January 15 through May 1, 2011
Fred Beans Gallery
Say the phrase "twentieth-century
art," and what comes to mind? Perhaps Jackson Pollock dripping
paint on a blank canvas with unconscious fervor, or Marcel Duchamp's
famous "Nude Descending a Staircase," which one misguided critic
referred to as "an explosion in a shingle factory." History often
remembers the innovators and pioneers, and when the tale of
twentieth-century art is told, it usually focuses on the rebellion
against "objective" art: art that "looks real."
While the abstract
painters tend to get the headlines, there were many twentieth-century
artists who quietly explored the human figure as the primary source
of inspiration and expression in their work. Many of these figurative
artists loved the ancient art of portraiture, which looks beneath the
surface, to the core of our individuality, and tries to capture that
elusive quality that makes each of us unique. Other artists were
gifted storytellers who used their work to comment on both the comedy
and tragedy of life, as well as celebrate the experiences that define
us as a culture and a nation. Some figurative artists faced inward,
toward the personal and the intimate; others faced outward,
toward the grand dramas of war and politics as well as the revealing
moments that often go unobserved, that sometimes say more about the
experience of being alive than a battle or a parade.
Drawing on the
Michener's extensive holdings of figurative art, especially in
paintings and photographs, this exhibit explored this temperamental
and stylistic dichotomy in figurative art, and included work by such
well-known regional painters as Louis Bosa, Daniel Garber, and B. J.
O. Nordfeldt; photographers Emmet Gowin, Edmund Eckstein, David
Graham, Andrea Baldeck, and Susan Bank; as well as works on paper by
Werner Drewes, William A. Smith, and Ben Solowey. Also featured were
selections from the collection of John Horton, a recent bequest to
the Michener that contains important Depression-era canvases by
painters William S. Schwartz and Guy Pène duBois.
Images, top to bottom:
William S. Schwartz (1896-1977), Come to Me All Ye That Are Heavy Laden, 1934, oil on canvas,
40 x 50 inches. James A. Michener Art Museum, Gift of the John P. Horton Estate...
Ricardo Barros (b. 1953), Isaac Witkin, 1996, carbon pigment digital print on paper,
25 3/8 x 24 inches. James A. Michener Art Museum, museum purchase funded by the Bette
and G. Nelson Pfundt Photography Endowment.
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