What Is It Telling Us?
Transcription
What Is It Telling Us?
What Is It Telling Us? PONDERING ONE OF GEORGE BELLOWS’ FINAL PAINTINGS By Kevin Salatino When the great American painter George Bellows died prematurely in 1925 at the age of 42, he had been in the midst of a gradual but conscious shift in style that was as intriguing as it was eccentric. The writer Sherwood Anderson observed, with a note of pathos in his voice, that “the late paintings keep telling you things. They are telling you that Mr. George Bellows died too young. They are telling you that he was after something, he was always after it.” 19 Far left: Detail of George Bellows’ Summer Fantasy (1924). Center: Kevin Salatino and Huntington paintings conservator Christina O’Connell assess the condition of the painting prior to its installation in the Virginia Steele Scott Galleries of American Art in July. Right: Bellows, in an undated photograph, died in 1925, less than a year after completing the painting. Portrait is courtesy of Peter A. Juley & Son Collection, Smithsonian American Art Museum, J0001254. 17 In a dazzling career spanning only 19 years, Bellows leapt, effortlessly, from achievement to achievement, his work characterized by daring technique and subject matter, incessant experimentation, breathtaking facility, and herculean productivity. The positive popular and critical reception of his late paintings—and of the mysterious “something” in them that Bellows was “after”—is particularly noteworthy in light of The Huntington’s recent acquisition of one of the most significant of his final works: the beautiful and elegiac Summer Fantasy of 1924 (see page 21), a picture of enormous ambition and, ironically, optimism, and so unlike the gritty boxing and urban scenes of his betterknown youth. In fact, the painting seems produced by the hand of a different artist entirely. Those earlier works—Stag at Sharkey’s (1909) (below, center) being the most famous—shocked their inaugural audiences not so much by their brutal and explicit imagery (“I just wanted to paint two men trying to kill each other,” in the artist’s words) as by the startling visual vocabulary Bellows had developed to express the dynamism and chaos of This work contrasts vividly with any number of Bellows’ earlier, gritty urban scenes. 18 modern life, with a brushstroke as rapid as an uppercut and a palette as raw as a bloody nose. That early subject matter—of boxers, street urchins, crowded tenements, the teeming life of New York City in a period of explosive growth— derived from the influence of Bellows’ famous teacher, Robert Henri, as did his dark, restrained palette, the legacy of Henri’s worship of the French Realist-cum-Impressionist painter Édouard Manet, an adulation he passed on to his pupil. Like Manet’s work, Bellows’ imagery expanded to include more resolutely pastoral scenes, particularly of the pastimes of the leisured classes (primarily polo and tennis), accompanied by an equal enlarging of his chromatic range—a brighter, more exuberant palette inspired by the works of Seurat and Gauguin, and the late paintings of Renoir. By 1918, Bellows—who had been interested throughout his career in color and compositional theories—had fallen under the spell of “dynamic symmetry,” a system of mathematically and geometrically conceived ideal proportions based on the study of ancient Greek architecture espoused by the theorist and painter Jay Hambidge. So important to Bellows was dynamic symmetry as a structuring principle that even his summer house in Woodstock, N.Y., was designed according to its precepts. The elaborate pantomime of Summer Fantasy is as rich in symbolism as a Renaissance allegory (think, for example, of Botticelli’s Primavera, or Allegory of Spring, with which there are clear and probably intentional parallels). The painting does not depict an actual or, frankly, even an imagined event, but rather a visionary one (see sidebar). It functions as a metaphor for, or an idealization of, the perfect summer’s day—late afternoon in the Earlier in his career, Bellows was known for his grittier subject matter. Opposite, bottom: Excavation at Night, 1908, oil on canvas, Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art, Bentonville, Ark. Opposite, top: Preliminaries to the Big Bout, 1916, lithograph, The Huntington Library, Art Collecions, and Botanical Gardens. Center: Stag at Sharkey’s, 1909, lithograph, The Huntington Library, Art Collections, and Botanical Gardens. Bellows is less widely known as a portraitist. Laura, 1915, oil on canvas, The Huntington Library, Art Collections, and Botanical Gardens. 19 Echoes of two great works can be found in Bellows’ Summer Fantasy (opposite). Top: Sandro Botticelli (Italian, 1445–1510), Primavera, or Allegory of Spring, ca. 1482, © Summerfield Press/ CORBIS. Bottom: Georges Seurat (French, 1859–1891), A Sunday on La Grande Jatte, 1884–86, oil on canvas, Art Institute of Chicago, Helen Birch Bartlett Memorial Collection, 1926.224. magical hour before sunset—thus imbuing it with nostalgia and longing. On a deeper level, the work may be interpreted as an allegory of life, from birth (the pram and nanny closest to us), through youth and adulthood (the central, striding couple and their attendants), to death, as implied by the darksilhouetted boat, a classic reference to the afterlife— all of this underscored by the lateness of day, whose lengthening shadows suggest fleeting time. The bridle path at the painting’s core sets the dominant theme: the race of life. This work contrasts vividly with any number of Bellows’ earlier, gritty urban scenes, Excavation at Night (1908) (pg. 18, bottom left), for example, where the massive, gaping excavation pit for Pennsylvania Station’s foundation is as much a metaphor for the industrial metropolis’ “satanic mills” and their dehumanizing effect as Summer Fantasy’s bucolic setting is for a lost and longedfor Arcadia. What is worth noting, however, is the essential something that connects all of Bellows’ paintings: the desire to elevate his subject matter from the merely illustrative to the metaphorical. Indeed, Summer Fantasy seems to stand as a kind of summation of the artist’s career and themes (as if he were aware that death was a beat away), akin in spirit and achievement to Georges Seurat’s magisterial Sunday on La Grande Jatte (1884–86) (lower left), a painting Bellows almost certainly knew, sharing with it an air of achievement and finality. Summer Fantasy becomes the second painting by Bellows to enter The Huntington’s collections, the first being a portrait of his half sister Laura (1915), acquired in 1983 (pg. 19). Though Laura is a brilliant example of the artist’s skills as a portraitist, Bellows is better known for his landscapes (with or without figures) and was arguably the greatest practitioner of that genre in 20th-century American art. Summer Fantasy thus fills what had been—in the absence of a Bellows landscape—a serious and longstanding The elaborate pantomime of Summer Fantasy is as rich in symbolism as a Renaissance allegory. 20 gap. The Huntington also holds a significant number of the artist’s prints, which Bellows believed to be equal in status to his paintings. He was a highly accomplished and prolific printmaker in a golden age of graphic art, and many of his most iconic lithographs can be found at The Huntington, including Stag at Sharkey’s and Preliminaries to the Big Bout (1916) (pg. 18–19). With the recent acquisition of two large and ambitious paintings by Bellows’ contemporaries, George Luks and Reginald Marsh, the context in which Summer Fantasy may be understood at The Huntington has expanded even further. Luks’ dark and powerful painting of the underbelly of the coal mining industry and its dependence on child labor, The Breaker Boys (ca. 1925) (pg. 22, top left), made at virtually the same moment as Summer Fantasy, provides a startling contrast— (continued on pg. 22) BELLOWS’ FANTASY Compositionally, Summer Fantasy is divided into a series of horizontal bands, like geological strata, granted a sense of movement by the zigzagging placement of figures in the painting’s carefully composed landscape. In the right foreground, a nanny dressed in white pushes a baby carriage; spatially closest to the viewer, she functions as what art historians call a “repoussoir” device, pulling us visually into the picture. In the left foreground, on a plane a bit further back, a large knot of figures gathers, accompanied by an imposing dog and another baby carriage. In center middle-ground, a couple (to whose central position we may attach some importance) strides forward up a gentle hill, the woman enhaloed by a translucent white parasol (or is it a hat?), her right hand extended in a kind of benediction—a Lady Bountiful of sorts. In even deeper space (at the painting’s horizontal center), several equestrians, looking as stately as a royal procession, canter along a bridle path—two white-horsed riders flanked by two dark. Finally, in the painting’s background, recreational sailboats ply a turquoise river, one boat dramatically silhouetted against the fiery reflected light of an apocalyptic sun breaking through El Greco–inspired clouds. The actors in this bucolic narrative wear vaguely historic costumes (the women more so than the men, whose clothing is more generically modern), including the anachronistic presence of parasols and long, flowing dresses. And while saturated shades of green, blue, purple, orange, and yellow dominate the landscape, the defining color of the central characters is white, and leisure the principal activity. Significantly, it is we, the viewers, to whom the painting’s main actors address themselves, as if the scene were unfolding on a stage in a theater in which we are the audience. Even the nanny in the foreground, though her face is only suggested, appears to look out of the picture and directly at us. –KS George Bellows (1882–1925), Summer Fantasy, 1924, oil on canvas, The Huntington Library, Art Collections, and Botanical Gardens. 21 CONSIGNMENTS NOW INVITED FOR AUCTIONS IN ALL CATEGORIES Bellows’ painting joins other works in the newly expanded Virginia Steele Scott Galleries of American Art, including The Breaker Boys, ca. 1925, oil on canvas, by George Luks (1867–1933); The Locomotive, 1935, tempera on concrete, by Reginald Marsh (1898–1954); and The Long Leg, ca. 1930, oil on canvas, by Edward Hopper (1882–1967). TWO MASSIVE BLUE AND WHITE BALUSTER VASES Kangxi period $100,000 - $200,000 Fine Asian Works of Art, June 24 With the recent acquisition of two large and ambitious paintings by Bellows’ contemporaries, George Luks and Reginald Marsh, the context in which Summer Fantasy may be understood at The Huntington has expanded even further. 22 aesthetic, historical, and cultural—to the latter, reflecting the complexities of the American scene in the pre-Depression twenties. Marsh’s monumental Locomotive (lower left), a work from a decade later than Summer Fantasy, and produced at the height of the Depression, promotes instead a vision of American progress and industry diametrically opposed to the sentiment of The Breaker Boys, which is unsurprising, given Locomotive’s origins as a government commission. The timeless Summer Fantasy stands outside (or falls somewhere between) both of these works, having more in common with Edward Hopper’s idealizing The Long Leg (ca. 1930) (top right), another dream of a perfect summer’s day. Hopper and Bellows were the same age and in the same class at the New York School of Art, where they were considered more-or-less friendly rivals. It is sobering to reflect that Hopper, who achieved success much later in life than Bellows, lived until 1967. While Hopper’s work was characterized throughout his career by slow, nearly invisible change, Bellows’ was defined by constant volatility and experimentation. Who knows what directions his art might have taken had he lived, like Hopper, another 40 years? We have hints, of course, of those directions, of which Summer Fantasy is one of the most fascinating. Beautiful and compelling in its mastery of light and color, its profundity of symbolic meaning, its insistent strangeness of mood, and its powerful referencing of the past while keeping a firm eye on the future, Summer Fantasy is a masterpiece of the artist’s late career—a consummation and condensation of an all-too-brief life of remarkable though truncated ambition and achievement. Kevin Salatino is the Hannah and Russel Kully Director of the Art Collections at The Huntington. International Auctioneers and Appraisers – bonhams.com/asian ©2014 Bonhams & Butterfields Auctioneers Corp. All rights reserved. Bond No. 57BSBGL0808 INQUIRIES +1 (323) 436 5552 [email protected]