the first half of the 20th Century, the scene changed for American women sculptors. Instead of moving to Rome and working in marble, they stayed home and switched to bronze.

Instead of modeling in an idealized manner, they tended to be more naturalistic.

Instead of competing for large public commissions, they tended to specialize in small-scale sculptures for use in interior decoration.

Instead of banding together in same-sex communities, the sculptors pursued separate lives and conventional relationships. Frequently their careers were supported by their wealthy family connections.

The most prominent of these women was Anna Hyatt Huntington, who rose to fame as an animal sculptor and went on to excel at equestrian statues for public venues.

1876-1973: Anna Hyatt Huntington

Anna was the most prominent woman sculptor of the first half of the 20th century.

She first achieved fame as an animal sculptor, then progressed to heroic equestrian statues.

Anna Hyatt married Archer Huntington, an art scholar and philanthropist.

They established a sculpture garden in South Carolina called Brookgreen.

Anna adamantly rejected modernism.

Two of her works may be seen in front of the Legion of Honor Museum in San Francisco. Anna was a member of the Legion.



2nd Half of 20th Century

In the second half of the 20th Century, sculpture in America changed dramatically for women.

The art scene was much more sophisticated, and it gradually became more internationalized. European women began to migrate to the United States, and U.S. museums began to show works by the most famous European women.

Instead of modestly hoping to make a living with decorative works, women began to compete like men to create aesthetic innovations that would knock the art world off its feet.

The result was a sudden jump from naturalism to abstraction—taking pleasure in the invention of abstract forms for their own sake and for their suggestive possibilities.

Abstract sculpture is an art form where the innovative developments were shared equally by women and men. No longer were women merely followers; they were in the advance guard. While male artists are generally favored by museums, curators could not deny the power of abstract sculpture by women, and all of the following women are shown frequently.

Several men made abstract sculptures in the mid-20th century. Two of the best were Henry Moore, a British sculptor, and Isamu Noguchi, an American sculptor who was raised in Japan. Here are examples of their work.


Henry Moore, 1898-1986
Working Model for ‘Oval with Points,’ 1969
SFMOMA / Jan's photo, 2016

Isamu Noguchi, 1904-1988
Samothrace, 
1984
SFMOMA / Jan's photo, 2016

Isamu Noguchi, 1904-1988
Cronos, 1947-1964
SFMOMA / Jan's photo, 2016

Abstraction:

Several women pursued pure abstraction in sculpture.

1899-1988: Louise Nevelson

Louise was one of the most important sculptors of the 20th century.

Her sculptures were flat, abstract compositions of scrap wood, painted a single color, usually black, but sometimes white or gold. 

Most of Louise's works were designed to be hung on a wall like a painting. Her free-standing compositions also tended to be flat and wall-like.

For outdoor sculpture, Louise worked in metal.

The most successful phase of her career started in the 1960s and continued through the 1980s.

Louise was born in Ukraine but her family came to the U.S. when she was 6 years old. 


1903-1975: Barbara Hepworth

Barbara was among the first sculptors in England to create abstract forms in stone.

She used direct carving technique, instead of working from a maquette modeled in clay.

She was a leading figured in the international art scene throughout her career, peaking in the 1950s.

Her work is exhibited by many American museums.


Sunday, February 5, 2017

Four A: Review Quiz

Review Quiz

One: Last week we learned about 8 new artists:

a) Bridget Riley
b) Emily Carr
c) Florine Stettheimer
d) Agnes Pelton
e) Georgia O'Keeffe
f) Agnes Martin
g) Kay Sage
h) Frida Kahlo

Match the 8 art photos below with the artists listed above.

#1




# 2


This is for O'Keefe. Need painting of desert.
#3




#4




#5





#6




#7





#8






Two:

Which artist was Mexican? _________
Which artist was British?   __________
Which artist was Canadian? _________
Which artist was into Transcendental abstraction? _______
Which artist documented the social life of elite Manhattan? ________
Which artist was into architectural dreamscapes? _________
Which artist painted the desert of New Mexico? _______
Which artist used painting as a form of meditation? _______

Saturday, February 4, 2017

Four: Early 20th Century in America

In the first half of the 20th century, American women painters fall into three revealing groups:
Social Documentarians
Desert Abstractionists
Surealists

Social Documentarians:

There was a strong trend among American women to use painting to document different cultures, especially those that were threatened. We have already seen Grace Hudson's paintings of Pomo indians and Evelyn McCormick's records of early California architecture.

Tonight we're going to consider two others in this trend. In Canada, Emily Carr documented the culture of the native tribes, and in New York, Florine Stettheimer portrayed the lifestyle of upper class Manhattanites in the 1920s.

1871-1945: Emily Carr, Canadian

> Emily Carr was the most important Canadian artist of the early part of the Century.

> Emily's major contribution was to apply the aesthetics of European Modernism to Canadian subjects.

> In her first phase, her goal was to document the cultures of Canada's native tribes; however, her modern interpretations are more evocative than literal.

> In the middle of her career, Emily abandoned art because she could not make a living from it. After her art began to receive some recognition, when she was in her 50s, Emily resumed painting.

> Her focus shifted to the landscape of Western Canada and her style became more lyrical and more personal.


> She belongs in this story because:
  • Canada is part of America, and her home in Victoria is closer to California than to the major cities of Canada.
  • She attended art school in San Francisco.
  • She was interested in art as documentation, like California artists Grace Hudson and Evelyn McCormick.

1871-1948: Florine Stettheimer

> Florine Stettheimer depicted the lifestyle of upper-class society in Manhattan in the 1920s and 1930s.

> She used a fake-naive style to create humorous detachment.

> She refused to compete in the art market, showing her work mainly in her own apartment, and declining to sell her paintings.

> She saw marriage as a threat to her independence, and lived with unmarried sisters.

> The Stettheimer sisters were famous for holding gatherings of artists and intellectuals, called salons, in their apartment.

> Florine also created stage designs for a few famous productions, and she was an excellent poet.


Desert Abstractionists:

Three American artists withdrew to the desert in the middle of their lives.



> Agnes Pelton was a modernist painter and a pioneer of transcendental abstraction.

> She started her career in the 1910s in Greenwich Village. She was doing figurative compositions in a Symbolist style.

> At the age of 50 she moved from New York to Cathedral City, a small village in the desert near Palm Springs, California.

> Here she did two kinds of painting. 
  • Most importantly, she produced abstractions that expressed the tenets of Transcendentalism.
  • In order to support herself, she painted lovely desert scenes. 
> Agnes was considered a role model for the younger artists in the Transcendental Painting Group, which made her the first president of the group.

> Her work was widely exhibited in California in the 1930s and 1940s, but she died a neglected figure.


> Georgia O'Keeffe was one of the most important American artists of the 20th century.

> Her career was defined by her relationship with well-known art showman, Alfred Stieglitz. As her mentor, her promoted her career. As a photographer, he doted on her image and his many photographs of her increased her fame. He also became her husband.

> She first came to prominence in the 1920s as one of America's first abstractionists.

> She soon turned to more representational work, but her style was to simplify forms to their essence, until they become almost abstract.

> She painted cityscapes and landscapes, as well as intense close-ups of individual objects.

> In her 60s, Georgia moved to New Mexico, and began to focus on desert subjects such as animal skulls and cactus flowers, as well as the landscape around her home.

> For the next two decades she was very productive, and received great recognition.

> Georgia's life as a desert recluse, and her talent for posing, made her a popular figure with photographers, and earned her great fame in the press. 


1912-2004: Agnes Martin

> Agnes Martin was a significant Abstract painter in the 1970s, 80s, and 90s

> She as in her 60s when she found her signature style.

> She invented a new form of abstraction that combined certain principles of Minimalism with the basic motivation of Expressionism.

> Her intention was to create work that would generate the types of peaceful and harmonious moods that she liked to experience, but she used the simplest possible means, eliminating detail and complication.

> She was born in Canada, but she spent her adult life in the US, and became a citizen when she was 40.

> In mid-life she moved from New York to New Mexico, where her full talent came to fruition.

    
Surrealists: 

Four women painters of the first half of the 20th century are generally considered Surrealists. Dorothea Tanning and Kay Sage were from the US, Frida Kahlo was Mexican and Leonora Carrington was an English-born Mexican artist.


> Kay Sage was one of the most prominent Surrealists in America.

> Her approach to Surrealism was to replace recognizable symbols with mysterious  architectural forms in austere, unidentifiable landscapes.

>The major period of her career was from 1940 to 1955.

> She is known for her marriage to Surrealist Yves Tanguy.

> She committed suicide at the age of 65 due to depression and failing eyesight.


1907-1954: Frida Kahlo, Mexican

> Frida Kahlo was a Mexican painter who specialized in self-portraits. She was active in the 1930s and 1940s and the early part of the 1950s

> She celebrated the primitive style of Mexican national and indigenous culture.

> She considered herself a realist, but she used symbols in a way that associated her with Surrealism.

> She was married to the famous Mexican painter, Diego Rivera, who also served as her mentor. Their marriage was notoriously stormy, largely due to his affairs with other women.

> Her life was defined by pain due to childhood case of polio and serious injuries from a bus accident in her late teens.


1917-2011: Leonora Carrington, British

> Leonora Carrington was a dedicated Surrealist throughout her career. Like Salvador Dalí, she used inscrutable symbolism from her own personal dreams.

> She was active as a painter from the 1940s through the end of the century.

> She was always recognized by the art world as an important Surrealist, but she is less famous than other Surrealists because she did not promote her work strongly, and most of it is held in private collections.

> She is known for her affair with Surrealist painter Max Ernst, and for a bout with mental illness in her early 20s.

> She was born in England, but she spent her career in Mexico City.

> She was also a prolific writer.


1910-2012: Dorothea Tanning

> Dorothea Tanning was a leading Surrealistic painter in the 1940s.

> In the 1950s and 1960s, Dorothea developed a unique style of painting in which bodies and body parts, vague faces, and biomorphic forms are shown as if through as prism, with planes faceted like jewels.

> In the 1970s she switched from painting to soft sculpture.

> In the 1990s, when she was in her 80s, she began to concentrate on writing, both fiction and nonfiction.

> She is known for a long-term marriage to Max Ernst.

> She is one of the few women painters to be self-taught.






Five: Mid-20th Century in America


Surrealism in America

Surrealism was basically a European movement
that was brought to America by immigrating artists.

In Europe, the two major Surrealists were Magritte and Dalì. 
Here are examples of their work:


Salvador Dalì
The Persistence of Memory, 1931
Internet


Rene Magritte
The False Mirror, 1928
Internet

The most prominent men to bring Surrealism to America were 
Yves Tanguy, from France, and Max Ernst, from Germany.
Here are examples of their work:


Yves Tanguy
Indefined Divisibility, 1942
Internet


Max Ernst
The Attirement of the Bride, date not given
Internet

Both Yves Tanguy and Max Ernst were associated with women Surrealists.

Yves Tanguy was married to Kay sage.


Kay Sage
Men Working, 1951
Joslyn / Jan's photo

A Story about Max Ernst, Surrealist

We first met Max Ernst in a photo of Sophie Taeuber-Arp:


Max Ernst, Gala, Sophie Taeuber-Arp and Paul Eluard, 1928

Here's another sample of his work:

Gala Éluard, 1924
Internet

> At that time he was in a menage à trois  with a woman known as Gala and her husband, the poet Paul Eluard. He was 37 and he had previously been married for a few years and fathered a son. 

Soon after his relationship with Paul and Gala, he married again. 
That relationship apparently lasted 10 years.

> When he was 46 Max met a beautiful and wealthy young painter named Leonora Carrington, age 20 who was fascinated by Surrealism. 

He divorced his second wife to live with Leonora in France. They had a couple of peaceful years in which both of them produced a lot of paintings. 

> With the outbreak of World War II, Max was arrested, first by the French and later by the Germans. 

He managed to escape with the help of  art patron Peggy Guggenheim. 

Max and Peggy moved to New York and got married in 1941, his 3rd marriage. 

> In 1942 he met Surrealist painter Dorothea Tanning; he was 51 and she was 32. 

They began a relationship, and in 1946, when his divorce from Peggy was complete, 
Max and Dorothea were married. 

That marriage lasted the rest of his life, 30 years.

Surrealist Artists who had relationships with Max Ernst




> Leonora Carrington was a dedicated Surrealist throughout her career.

> Like Salvador Dalí, she used inscrutable symbolism from her own personal dreams.

> She was active as a painter from the 1940s through the end of the century.

> She was always recognized by the art world as an important Surrealist, but she is less famous than other Surrealists because she did not promote her work strongly, and most of it is held in private collections.

> She is known for her affair with Surrealist painter Max Ernst, 
and for a bout with mental illness in her early 20s.

> She was born in England, but she spent her career in Mexico City.

> She was also a prolific writer.


> Dorothea Tanning was a leading Surrealistic painter in the 1940s.

> In the 1950s and 1960s, Dorothea developed a unique style of painting in which bodies and body parts, vague faces, and biomorphic forms are shown as if through as prism, with planes faceted like jewels.

> In the 1970s she switched from painting to soft sculpture.

> In the 1990s, when she was in her 80s, she began to concentrate on writing, both fiction and nonfiction.

> She is known for a long-term marriage to Max Ernst.

> She is one of the few women painters to be self-taught.

Abstract Expressionism 

Abstract Expressionism was developed in New York in the late 1940s and 1950s.

This movement dominated American art for a couple of decades, and made New York the new center of the art world.

Artists painted huge canvases that were intended as reflections of their individual psyches, and they hoped that in doing so they were tapping into universal inner sources.

Abstract Expressionists valued spontaneity and improvisation, and they felt that the process of making the painting was the most important value.

Painters were very interested in the qualities of paint and in the way paint was applied to the canvas.

There were two basic approaches to Abstract Expressionism.

One approach emphasized dynamic, energetic marks on canvas.

The other was a quieter look at more open fields of color.

In either case, the imagery was primarily abstract, but sometimes vaguely recognizable objects would appear.

The two most prominent Abstract Expressionists were Jackson Pollock and Willem de Kooning.

Here are examples of their work:


Jackson Pollock
Autumn Rhythm (Number 30), 1950
Internet


Willem de Kooning
Excavation, 1950
Internet

Both Pollock and de Kooning were married to Abstract Expressionists.

Jackson Pollock was married to Lee Krasner.

Willem de Kooning was married to Elaine de Kooning.

Both Lee and Elaine put their husband's career before their own. The disadvantage was that they were seen as Wives first, and Artists, second.

The advantage was that as wives they received attention that they might have been denied on their own.

First Generation


> Lee Krasner was an important Abstract Expressionist painter in the 1950s and 1960s.

> Her work is admired for all-over compositions, with formal rhythms and subtle color harmonies.

> Lee is known for her marriage to Jackson Pollock, her efforts to channel his talent, and her promotion of his career.

> Lee reached her full potential after Jackson's accidental death. Her energy was liberated from constant concern for her husband, and his studio provided her with ample room to work.


1918-1989: Elaine de Kooning

> Elaine de Kooning was both a gifted figurative painter and a committed Abstract Expressionist. 

> She started her career in the 1950s and continued to paint through the 1980s. 

>She is best known for her portraits, especially a series of drawings and paintings depicting John F. Kennedy. 

>In addition, she was an important figure in the art world because of her work as a critic and educator.

>She was also known as the wife of Willem de Kooning, one of the stars of Abstract Expressionism.


Second Generation

Abstract Expressionism lasted long enough that a second generation of artists came to New York to follow in the footsteps of Lee and Elaine, and their more famous husbands, Pollock and de Kooning. The two most prominent women painters in this generation were Helen Frankenthaler and Joan Mitchell. Helen made her career in the same milieu in New York as the first generation, but, after making her name in New York, Mitchell spent a major portion of her career in France.

1928-2011: Helen Frankenthaler

> Helen Frankenthaler a prominent member of the second generation of artists in the Abstract Expressionism movement in New York.

> Helen was a pioneer of Color Field painting. She invented the soak-stain technique which became quite a fad among painters for awhile.

> In the 1960s she was married to Robert Motherwell, one of the first generation of Abstract Expressionists.


1926-1992: Joan Mitchell

> Joan Mitchell was a prominent member of the second generation of artists in the Abstract Expressionism movement in New York.

> Joan differed from other members of this New York-based group by moving to Paris, after she had established her reputation.

> She continued to paint Abstract Expressionist style and to exhibit with the New York school.


Summary of Ab Ex in a Mural by Red Grooms


Red Grooms,
Kaldis (artist), Krasner, Elaine / Newman, Grooms, Unknown artist, Chamberlain on floor / Ruth Kligman, De Kooning, Pollock / Rosenberg (pro de Kooning), Reinhardt, Kline, Greenberg (pro Pollock), Stamos (artist) in foreground / Frankenthaler, Motherwell, Rothko in front with unknown artist / Guston asleep in back, 1986
Colored pencil and crayon on 5 sheets
Yale
Photo by Dan L. Smith, 2013

Realists:

Although Abstract Expressionism dominated art criticism and art training for a couple of decades, many artists deliberately bucked the trend, while others just ignored it.


> In the mid-1930s, when portraiture was considered too old-fashioned to count, Alice Neel developed an approach that somehow looked contemporary and relevant. 

> She used the strong, liberated brushstrokes of the Ab Ex artists; she captured the revealing poses and gestures that had also been Elaine de Kooning's strength.

> But faces were her principal interest, and she was brilliant at conveying personality and attitude without pretense.

> In the first part of her career, during the 1940s and 1950s, she focused on  ordinary people: workers, struggling artists, gays, ethnic types. She did not get many exhibitions.

> In a desperate bid for attention in her later years, she began to ask gallery owners and other taste-makers to sit for her. It worked. In her 70s she became quite famous.


> Janet Fish is a contemporary realist who revitalized the still-life genre.

> She is known for paintings of colorful objects with reflective surfaces, but some of her paintings feature objects with complex, overlapping patterns and few reflections.



Californians:

San Francisco had its own art scene in the mid-20th century based around its own art institute and local art movements.


1929-1989: Jay DeFeo

> Jay DeFeo was at the center of the Beat community of artists, poets, and musicians in San Francisco in the 1950s.

> Her masterpiece is called The Rose,  in which she used paint as a medium for relief sculpture. Not only is her technique innovative, but her final image is inspiring.

> Her later work changed to a more personal direction, and her technique was intensely experimental. This work is not shown very much.


1938-1990: Joan Brown

> Joan Brown was a major figurative artist in the Bay Area in the 1960s and 1970s.

> Her principal theme was her own life.

> Her style changed from thickly-pigmented abstractionism to flat, decorative figuration.

> In the 1980s, Joan became a devotee of a guru from India and started painted more symbolic work which has not been exhibited much.

> Later she began focusing on public sculpture, often in the form of an obelisk.

> She died at the age of 52 in an accident while installing one of her obelisks in a temple in India. 



Currently Oakland is home to one of the most important contemporary painters, Chinese immigrant Hung Liu. 

Born 1948: Hung Liu, Chinese-American

> Hung Liu is one of the most important and well-known contemporary painters in the U.S.

> She grew up during Mao's Cultural Revolution and worked in a labor camp.

> She received a degree in mural painting in 1975. She learned to paint in a socialist-realist style. 

> In China she was a successful art teacher with her own television show.

> She immigrated from China in 1984 in order to study art at UCSD.

> In 1990 she became a professor at Mills College, a position she held for 20 years.

> Since her retirement in 2010 she has been incredibly productive.

> Her paintings usually depict figures and scenes from China's past.