Feast and FaMine - Portland Art Museum`s Online Collections
Transcription
Feast and FaMine - Portland Art Museum`s Online Collections
Checklist All dimensions are given in inches; height precedes width precedes depth. Glen Alps (American, 1914–1996) 1. Ferry Boat Café, 1946 Lithograph; unnumbered edition of 10 image: 9 x 10 7/8 sheet: 12 x 12 3/8 The Vivian and Gordon Gilkey Graphic Arts Collection; Gift of the artist 93.40.12 Mario Avati (French, 1921–2009) 2. The Alsatian Wine Bottle, 1957 Etching and aquatint; edition 1/2 plate: 17 5/8 x 23 7/8 sheet: 19 7/8 x 26 The Vivian and Gordon Gilkey Graphic Arts Collection 86.13.450 Frank Boyden (American, born 1942) 3. Menu: October 8, 2010, 2010 Drypoint with watercolor and graphite; edition of approx. 5 plate: 12 x 10 sheet: 15 1/2 x 12 3/4 Gift of the artist in honor of Tom Firman 2013.84.1 Leonetto Cappiello (French, born Italy, 1875–1942) 6. Contratto, 1922 Color lithograph; large edition, size unknown image and sheet: 55 3/8 x 39 1/4 Promised gift of Daniel Bergsvik and Donald Hastler Enrique Chagoya (American, born Mexico, 1953) 7. The Enlightened Savage, 2002 Digital pigment prints wrapped around 10 cans with silkscreened cardboard box; edition 14/40 stacked cans: 16 x 14 x 5 box: 5 x 16 x 7 Collection of Jordan D. Schnitzer 8. Pyramid Scheme, 2009 Digital pigment prints wrapped around 10 cans with silkscreened cardboard box; edition 9/40 stacked cans: 16 x 14 x 5 box: 4 3/4 x 16 1/4 x 6 1/2 Collection of Jordan D. Schnitzer Sue Coe (English, active United States, born 1951) 9. Feed Lot, 1991 Lithograph; edition 6/100 image: 18 1/8 x 16 1/8 sheet: 22 1/2 x 16 1/8 Museum Purchase; Funds provided by Diane and Richard Lowensohn 2013.123.1 10. Standing Pig, 1993 Etching; edition 3/18 image: 9 x 113/4 sheet: 14 7/8 x 21 7/8 Museum Purchase; Funds provided by the son of a Union Butcher 2013.123.2 4 Frank Boyden and Margot Voorhies Thompson Frank Boyden (American, born 1942) Margot Voorhies Thompson (American, born 1948) 4. Menu du 13 Septembre 2007 (Menu of 13 September 2007), 2007 Drypoint with watercolor and ink; edition 31/35 plate: 11 5/8 x 7 3/4 sheet: 14 x 10 Gift of Frank Boyden 2007.72 Aaron Fink (American, born 1955) 22.Peach Ice Cream Cone, 2004 Color photolithograph; Gilkey Center proof, aside from edition of 20 image: 20 1/2 x 15 1/4 sheet: 30 x 22 Gift of Mahaffey Fine Art, Print Workshop, Portland 2009.83.4 Félix Bracquemond (French, 1833–1914) 5. Selection of dinnerware from the Service Rousseau, 1866–75 Handpainted earthenware with transferprinted designs Various dimensions Lent by Helen Jo and William Whitsell Warrington Colescott (American, born 1921) 11. Suite Louisiana: Down Tchoupitoulas Street (Chef Emeril), 1996 Soft‑ground etching, aquatint, and spit‑bite aquatint, with vibrograver, à la poupée inking, and relief rolls through stencils, printed in color; state iii proof before edition of 80 plate: 17 3/4 x 23 3/4 sheet: 22 1/2 x 30 Gift of the artist 2001.57.4 Claude Gadoud (French, 1905–1991) 23.Vins Camp Romain, 1925 Color lithograph; edition size unknown image and sheet: 63 x 74 Promised gift of Daniel Bergsvik and Donald Hastler Robert Gober (American, born 1954) 24. Untitled (Fresh Pigs), 1993–94 Color lithograph; edition 63/75 image: 111/4 x 11 sheet: 12 1/4 x 12 Collection of Jordan D. Schnitzer 12 Adolf Dehn Adolf Dehn (American, 1895–1968) 12. Watermelon Eaters, 1945 Lithograph; edition 10/12 image: 7 1/2 x 9 7/8 sheet: 9 5/8 x 13 3/4 Gift of Mrs. Adolf Dehn 1999.8.16 13. Cornucopia and Her Pestilential Sister— Famine, 1949 Lithograph; edition 11/30 image: 12 7/8 x 17 1/4 sheet: 16 7/8 x 21 Gift of Mrs. Adolf Dehn 1999.8.380 James Ensor (Belgian, 1860–1949) 14. Menu pour Charles Vos (Menu for Charles Vos), 1896 Etching; edition size unknown plate: 6 1/8 x 4 1/4 sheet: 7 7/8 x 7 Private collection 15. Menu pour Charles Vos (Menu for Charles Vos), 1896 Etching with brown ink; edition size unknown plate: 6 1/8 x 4 1/4 sheet: 7 7/8 x 5 3/4 Private collection 16. Menu pour Charles Vos (Menu for Charles Vos), 1896 Etching with watercolor; edition size unknown plate: 6 1/8 x 4 1/4 sheet: 111/4 x 9 3/8 Private collection 17. Menu pour Ernest Rousseau (Menu for Ernest Rousseau), 1896 Etching; edition size unknown plate: 7 1/8 x 5 1/4 sheet: 111/2 x 9 1/2 Private collection 18. La Gourmandise (Gluttony), from the series Les Péchés capitaux (The Deadly Sins), 1904 Etching with hand-coloring; edition size unknown plate: 3 3/4 x 5 3/4 sheet: 6 3/8 x 9 7/8 Private collection Bob Evans (Welsh, born 1947) 19. Late Dinner, 1988 Lithograph; edition 36/100 image: 8 x 12 1/8 sheet: 12 1/8 x 16 The Vivian and Gordon Gilkey Graphic Arts Collection 1997.228.321 Philip Evergood (American, 1901–1973) 20. Still Life, 1944 Lithograph; edition of 200 image: 111/2 x 16 1/4 sheet: 12 3/4 x 18 3/4 Gift of Mrs. Yeffe Kimball Slatin 51.226 Mary Fedden (British, born 1915) 21. Ginger Beer Bottle, 1971–72 Color lithograph on paper; edition 6/70 image: 16 1/8 x 22 1/2 sheet: 20 7/8 x 27 The Herbert and Nancy Bernhard Collection 87.44.7 25. Untitled (Whole Pigs), 1993–94 Color lithograph; edition 63/75 image: 21 x 11 sheet: 22 3/8 x 12 Collection of Jordan D. Schnitzer David Lance Goines (American, born 1945) 26.Sauvez les poisons (Save the Fish), 1998 Color lithograph; unnumbered edition of 2,085 image and sheet: 24 x 171/2 Promised gift of Daniel Bergsvik and Donald Hastler 27. Chez Panisse: Grow What You Eat, 2008 Color lithograph; unnumbered edition of 1,253 image and sheet: 24 x 15 ¼ Promised gift of Daniel Bergsvik and Donald Hastler George Grosz (German, 1893–1959) 28.Geselligkeit (Dinner Party), 1929 Graphite and ink 18 1/4 x 23 5/8 Museum Purchase; Ella M. Hirsch Fund 38.48 Camille Pissarro (French, born Danish West Indies, 1830–1903) 44.Marché aux légumes, à Pontoise (Vegetable Market at Pontoise), 1891 Etching image: 10 x 8 sheet: 12 5/8 x 91/2 The Vivian and Gordon Gilkey Graphic Arts Collection 79.50.633 Commissioned through New Deal art projects L43.6.103 Sister Mary Corita Kent (American, 1918–1986) 31. Fresh Bread, A Secret Agent, 1967 Color screenprint; edition size unknown image: 14 1/8 x 22 1/4 sheet: 14 3/8 x 23 1/8 The Vivian and Gordon Gilkey Graphic Arts Collection 86.13.573 45.La Charrue (The Plow), 1901 Color lithograph image: 8 7/8 x 6 1/4 sheet: 9 5/8 x 6 3/4 Bequest of Charles Henry Leavitt 59.26.51 Käthe Kollwitz (German, 1867–1945) 32.Bettelnde (Beggars), 1924 Lithograph; edition size unknown image: 15 1/8 x 9 7/8 sheet: 12 1/2 x 15 The Vivian and Gordon Gilkey Graphic Arts Collection 86.13.490 Henri Privat‑Livemont (Belgian, 1861–1936) 46.Absinthe Robette, 1896 Color lithograph; edition size unknown image and sheet: 46 1/4 x 32 5/8 Promised gift of Daniel Bergsvik and Donald Hastler 33.Deutschlands Kinder hungern! (Germany’s Children Are Starving!), 1924 Lithograph; edition size unknown image: 17 x 111/4 sheet: 211/8 x 15 The Vivian and Gordon Gilkey Graphic Arts Collection 85.14.365 Roy Lichtenstein (American, 1923–1997) 34.Sandwich and Soda, from the portfolio X + X (Ten Works by Ten Painters), 1964 Screenprint on clear plastic; edition 174/500 image: 19 x 23 sheet: 20 x 24 Collection of Jordan D. Schnitzer 35.Still Life with Windmill, from the series Six Still Lifes, 1974 Color lithograph and screenprint with de‑embossing; edition 62/100 image: 29 1/4 x 38 1/8 sheet: 35 7/8 x 44 1/8 Collection of Jordan Schnitzer Family Foundation David Hockney (English, active United States, born 1937) 29.Menu—2nd January 1980, 1980 Color offset lithograph; edition size unknown sheet: 18 3/4 x 12 7/8 (sight) Collection of Pamela Berg Victor Prouvé (French, 1858–1943) 47. Brasserie de Vézelise, 1914 Color lithograph; edition size unknown image and sheet: 46 1/2 x 62 Promised gift of Daniel Bergsvik and Donald Hastler 44 Camille Pissarro 36.Tea Service, 1984 Set of 21 glazed ceramics in custommade box; artist’s proof, aside from edition of 100 box: 20 x 26 x 7 5/8 Collection of Harsch Investment Property Management Jean‑François Millet (French, 1814–1875) 37. Les Glaneuses (The Gleaners), 1855 Etching plate: 7 1/2 x 10 sheet: 8 1/4 x 13 The Vivian and Gordon Gilkey Graphic Arts Collection 80.122.514 38.La Baratteuse (Woman Churning Butter), 1855–56 Etching plate: 7 x 4 3/4 sheet: 8 1/2 x 5 7/8 Bequest of Charles Henry Leavitt 59.26.47 Thomas Richard Hood (American, 1910–1995) 30.Dinner Time, 1935/42 Etching; edition size unknown image: 8 x 7 sheet: 10 3/4 x 8 1/2 Allocated by the U.S. Government, 43 Pablo Picasso 39. La Bouillie (Gruel), 1861 Etching plate: 6 5/8 x 5 1/8 sheet: 10 x 6 1/2 The Vivian and Gordon Gilkey Graphic Arts Collection 78.52.679 40.Le Départ pour le travail (Leaving for Work), 1863 Etching plate: 151/4 x 12 1/8 sheet: 19 3/4 x 16 1/8 Gift of Mrs. George Ware in memory of her husband, George Ware 66.10 Claes Oldenburg (American, born Sweden, 1929) 41. Alphabet in the Form of a Good Humor Bar, 1970 Color lithograph; edition 174/250 sheet: 29 x 20 Gift of Mr. Ronald Shindler and Mr. Lowell Shindler 81.107.2 Mel Ramos (American, born 1935) 48.Miss Fruit Salad, 1990 Color screenprint; edition 73/125 sheet: 45 5/8 x 38 Collection of Jordan D. Schnitzer Nelson Sandgren (American, 1917–2006) 49.The Winemaker, 1960/70 Lithograph; edition 18/20 image: 21 7/8 x 16 3/8 sheet: 30 x 22 1/8 The Vivian and Gordon Gilkey Graphic Arts Collection 80.122.65 Cindy Sherman (American, born 1954) 50.Tureen with cover and underplate, Madame de Pompadour (née Poisson) pattern, 1990 Porcelain with painted and silk-screened decoration; edition 14B /25 underplate: 2 1/2 x 14 1/2 x 22 tureen: 10 x 7 3/4 x 15 Museum Purchase; Funds provided by Nani S. Warren and Katherine “Kitty” Bunn 2009.15a–c Wayne Thiebaud (American, born 1920) 51. Lunch, from the suite Delights, 1964 Etching; artist’s proof from edition of 100 image: 5 x 6 3/4 sheet: 14 x 11 Gift of the E. Mark Adams and Beth Van Hoesen Adams Trust 2007.59.127 52.Delights, 1965 Artists’ book with 17 prints, including etching, etchings with aquatint, and drypoint; edition of 100 13 1/2 x 113/8 x 3/4 Gift of Manuel Neri 2001.69 53.Candy Apples, 1987 Woodcut; edition 43/200 image: 16 1/2 x 15 1/2 sheet: 24 x 23 Lent by Ronna Hoffman 54.Cakes and Pies, 2006 Color direct gravure; edition 23/40 image: 22 x 18 1/4 sheet: 30 x 25 1/2 Collection of Jordan Schnitzer Family Foundation Henri de Toulouse‑Lautrec (French, 1864–1901) 55.La Modiste, Renée Vert, menu (The Milliner, Renée Vert, Menu), 1893 Lithograph; edition size unknown (few impressions) image: 12 1/4 x 8 1/2 sheet: 211/2 x 12 1/2 Private collection 62.Steaks, 99 cents, c. 1986 Screenprint; not editioned (few impressions known) sheet: 21 3/4 x 14 3/4 Collection of Jordan D. Schnitzer 53 Wayne Thiebaud 56.La Fillette nue, menu (The Naked Girl, Menu), 1898 Lithograph; no edition (five known impressions) image: 8 1/2 x 7 1/2 sheet: 18 1/2 x 111/2 Private collection Beth Van Hoesen (American, 1926–2010) 57. Cocktail Hour, 1946 Lithograph; no edition image: 12 1/2 x 9 3/8 sheet: 19 1/8 x 12 5/8 Gift of the E. Mark Adams and Beth Van Hoesen Adams Trust 2007.60.13 58.Chinese Cabbage (Cabbage), 1960 Etching with roulette and drypoint; edition 6/25 plate: 9 7/8 x 7 7/8 sheet: 14 1/2 x 14 Gift of the E. Mark Adams and Beth Van Hoesen Adams Trust 2007.60.70 59. Lunch, 1965 Etching and aquatint with open bite; edition 4/35 plate: 8 1/8 x 7 5/8 sheet: 12 7/8 x 12 1/8 Gift of the E. Mark Adams and Beth Van Hoesen Adams Trust 2007.60.469 42.Profiterole, 1990 Color lithograph; edition 15/57 sheet: 311/4 x 41 Collection of Jordan D. Schnitzer Andy Warhol (American, 1928–1987) 60.Piglet, from Wild Raspberries by Andy Warhol and Suzie Frankfurt, 1959 Lithograph with watercolor; edition size unknown sheet: 17 1/2 x 22 1/2 Collection of Jordan Schnitzer Family Foundation Pablo Picasso (Spanish, active France, 1881–1973) 43.Le Repas frugal (The Frugal Repast), from Suite des Saltimbanques, 1904 Etching with scraper; edition of 250 plate: 181/4 x 14 7/8 sheet: 25 1/2 x 19 7/8 Courtesy of John Szoke Gallery, New York 61. Torte á la Dobosch (Dobosch Torte) from Wild Raspberries by Andy Warhol and Suzie Frankfurt, 1959 Lithograph with watercolor; edition size unknown sheet: 17 1/8 x 11 Collection of Jordan Schnitzer Family Foundation 50 Cindy Sherman The Campbell’s Soup Company After Andy Warhol (American, 1928–1987) 63.The Souper Dress, 1966–67 Screen-printed tissue, wood pulp and rayon mesh with binding tape; edition size unknown 38 x 22 Collection of Jordan D. Schnitzer Feast and Famine The Pleasures and Politics of Food James Abbott McNeill Whistler (American, active in England and France, 1834–1903) 64.The Wine Glass, 1858 Etching; edition size unknown (41 known impressions) image: 3 1/4 x 2 1/8 sheet: 6 x 4 1/2 Gift of Ada A. Chipman 86.1.2 Joe Wirtheim (American, born 1978) 65.Break New Ground, 2007, printed 2013 Color offset lithograph; unnumbered edition of 500 image and sheet: 18 x 12 Courtesy of the artist and The Victory Garden of Tomorrow 66.Keep ’Em Flying, 2007, printed 2013 Color offset lithograph; unnumbered edition of 500 image and sheet: 18 x 12 Courtesy of the artist and The Victory Garden of Tomorrow This exhibition is organized by the Portland Art Museum and curated by Mary Weaver Chapin, Ph.D., Curator of Graphic Arts; it is supported in part by the Vivian and Gordon Gilkey Endowment for Graphic Arts and the Exhibition Series Sponsors. Cover: 34 Roy Lichtenstein January 11 – May 4, 2014 Portland Art Museum, Oregon Feast and Famine the etchings of the pre-Impressionist peintre-graveur JeanFrançois Millet. Les Glaneuses (The Gleaners) depicts three women stooped over a recently harvested field to collect grain left behind, an age-old right of widows and destitute peasants that dates back to biblical times. Millet captures their fatigue and contrasts the meager holdings of the peasant women to the bountiful harvest behind them, creating an image that addresses both the plight of the poor and the politics of abundance.1 Despite their ungainly postures, the women bear a sense of dignity, a feature again found in Millet’s La Baratteuse (Woman Churning Butter), in which the simplified setting, monumentality of the young peasant woman, and dramatic lighting elevate this daily task to the realm of the iconic. A generation later, Impressionist Camille Pissarro honored agricultural labor, from the preparation of the fields in La Charrue (The Plow) to the presentation of the produce at market in Marché aux légumes, à Pontoise (Vegetable Market at Pontoise). Pissarro here also highlights the social interactions in the lively market, where food is the catalyst that brings people together. The Pleasures and Politics of Food further suggests that this is not an ordinary party. For a private dinner in 2007, to celebrate the opening of a gallery exhibition featuring works by both Ensor and Oregon artist Frank Boyden, calligrapher Margot Voorhies Thompson and Boyden reinterpreted this menu, replete with an image of the head of James Ensor on a platter. The food and, especially, the beverage industries were among the top commissioners of color posters when they emerged as the most prominent advertising medium in the 1890s. Brightly colored, these lithographic posters were plastered across the major cities of Europe well into the twentieth century. Bold images like Henri Privat-Livemont’s Absinthe Robette enticed the urban bourgeoisie to indulge in the pleasures of absinthe, a strong hallucinogenic liqueur with a beautiful green color. Privat-Livemont made the beverage even more enticing by depicting a lightly draped, comely young woman offering up the drink, thereby linking the enjoyment of drinking with the sensual pleasure of Moving from the fields to the market and thence to the table, Feast and Famine enters the private realm of dining. As one of humanity’s fundamental needs, food is a constant across cultures and centuries. More than daily sustenance, food is a social lubricant, a focal point for celebrations, a bearer of cultural meaning, and a sensual delight. Its scarcity causes wars, its production ignites debate, and its sale and distribution have spawned complex networks of industry and advertising. It is not surprising, then, that artists have engaged with this topic throughout history, from prehistoric cave paintings depicting wild game to lavish still lifes documenting the At the turn of the nineteenth century, artists including Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec used their talents to create menus for feasts, public and private. Toulouse-Lautrec was as passionate about food as he was his art and produced menus on commission for clients, including the artists’ group the Société des Indépendants. For them Lautrec created a stylish menu card, La Modiste, Renée Vert, picturing a pert milliner at work. Around the same time, Belgian artist James Ensor was busy creating a menu for his friend and cabaret owner Charles Vos, seen in this exhibition in three versions: a first state before text, a state with the handwritten menu, and an impression with hand-coloring. Ensor’s caustic humor is evident in his depiction of the party revelers, who arrive carrying fish, pigs, and chickens. Other guests have already overindulged and can be seen in the ramparts vomiting and defecating on those below. The fare offered—including mégalosor (megalosaurus) and cuissot d’ange (angel haunch) bounty and wealth of a society. Feast and Famine explores food-related themes—from the fields to the table, and from the profound to the humorous—in the graphic arts since 1850. For most of human history, sustenance has gone hand in hand with hard physical labor, a concept that is easily forgotten in the twenty-first century, where consumers are largely divorced from the sources of their food. In this exhibition, the intimate tie between food and labor is best expressed in 32 Käthe Kollwitz Ramos’s sensibilities are shaped by the Pop movement, which elevated everyday objects to the realm of the monumental. Traditionally, still life was considered a minor genre, but in the hands of Pop artists, it was renewed in innovative and often humorous ways:2 Claes Oldenburg morphed a towering ice cream bar into an edible alphabet, Andy Warhol turned banal soup cans into wearable art, and Roy Lichtenstein completely transformed an ordinary tea service by using his graphic, Ben-Day dot style to create a three-dimensional expression of his prints and paintings. Wayne Thiebaud has turned his gaze to the still life as well. However, he eschews the Pop aesthetic of smooth, glossy surfaces for a more tactile approach, evident in the rich burr of his drypointed lines in Delights, an album of seventeen intaglio prints. Thiebaud often worked beside his colleague and friend Beth Van Hoesen, whose own portraits of food share a graceful linear quality. Mary Corita Kent advanced food as a catalyst for change in her screenprint of 1967, Fresh Bread, A Secret Agent, where she muses, “What kind of a revolution would it be if all the people in the whole world would sit around in a circle and eat together?” Today, artists are deeply engaged with the politics and production of food. Sue Coe advocates for a vegan diet and champions the rights of animals in work such as Feed Lot and Standing Pig, recent acquisitions of the Portland Art Museum. Poster artists, too, sound the call to action, as in David Lance Goines’s Sauvez les poisons (Save the Fish) and Grow What You Eat. Here in the Pacific Northwest, where residents enjoy a bounty of local and organic produce, meat, and wine, graphic artist Joe Wirtheim encourages his Pop artists focused on the actual foodstuffs, while other artists have examined the people at the meal and the social atmosphere that surrounds them. George Grosz encapsulated the corruption and decadence of Weimar Germany in his drawing Geselligkeit (Dinner Party), in which nine diners engage in conversation around a table loaded with delicacies. Adolf Dehn later delineated the lively chatter of two middle-class ladies in Watermelon Eaters. Philip Evergood’s Still Life focuses instead on the gulf of silence separating an affluent couple, and in Glen Alps’s Ferry Boat Café, there is no escaping the isolation of the commuting diners. 6 Leonetto Cappiello 37 Jean‑François Millet touch. Leonetto Cappiello used a similar, although more modest approach, in his poster for Contratto, in which a young woman holds up an oversized glass of champagne. Indeed, artists frequently mix food and sex into a potent visual cocktail, inflaming one sense by fanning another, an effect perfectly and ironically captured by contemporary American artist Mel Ramos in Miss Fruit Salad from 1990. Social isolation prevails, as well, in the young Pablo Picasso’s Le Repas frugal (The Frugal Repast), among the most iconic representations of the despair of hunger. Although not produced as a political statement, it shares the power one sees in the work of Käthe Kollwitz, a graphic artist and activist who turned her attention to the least fortunate in German society. Bettelnde (Beggars) and Deutschlands Kinder hungern! (Germany’s Children Are Starving!) were both published in 1924, a time when inflation threatened the daily lives of thousands of Germans. More recently, Sister 41 Claes Oldenberg 10 Sue Coe fellow Portlanders with posters inspired by the classic designs of World War I victory-garden broadsides to plant urban gardens and raise chickens. Traveling a broad course from the field workers of Millet to the fast-food abundance of the Pop artists, people are returning to a local, sustainable model of eating. Feast and Famine offers a look at the pleasures and politics of food, one bite at a time. —Mary Weaver Chapin, Ph.D. Curator of Graphic Arts 1 Alexandra R. Murphy, ed., Jean-François Millet: Drawn Into the Light (Williamstown, MA: Sterling and Francine Clark Art Institute, 1999), p. 81. 2 John Wilmerding, The Pop Object: The Still Life Tradition in Pop Art (New York, NY: Acquavella Gallery and Rizzoli, 2013), p. 11.