Press release: Huntington Library displays photography by local students

SAN MARINO, Calif. —An innovative partnership between The Huntington Library, Art Collections, and Botanical Gardens and East L.A.’s Esteban E. Torres High School has produced some pretty snappy results: An exhibition of photography by students that will be displayed along more than 1,000 feet of construction fence surrounding The Huntington’s Education and Visitor Center project.

The students’ artwork was unveiled today at an event marking the culmination of the collaboration, the first of a series of activities The Huntington and Torres aim to do through their “2nd Campus” program.

“At a time when so many headlines suggest that K–12 education is in dire straits, we’re seeing proof of what can happen when you give students and teachers a little support and a lot of license,” said Steven S. Koblik, Huntington president. “We’re delighted with the results and are equally pleased that we will soon have an expansive display space on which to present them.” The construction fence will be adorned with life-size photographs of students holding the photographs they created. It goes up in early June.

The work will be on display through early 2015, when construction of the new Education and Visitor Center is expected to be complete.

‘Useful Hours’ exhibit to open in June at Huntington

 

SAN MARINO, Calif.—Taking its title from a verse stitched in a 1796 sampler by 10-year-old Anne “Nancy” Moulton, “Useful Hours: Needlework and Painted Textiles from Southern California Collections,” on view at The Huntington Library, Art Collections, and Botanical Gardens June 1–Sept. 2, 2013, explores the development of needlework and painted textiles in the United States in the late 18th and early 19th centuries. With a selection of 29 rare and finely wrought examples, the exhibition offers extraordinary insight into the early training, daily lives, and social and cultural values of American women during this rich period in American history.

“Useful Hours” includes several exceedingly rare pieces of 18th-century American needlework, drawn in large part from the collection of Victor Gail and Thomas H. Oxford, a promised gift to The Huntington, as well as from the collections of Los Angeles County Museum of Art and private lenders. The 25 surprisingly beautiful, touching, and painstakingly executed examples of American works are juxtaposed with four examples of British needlework, a related painting, American furniture, and other decorative arts objects, along with books and manuscripts from The Huntington’s collections.

“I hope visitors feel the sense of amazement that I feel when I explore these young women’s accomplishments,” said Harold B. “Hal” Nelson, The Huntington’s curator of American decorative arts. “Their technical skill and creativity within needlework traditions of the time are truly marvelous. I also think people will be surprised when they realize these remarkable pieces are all from Southern California collections,” he added. “A common misconception is that the best American art collections are only on the East Coast, but when you see these pieces you instantly realize that is far from the case.”

About The Huntington

The Huntington Library, Art Collections, and Botanical Gardens is a collections-based research and educational institution serving scholars and the general public. More information about The Huntington can be found online at www.huntington.org.

Visitor Information

The Huntington is located at 1151 Oxford Rd., San Marino, Calif., 12 miles from downtown Los Angeles. It is open to the public Monday, Wednesday, Thursday, and Friday from noon to 4:30 p.m.; and Saturday, Sunday, and Monday holidays from 10:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Summer hours (Memorial Day through Labor Day) are 10:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Closed Tuesdays and major holidays. Admission on weekdays: $20 adults, $15 seniors (65+), $12 students (ages 12–18 or with full-time student I.D.), $8 youth (ages 5–11), free for children under 5. Group rate $11 per person for groups of 15 or more. Members are admitted free. Admission on weekends and Monday holidays: $23 adults, $18 seniors, $13 students, $8 youth, free for children under 5. Group rate $14 per person for groups of 15 or more. Members are admitted free. Admission is free to all visitors on the first Thursday of each month with advance tickets. Information: 626-405-2100 or www.huntington.org.

What to do for New Year’s in Pasadena

When New Year’s Eve approaches, Pasadena both grinds to a halt and spins into a frenzy. People working on the Tournament of Roses Parade floats are usually feverishly putting on fresh flowers until the early hours of the morning. The parade horse people are camping out and pulling an all-nighter on the freeway braiding the manes and tails of their horses and trying to keep warm.

Yet for those who aren’t involved in the actual parade or football game, things slow down. Offices close because no one can get into Old Pas or other areas on the parade route. And many streets are blocked off. Some people just leave Pasadena. I used to take the Gold Line to Downtown Los Angeles and then the Amtrak to San Diego  or drive up and off to Orange County’s South Coast Plaza.

Because many employees can’t get to their place of work, many attractions are closed on New Year’s Day including the Huntington Library, Pacific Asia Museum, the Pasadena Museum of California Art and the Norton Simon. If you can (or plan ahead and see these attractions on Monday, 31 December 2012), stick around and see these beautiful institutions that make Pasadena unique.

If you’re new to the area or just visiting, you’ll want to be sure to see other sights in Pasadena. Want to get away from the madding crowd? Try the Huntington Library, Art Collections and Botanic Gardens. This might not be spring, but there’s plenty blooming there. Some of the trails (such as the Australian Garden or the Desert Garden) are rarely traveled and you can get some solitude. The Rose Garden isn’t in its prime, but there are still flowers blooming. In the Desert Garden, the succulents are blooming, especially the aloes.

There are also the Chinese Garden and the nearby Japanese Garden. When I was there last week, the gingko trees had turned yellow and the leaves were just beginning to fall. The camellia bushes are close to blooming. Wednesday through Monday (closed Tuesdays) from 12 p.m. to 4 p.m. you can get something to eat at the Chinese Garden Tea House.  We tried the garlic shrimp spring roll for $6.95 and the Cantonese short ribs soup with rice noodles for $11.95.

If you can think ahead, make reservations for the Tea Room. For $27.99 per person (plus tax) you get unlimited tea and visits to the buffet of savory finger sandwiches, cheeses, fresh fruit, seasonal salads, deserts and scones.

Highlights of the Art Collections are “The Blue Boy” by Thomas Gainsborough (circa 1770), but the Huntington also has one of the major Lincoln collections in the nation and two exhibits explore that time era: “A Strange and Fearful Interest: Death, Mourning, Memories and the American Civil War” which ends 14 January 2013 and “A Just Cause: Voices of the American Civil War” which ends 7 January 2013.

If you like variety, you can hit the Pacific Asia Museum and the Pasadena Museum of California Art which are just one-building away from each other off of Union. That’s just north of Colorado and East of Los Robles.  Garden lovers stop by and see “The Garden in Asia” exhibit which looks at objects that illustrates the importance of the garden in Asia. Asian cultures revere their elders and this is explored in “The Art of Continuity: Revering our Elders.”  There’s also an exhibit on ceremonial art in Indonesia and the “Kimono in the 20th Century.”

The Pasadena Museum of California Art has exhibit on various artists such as Greta Magnusson Grossman (“A Car and Some Shorts”), Paul Landacre (“White on Black: The Modernist Prints of Paul Landacre”), and textile artist Guillermo Bert.

The Norton Simon Museum is at the very beginning of the Tournament of Roses Parade  and is open New Year’s Eve from 12 noon until 4 p.m., but close on New Year’s Day. The museum is deceptively small and has a lovely little garden. What you’ll really want to see if Van Gogh’s 1889 “Self-Portrait” which is on loan from the National Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C. Other current exhibits include the still lifes (“Significant Objects: The Spell of Still Life”) and Connor Evert lithographs (“Studies in Desperation: A Suite by Connor Evert”).

In nearby Arcadia, the Los Angeles County Arboretum and Botanic Garden is open on New Year’s Day. You’ve probably seen the Queen Anne Cottage on TV. Built in 1885 and now considered on the National Register of Historic Places, the building was used for the opening sequence of the TV show “Fantasy Island” and the lagoon near it was used for a sequence in one of the Tarzan movies.

The Descanso Gardens in Flintridge La Cañada, is just down the 210 from Pasadena and is open every day except Christmas Day. The camellia forest should be about ready to bloom.  If you’re lucky the Boddy House, home of E. Manchester Boddy, the founder of Descanso Gardens, will be open. Call ahead to check.

Other things to do include a visit to one of the area Chinatowns–Downtown Los Angeles, Alhambra, Monterey Park and Arcadia. Check on Yelp for recommendations. The San Gabriel Valley has excellent Chinese food available.

January 1, is just the beginning of New Year’s celebrations because there’s still the Chinese New Year’s (in February) and the Persian New Year’s (in March).  Happy New Year!

For information about the parade route, street closures or the football game, visit the Tournament of Roses website.

Catherine Allgor named Director of Education at Huntington

Catherine Allgor (Courtesy Franz Moeller)

SAN MARINO, Calif.—Following a national search, The Huntington Library, Art Collections, and Botanical Gardens has named Catherine Allgor, Ph.D., its Nadine and Robert A. Skotheim Director of Education. Allgor is an acclaimed professor of history at the University of California, Riverside. She joins the Huntington staff Feb. 1, 2013.

 

Allgor takes the helm from Susan Lafferty, who stepped down from her position in August to pursue a doctoral degree in education.

 

Allgor has been at UCR since 2001 and has established herself as a leading historian of first ladies. She is known for her scholarly work on Dolley Madison, Abigail Adams, and Louisa Adams, among others, and is a frequent commentator on television and in other media on issues having to do with the role of the first lady. Her 2006 book, A Perfect Union: Dolley Madison and the Creation of the American Nation, served as the basis for the film “Dolley Madison,” produced by PBS for its American Experience series.

 

“The education program at The Huntington is at a pivotal point,” says Huntington president Steve Koblik. “We find ourselves in the enviable position of having a spectacularly talented education team doing some very exciting, innovative work. Catherine comes to us with key insights into education, and with high energy, creativity, and the drive to take us to the next level.”

 

At The Huntington, Allgor will be responsible for nearly 20 staff members working on a range of projects, from school tours to teacher training to school partnerships with the Pasadena Unified and Los Angeles Unified School Districts. She will also oversee more than a thousand volunteers, including 400 docents who provide enrichment for students and adult visitors touring the art, botanical, and library collections as well as select temporary exhibitions.

 

“I am proud and honored to be joining an institution as distinguished as The Huntington Library,” she said. “Education is at the heart of The Huntington’s mission, and I look forward to building on the amazing work of Sue Lafferty and her staff.”

 

Allgor’s accomplishments at UCR are numerous; most recently she held a three-year UC Presidential Chair appointment, from 2009 to 2012, given only to select, distinguished members of the university’s faculty. In her position, she has created and taught numerous courses on women’s history, American history, the history of race and slavery, and political history at both graduate and undergraduate levels. Beyond campus, Allgor has worked in various Southern California school districts, leading teacher workshops to improve teaching focusing on new trends in history, education, and innovative teaching techniques.

 

She frequently is called on to participate in teacher training institutes nationwide, has consulted at numerous museums, and has provided advice to the White House, the U.S. Mint, and the National Portrait Gallery, among others. In addition, she serves on the James Madison Memorial Fellowship Foundation, a presidential commission that funds teachers in their pursuit of advanced degrees.

 

Before joining the faculty at Riverside, Allgor taught at Claremont McKenna College, Harvard University, and Simmons College. She began her career as an actor and interpreter at Plimoth Plantation in Plymouth, Mass., where, in historical character, she worked as a first-person interpreter.

 

She holds an associate degree in theatre arts from Bucks County Community College in Newtown, Penn., a bachelor’s degree in history from Mt. Holyoke College, and two master’s degrees and a doctorate in history from Yale University.

Upcoming events at the Huntington

CLASSES & WORKSHOPS

Silverpoint Drawing Workshop
NOV 3 & 10, SATURDAYS, 9 AM–2 PM
Students will learn the historic technique of silverpoint—drawing with a fine silver stylus or wire—as seen in the exhibition “Alpine Skeletons: Marsden Hartley Silverpoint Drawings.” Artist Sylvana Barrett leads this two-part workshop. REGISTER

Preschool Series: Huntington ArtVentures
NOV 7, 14, 21 & 28, WEDNESDAYS, 10 AM–NOON
Preschoolers explore the galleries in search of textures, colors, shapes, and other “art forms” in this series led by Laura Moede. Each session includes stories, art activities, and more. Ages 3–4. REGISTER

Teen Photography Series: Past and Present in Focus
NOV 10 & 17, SAT, 10 AM–1 PM
Civil War images and contemporary subject matter will inspire teenage photographers in this workshop led by Alex Sanchez, exploring how the art of photography has changed in the last 150 years. The two-part class includes outdoor and gallery sessions and a tour of the Civil War photography exhibition in the Boone Gallery. Ages 14–17. REGISTER

Preserving Workshop: Quick Pickling Basics
NOV 17, SAT, 9–11:30 AM
On the birthday of Nicolas Appert (1749-1841), the inventor of canning, learn how to make your own delicious pickles. Home-preserved foods are a flavorful addition to the holiday table. Perfect for gift-giving, too! Ernest Miller of the Farmer’s Kitchen leads this hands-on workshop. REGISTER

Flower Arranging Workshop: Australian Accents
NOV 17, SAT, 10 AM–NOON
Flowers and greenery native to Australia lend their distinctive beauty to floral designs in this workshop led by Flower Duet. Using eucalyptus and leucadendron stems as architecture, students add long-lasting flowers to create texture-rich centerpieces that will stay fresh right through Thanksgiving. REGISTER

Curator Tour: “Alpine Skeletons: Marsden Hartley Silverpoint Drawings”
NOV 28, WED, 4:30–5:30 PM
In the 1930s, American artist Marsden Hartley traveled to the Bavarian Alps and produced a series of delicate silverpoint drawings that captured the spare geometries of the mountain landscape. Curator James Glisson leads a private tour of the exhibition showcasing these rarely-seen works from The Huntington’s collections. REGISTER

LECTURES & CONFERENCES

Garden Talk & Sale: California Native Gardening
NOV 8, THURS, 2:30 PM, FREE
Helen Popper, author of California Native Gardening: A Month-by-Month Guide, discusses the Golden State’s unique seasonal rhythms and offers calendar-based tips for both beginning and experienced native gardeners. Plant sale follows the program. MORE

Systems of Life: Politics, Economies, and the Biological Sciences, 1750-1850
NOV 9–10, FRI–SAT, 8:30 AM–5 PM
This conference explores the intellectual history of the late 18th and early 19th centuries through the lens of conceptual innovation in the fields of politics, economics, and biology. PROGRAM & REGISTRATION

In Conversation: Lesley Vance and Ricky Swallow with Christopher Bedford
NOV 11, SUN, 2–4 PM
Christopher Bedford, co-curator of the exhibition “Lesley Vance & Ricky Swallow” and director of the Rose Art Museum at Brandeis University in Boston, leads a conversation with the artists inside the gallery, exploring issues of inspiration, display, and relevance. RESERVE NOW

An Isherwood Conversation
NOV 20, TUES, 7:30 PM, FREE
Join artist Don Bachardy and literary scholar Katherine Bucknell for conversation about author Christopher Isherwood, best known for his Berlin Stories, on which the musical Cabaret is based. Bachardy, a noted portraitist, was Isherwood’s life-partner, and Bucknell is the editor of the author’s diaries. A book signing follows the program. MORE

The Signatures of the Robben Island Shakespeare
NOV 26, MON, 7:30 PM FREE
David Schalkwyk, director of research at the Folger Shakespeare Library, talks about the copy of “The Complete Works of Shakespeare” that circulated among 34 political prisoners (including Nelson Mandela) on Robben Island, the notorious apartheid prison. MORE

Of Travels, Fruits, and Gardens: Jesuits and the European Knowledge of Chinese Plants and Gardens
NOV 27. TUES, 7:30 PM, FREE
In the 17th and 18th centuries, Jesuit missionaries in China established a fruitful interaction between East and West, sending reports home to Europe that were of great cultural and scientific interest. Bianca Maria Rinaldi, assistant professor of landscape architecture at the University of Camerino, Italy, discusses the role Jesuits played in disseminating information about Chinese horticulture and garden design. MORE

Death takes a holiday at the Huntington

Perhaps no war haunts the national consciousness more than the Civil War. While now most of the nation venerates the president who saw us through those terrible times, this wasn’t so until after his death. The Civil War did more than change the way we view Abraham Lincoln. It changed the way the average citizen and the military view and treat death. Two exhibits at the Huntington Library–”A Strange and Fearful Interest: Death, Mourning, and Memory in the American Civil War” at the Boone Gallery and “A Just Cause: Voices of the American Civil War” at the West Hall–remind us that the Huntington is one of the finest repositories for Civil War and Lincoln-related materials in the nation.

History at the Huntington is fascinating, particularly if you get a chance to hear the curators. Olga Tsapina, Norris Foundation Curator of American Historical Manuscripts at The Huntington has an infectious excitement when she gave journalists a tour of her exhibit. Her eyes light up and in her delightful Russian accented English, she gives us an outsider’s look at American history. There is no North or South, Yankee versus Southern gentility to provoke protest.

Forget the fiction that Hollywood and revisionists have manufactured. The just cause wasn’t a war against slavery. It was a war against secession. As Tsapina reminds us, when Lincoln bid farewell to Ulysses S. Grant, he wrote in a letter “And now with a brave army, and a just cause, may God sustain you.” The letter is the source of the exhibitions title, “A Just Cause: Voices of the American Civil War,” yet Tsapina asks what was the cause that justified  ”the carnage that would claim the lives of hundreds of thousands of Americans”?

The exhibit presents “all sides of the argument” from what people of that time felt and they weren’t that kind to Lincoln.  That means brace yourself because there were people who felt that “slavery was good in America” and “fundamentally different.”  Lincoln is mocked and both sides initially felt that God and the Founding Fathers were on their side. After all, some of those men such as Thomas Jefferson, owned slaves.

The display includes some 80 letters, diaries and other writings by Northerners and Southerners, including Abraham Lincoln, Jefferson DAvis, Robert E. Lee, George B. McClellan as well as Union and Confederate soldiers, their family members, clergy, physicians, lawyers and academics.

The view of history as it happens doesn’t always agree with how we evaluate it a century of more later. What we knew then, what we know now and how society has changed has changed our perception of history. This exhibit may give you a different perspective of the news you see now or even inspire you to keep a journal.

If you’re fascinated by the Civil War or just in the mood a little gloomy contemplation on death, the exhibit “A Strange and Fearful Interest: Death, Mourning and Memory in the American Civil War” is just the thing. It’s perfect for Halloween and even has a free but overbooked related lecture on Halloween.

The American Civil War came before there was a standardized protocol for notification of the dead, grave registrations and pensions. According to the curator, with three percent of the population dead as a results, the Civil War changed the perception of death and mourning. Jennifer Watts, curator of photographs at The Huntington and curator of the exhibit explained in a press view that the title comes from a statement made by Oliver Wendell Holmes Sr. in 1863 after seeing photographs of the Antietam. He wrote “The field of photography is extending itself to embrace subjects of strange and sometimes fearful interest.”

While war photography is an accepted field of journalism and a genre of photography, the rise of photography as a means of recording events began in the Civil War. At that time, film was slow and required long exposures. That meant there were no action shots–that was left to the imagination of artists. But the dead, so many of them, were left out in the fields that enterprising photographers could go out and record these horrific still lifes or ghastly landscapes. Newspapers could not yet print photographs, but they could have engravings made from the photographs–artists working to interpret what they saw. To see the actual photographs, one had to attend an exhibit.

Photographs were also taken for loved ones to remember their soldiers and for soldiers to remember their loved ones. And the photographs could also be used to help find soldiers because there was no system of notification of deaths. Imagine getting on a train to search for someone on the battlefields. Images includes a photo commemorating the birthday of Ulysses S. Grant where prominent Confederate and Union commanders met at Gettysburg in 1893 and scrapbook pages recording death by Alexander Gardner from his Antietem series. There’s a wanted poster from the Lincoln assassination and photos depicting the exhibition of Lincoln conspirators.

The exhibit itself is organized around three themes: Battlefront, Assassination and Commemoration. You can get a close look at 50 works at two computer kiosks. The exhibit doesn’t stop there. Online you can hear expert commentary from renowned scholars such as David W. Blight (author of “Race and Reunion: The Civil War in the American Memory”) and Pulitzer Prize-winner James M. McPherson (“Battle Cry of Freedom: The Civil War Era”).  There’s also a rare recording of Joseph H. Hazelton’s account of Abraham Lincoln’s assassination (April 14, 1865). He was 10 and handing out programs at Ford’s Theatre.

You can also see and hear artist Barret Oliver’s short film about the process of making photographs in the field during the Civil War days.

Curator Jennifer Watts will be giving a private tour of the exhibit of “A Strange and Fearful Interest: Death, Mourning and Memory in the American Civil War”on Dec. 4, 4:30 p.m. to 5:30 p.m.

“A Strange and Fearful Interest: Death, Mourning, and Memory in the American Civil War” continues until January 14, 2013. “A Just Cause: Voices of the American Civil War” continues until January 7, 2013.

For more information about these exhibits visit www.Huntington.org. The Huntington Library, Art Collections, and Botanical Gardens is located at 1151 Oxford Road, San Marino.

New Frank Lloyd Wright acquisitions at the Huntington

The Huntington Library, Art Collections, and Botanical Gardens announced today the acquisition of 13 important pieces of furniture designed by seminal American architect Frank Lloyd Wright (1867–1959).  The highlight of the group is a nine-piece dining room suite designed in 1899 for the Husser House (which since has been destroyed) in Chicago, a commission that marked a crucial turning point in Wright’s career. With that project, Wright began to conceive of interior space that was more open and flowing than in his earlier commissions, breaking down the notions of architecture that had prevailed until that point.

The Huntington also acquired four chairs from four other signature Wright houses in Illinois: the Avery Coonley House, the Arthur Heurtley House, the Little House (which also has been demolished), and the Ward W. Willits House. All 13 pieces of furniture have been on view in the Virginia Steele Scott Galleries of American Art at The Huntington since 2009, on long-term loan from the Joyce and Erving Wolf family.

“It’s difficult to measure the significance of this acquisition,” said Kevin Salatino, Hannah and Russel Kully Director of the Art Collections at The Huntington. “Wright’s work is indispensible to understanding the history of modern architecture and design in this country. And since many of his important early projects, like the Husser House, have been demolished, the need to make their design components available to the public has become pressing. Consequently, we’re thrilled to have been able to add these works to the permanent collection at The Huntington.”

‘American Gothic’ murder mystery: Critics can kill

Today, I’m re-opening a cold case, a case of murder most cold and cowardly. The murderer was mad, mad, mad and dangerous to know and for a while, he was able to revise history. Some people believe his version of history. He must have been quite smug and self-satisfied at first but slowly despite his campaign to erase all traces of a man and his mission, history and humanity betrayed him.

By the time Horst Waldemar Janson died in 1982, he could not have been blind to the irony. The people who knew his name were academics and those forced to take courses in art history at universities. For all his airs of European superiority, Janson could not ignore the images on TV or in the movies. His enemy had become an icon.

Janson had knocked on Wood, Grant Wood, soon after Wood’s death in 1942. Wood was a hick. Born in Iowa near Anamosa, Wood studied at the Art Institute of Chicago and even traveled to Europe four times. Wood was an artist. Janson was an art historian and critic. Janson attempted to kill Wood with words and the lack thereof.

Recently Scott Jordan Harris, a UK correspondent for Roger Ebert and a contributor to BBC Radio 4′s “The Film Programme” wrote an article for The Telegraph asking if there was too much snark in film criticism. In America, we’ve delighted in such viciousness for a while it seems although not always in film criticism. And such critical prejudices have actually distorted history for millions of Americans. You only need to look into that famous tome: Janson’s “History of Art.”

The Harris’ article, “Let’s drag film criticism out of the snark ages,” asked if this era hadn’t become a bit too snarky and that critics might be taking too much pride in their poison pens.

An entire generation of film critics – or at least of those who would like to be film critics – seems to believe that the highest aim of film criticism is to crack wise about a movie that isn’t worth anyone’s attention.

Snark has been practiced by other critics–book, theater and art reviewers. Consider Dorothy Parker. Parker was the queen of the pithy comment while at The New Yorker magazine and was a founding member of the Algonquin Round Table.

Her review of A.A. Milne’s “The House at Pooh Corner” was (as the Constant Reader): “It is that word ‘hummy,’ my darlings, that marks the first place in The House at Pooh Corner at which Tonstant Weader Fwowed up.” She failed to see an enduring childhood classic.  More people are probably familiar with Pooh than Parker. What we forget is that Parker later show regret this Round Table and “the terrible day of the wisecrack.”

Yet Parker didn’t deny the existence of those whom she jabbed with her poison pen. H.W. Janson decided to exclude any mention of an art movement that had been popular in the 1930s and personal dislike of one of the artist may have been a reason. Looking at my second edition of  ”History of Art” as an undergraduate art student, I can remember my instant distaste.

The book was originally written in 1962 and titled “History of Art: A Survey of the Major Visual Arts from the Dawn of History to the Present Day.” There is a notable absence of women and subjects that women seem to dwell upon, but I had already been told that women could not be artists when I was in elementary school.

Islamic art is covered  on pages 227-245 at just before medieval art.  The comparative views of the history of art chart does not divide up Islamic art into different styles as it does for India. Japan also leaps from Nara to Kamakura, completely bypassing the Heian period. For Janson, the history of art was largely centered on Western European and North American. Yet even while living in America, he pretended as if certain themes and artists did not exist.

What I had not noticed, until a recent visit to the Huntington Library’s “Roger Medearis: His Regionalism” exhibition is that one of the most famous paintings in American art history is not seen at all. Neither is the artist mentioned. Nor the movement he was a part of. How could I know Regionalism was missing as a student who didn’t know it existed?

The missing painting is so famous it has become an American  icon often parodied–as well known as Leonardo da Vinci’s “Mona Lisa” and Edvard Munch’s “The Scream.”  More people know of “American Gothic”  than know of Janson.

Grant Wood. “American Gothic.” 1930.

When you look at this painting do you think “small-souled”? Do you feel something is lacking because there is “no very unruly emotion”? Would you associate this painting with fascism or Nazi Germany?

“American Gothic” currently resides in Art Institute of Chicago. It won a Norman Wait Harris Bronze Medal and $300 in the 1930s for Grant Wood. Not everyone praised Wood then. One felt his work had a “gift-shop atmosphere” and another wrote “His color is clear, his outlines unblurred, and his surfaces polished. His intent is easily understood. His work is nearly always popular among simple people.” Some of those simple people who bought his work included Edward G. Robinson and Katherine Hepburn.

Grant Wood. “Stone City, Iowa.” 1930.

Grant Wood. “Woman with Plant.”

Grant Wood. “The Perfectionist.” 1936.

Wood died in 1942 and the retrospective brought out the snark in art critics. Dorothy Odenheim of the Chicago Sun-Times wrote that Wood was “a provincial whose vision was restricted in more than a physical sense to the rolling hills of Iowa. He had no taste, no sense of color, no feeling for texture…no atmosphere, no smell of the soil, no wind in the air.”

No movement is made by one artist alone. Besides Grant Wood, there was Thomas Hart Benton of Missouri and John Steuart Curry of Kansas. These artists focused on scenes of rural life and the images of America’s heartland were most popular during the Great Depression (1930-35).

Born in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, Wood trained at the School of Art Institute of Chicago. Teaching at the University of Iowa (1934-1941) he was a one-time colleague of Janson and they apparently disagreed on almost everything.

The name of the painting, “American Gothic,”  comes from the style of the cottage in the background, Gothic Revival. The woman was Wood’s sister Nan (1900-1990). The man was a dentist, Dr. Byron McKeeby (1867-1950).  Various interpretations have been made of the two: a farmer and his wife, a farmer and his spinster sister, a farmer and his spinster daughter.

Yet the painting is one of the most recognizable images, easily leading to parodies such as a scene in the opening credits for 1965-1971 sitcom, “Green Acres” with Eddie Albert and Eva Garbor. The 1988 horror film poster for “American Gothic” with Rod Steiger and Yvonne DeCarlo parodies this painting.  In 1997, the Tim Allen Kirstie Alley comedy “For Richer and Poorer” also used the painting as the basis for their poster.

None of these images  uses would make you think Adolph Hitler, Fascists or Nazi. I doubt if the PR people even considered “American Gothic” or Regionalism controversial. Yet in his 1946 essay, “Benton and Wood, Champions of Regionalism” Janson wrote of American Regionalism “many of the paintings officially approved by the Nazis recall the works of the regionalists of this country.”

Regionalism wasn’t just bad it was dangerous and “sufficiently dangerous to invite the closest scrutiny of its sources, aims, and methods, as well as the underlying reasons for its popular success. Since the movement has been nourished by some of the fundamental ills of our society–the same ills that, in more virulent form, produced National Socialism in Germany–it would be vain to expect its complete disappearance in the immediate future; nevertheless, a clear understanding of its nature will at least enable us to recognize its implications and reduce its influence.”

Jackson Pollock’s “The Key.” 1946.

Jackson Pollock’s “Number 8, 1949″ (detail).

He also claimed that “almost every one of the ideas constituting the regionalist credo could be matched more or less verbatim from the writings of Nazi experts on art.”

From Janson’s perspective, it seems Abstract Expressionism was democratic. As with all movements, there is some interconnection in the creative fields and Robert H. Brinkmeyer in his “The Fourth Ghost: White Southern Writers and European Fascism, 1930-1950″ feels that attitudes that brought the decline in Regionalism in the art world also influenced the rejection of white Southern writers.

“Pearl Harbor” from Thomas Hart Benton’s Year of Peril series.

Thomas Hart Benton. “Instruction.” 1940.

According to Patricia A. Johnston in her “Seeing High & Low: Representing Social Conflict in American Visual Culture” those values of Regionalism that “were consonant with fascism’s” included anti-modernity, anti-intellectualism, nationalism and homophobia.

Wood was suspected of being a closeted homosexual. Yet Benton was reportedly dismissed from the Kansas City Art Institute  for making a homophobic remark. Benton served in the Navy during the first World War and during World War II, he made a series called “The Year of Peril” which meant to show the threat of fascism and Nazis to the American way of life and ideals. Curry was known for his man versus nature images.

So while students of Benton’s who rebelled against Regionalism such as Jackson Pollock became the darlings of the art critics, students such as Roger Medearis found his artistic vision questioned. While Medearis wasn’t a strict disciple of his teacher Benton, he was associated with the movement. Returning after serving in the war, he found the art world no longer welcoming and his home life troubled. By the 1950s he would be divorced and working as a traveling salesman. He remarried and moved from the Midwest to California.

Roger Medearis, “Farmer Takes a Wife,” 1941. Egg tempera on board.

Medearis would return to painting and was living as an artist in San Marino at the time of his death in 2001. The new exhibit at the Huntington Library, “Roger Medearis: His Regionalism” is what brought Janson’s crime to my attention.

Yet what did Janson really know about Americans? He was born in St. Petersburg, Russia in 1913 as Horst Waldemar Janson. His family moved to Hamburg, Germany. He graduated from the University of Hamburg. In 1935 he came to the United States to study.  He taught at the Worcester Art Museum in Massachusetts from 1936-1938 and then at the University of Iowa from 1938-1941. He received his Ph.D. in 1942 from Harvard. He became a naturalized citizen in 1943. Janson’s brother died fighting the Nazis in Germany.

Roger Medearis “Godly Susan,” 1941. Egg tempera on board.

Janson married Dora Jane Heineberg (1916-2002) who was also an art history student at Radcliffe. “History of Art” credits Dora Jane Janson as assisting in the writing of the text. The current text is now the history of Western art and Dora and H.W.’s son is currently in charge of reviewing and revising.

Seeing Medearis‘ later works, when he finally returned to art, still without the kind of modeling and blurred outlines that critics such as Pickering had found problematic with Wood’s work. Yet to me, such strong, rhythmic outlines remind me of Japanese woodblock prints. Medearis is the kind of artist that Janson could well have destroyed, but his return to painting in 1965 eventually led to his becoming a self-supporting artist. The works aren’t edgy either but can their beauty really be denied?

Roger Medearis “Home in the San Gabriels,” 1996. Oil on linen canvas.

Janson might have set out to kill Regionalism and particularly Grant Wood, but Wood’s legacy survives. What resonates in people’s hearts is not always what critics endorse. Critics can kill, but the snark can be debarked when the people choose a classic and you or your work outlive the people with the poison pen.

Critics everywhere should use this as a caveat to be humble or you risk the possibility of looking ridiculous in the future. Don’t be found guilty of the malicious attempted murder of a movement and don’t be tempted to re-write history.

Roger Medearis, “Native Oak,” 1981. Lithograph.

Roger Medearis: Obsession with beauty with regional lines

If you wait long enough, fashion will recycle and if you have a chance to see a “Roger Medearis: His Regionalism” at the Huntington Library in the Virginia Steele Scott Galleries of American Art (Susan and Stephen Chandler Wing) until 17 September 2012, you’ll be glad that Medearis didn’t lose his optimism. Just look at his 1996 oil painting, “Home in the San Gabriels” below.  Regionalism was a modern art movement that was popular in the 1930s but fell out of fashion and even into infamy.

“Home in the San Gabriels,” 1996. Oil on linen canvas.

Based in the Midwest, Regionalism was popularized by men like Grant Wood of Iowa, Thomas Hart Benton of Missouri and John Steuart Curry of Kansas. This so-called Regionalist Triumphate brought American rural scenes into the art world, perhaps to comfort people who lived under the dark economic burden of the Great Depression. While you might not have heard of Regionalism, you’ve seen it. Wood’s “1930 “American Gothic” which resides in the Art Institute of Chicago is an American icon that is often parodied.

“American Gothic” by Grant Wood. 1930.

The name “American Gothic” (left) comes from the Gothic Revival style cottage you see in the background (note the medieval pointed arch) and in front, Wood’s painted his sister Nan (1900-1990) and his dentist, Dr. Byron McKeeby (1867-1950).

Besides paintings, Curry was known for his murals. Curry’s paintings were less static and recorded scenes of Midwest life such as his 1929 “Tornado Over Kansas” where a family is about to take refuge in a tornado shelter as you see a great twister in the background.

“Tragic Prelude” by John Steuart Curry.

Curry painted a mural of John Brown, “Tragic Prelude.”

“Tornado Over Kansas.” John Steuart Curry.

File:People-of-Chilmark-Benton-1920-lrg.jpg

“People of Chilmark” by Thomas Hart Benton.

It was, however, Thomas Hart Benton (15 April 1889-19 January 1975) who influenced Roger Medearis. Benton came from a family of politicians but preferred to follow his art muse. He worked as a cartoonish for the Joplin American newspaper before enrolling in the Art Institute of Chicago. He left to study in Paris and was introduced to Synchronism, an American avant-garde movement which used color arranged like notes in a symphony. When he returned to New York in the 1920s, Benton began to paint in a representational, naturalistic style, but you can still see stylized lines that have a certain rhythmic appeal in his 1920 “People of Chilmark.” (below) Besides scenes from the Midwest, Benton painted scenes of New York City, Martha’s Vineyard, the American South and the American West.

Roger Medearis was born in 1920, the son of a Southern Baptist minister. His family moved around as a result of his father’s work and the family stayed in parts of Missouri, Oklahoma and Kansas.

Roger Medearis: The Places He Knew Best

“Self-Portrait” by Roger Medearis. 1938.

Medearis became a student of Thomas Hart Benton after he enrolled in the Kansas City Art Institute in 1938. (To the right is Medearis’ self-portrait from 1938) Benton was  well known by that time having been on the cover of Time magazine in 1934.

Benton also taught Jackson Pollock who famously commented that Benton’s art gave him something to rebel against. Benton left the institute after making a homophobic comment in 1941.

That same year, as the U.S. entered World War II,  Medearis drew Navy charts and eventually enlisted in the Army. When he was discharged in 1946, he moved to Connecticut and has several successful solo exhibits in New York. But change was on the horizon. Surrealists and Abstract Expressionism became popular.  Noted art historian H.W. Janson in 1946 compared regionalists to the kind of art that the Nazis had attempted to popularize. Yes, art students, that Janson…and if nothing else, this exhibition is proof of how wrong even well-respected art historians and critics can be.

Entering the Huntington exhibit, you won’t bother to ask yourself if Janson was right. More likely, you’ll marvel at the 1996 oil “Home in the San Gabriels” that the exhibit (curated by Jessica Todd Smith) uses both as the cover art of its brochure and the introductory painting.

The exhibition does have a bit of Hollywood glamour, funding comes from the $1 million gift from actor-writer Steve Martin gave to the Huntington in 2005 as well the Susan and Stephen Chandler Exhibition Endowment.

“Native Oak” by Roger Medearis.

This small exhibition shows the great breadth of Roger Medearis’ works with 36 pieces. You can compare his student self-portrait to his 1990 self-portrait and see how Medearis’ style changed. You can also see obsession and economics at play. Four examples of his series “Farmer Takes a Wife” are on display–graphite on paper in 1940, egg tempera on board in 1941, lithograph in 1989 and hand-colored lithograph in 1989. “Native Oak” originally graphite on paper in 1979 was made into a lithograph in 1981.

In “Farmer Takes a Wife,” you can see that Medearis has a bit more humor than Wood. His couple are definitely not comfortable with each other. The bright colors of the original become muted in the hand-colored lithograph. Did this make those lithos easier to sell and fit into any decor?

“Farmer Takes a Wife” by Roger Medearis.

The benefit of making a lithograph is by pulling editions, you have more works of art to sell.  Economics is always a concern for artists and was one of the reasons Medearis stopped working on art and joined the rat race.

Medearis’ art fell out of favor in Post-World War II America, and he also moved away from Regionalism, painting a series of still life studies. By the end of the 1940s, his marriage was also troubled and he went to re-visit his roots in Missouri and his works show farmhouses in the bleak Missouri winter. The exhibit shows detailed paintings and quick painted sketches from this period.

“Godly Susan” by Roger Medearis.

Economics and his divorce forced him to give up his art. He began working as a traveling salesman and relocated to California with his new wife, Judith Dettling whom he married in 1958. He wound up working at Container Corp. of America in Los Angeles. But art called him and he converted his garage into a studio Monterey Park.

His Regionalism came to Southern California. You can see that in the 1998 “April Hillside” where great fields of yellow mustard glow below a gorgeously blue sky with a small group of clouds. Venturing into the countryside of Southern California was something Betty, his third wife and widow, takes credit for. “I would drive and  he would tell me where to stop,” she recalled. Medearis’ second wife died in 1975 and he married Betty Burrall Sterling in 1976. She knows where that field of yellow is and still walks around there. “I brought some color into his life,” she explained. Eventually, Medearis went back to art full time and did well enough to move to San Marino where he died.

Indeed, you can see how at a certain point Medearis favored muted tones and then returned to color. His later works are intensely detailed and this is the kind of art you need to see in person. Move close to see all the details. “April Hillside” is made up of small strokes, almost like the small dots used for photo printing. Yet these are layered and vary in transparency.

According to Smith, Medearis would use photography and slides to piece together his work as well as making smaller studies. He also used other methods for making studies such as the painted bronze “Rio Chama” (1985).

Sometimes I wonder if our values in Western art isn’t skewed toward scandal. Do we want our artists to be people who live life on the edge? Is their art a reflection of their lives, their obsessions and their weaknesses? Or is their art a reflection of the lives we want to vicariously live, like art critics are Walter Mittys?

Certainly bad boys like Paul Gauguin (deserted his family to cavort with exotic women), Pablo Picasso (misogynistic man with a taste for younger women) or Jackson Pollock (hard living) make for better copy in the gossip columns than someone who lives his life as a hard-working family man.

Yet the kind of art that comes from a man who had many friends, who according to his wife was kind and humorous, is a reflection of what man and his nature. When Medearis died in 2001, he left behind a son, four stepdaughters ad grandchildren. Shouldn’t we value the art of a man of good values? Looking at Roger Medearis’ work I don’t see Fascist values. I see patience, lyrical beauty and a focused steady vision of the America. Did being a good family man or woman every go out of style?

“Roger Medearis: His Regionalism” continues at the Huntington Library, Art Collections, and Botanical Gardens, 1151 Oxford Road, San Marino, CA 91108.

N.B. I included works from other artists in this article only to show Medearis’ influences. 

Related Programs

Book Series: American Regionalism
May 23, June 27, July 25, and Aug. 29 (Wednesdays) 11 a.m.–12:30 p.m.
Join facilitator Judith Palarz for this four-part book series that will explore the uniquely American landscape through the writings of authors Willa Cather, William Faulkner, Sinclair Lewis and John Steinbeck. This series will also include a curator tour of the exhibition “Roger Medearis: His Regionalism.” Members: $85. Non-Members: $95. Registration: 626-405-2128.

Curator Tour: Roger Medearis: His Regionalism
July 11 (Wednesday) 4:30–5:30 p.m.
Join curator Jessica Smith for a private tour of the exhibition “Roger Medearis: His Regionalism” and gain insights into this uniquely American artist who was passionate about painting the places and things he knew best. Members: $15. Non-Members: $20. Registration: 626-405-2128.

Year of the Dragon celebration at Huntington Library

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Chinese New Year Festival 2012
 

 

Feb. 4 & 5, Sat.-Sun.

10:30 a.m. – 4:30 p.m., rain or shine! 
Visitors can experience the beauty of Chinese music, dance, and culture as the arrival of the Year of the Dragon is celebrated at a Chinese New Year festival on Saturday and Sunday, Feb. 4 & 5, at The Huntington. Hours for the event are 10:30 a.m.- 4:30 p.m. All activities are included with general admission.

 Performances
 Location
SaturdayFeb. 4 SundayFeb. 5
Dragon dancers Scott Galleries Lawn 11 a.m.
1 p.m.

3 p.m.

11 a.m.
1 p.m.

3 p.m.

Martial Arts & Qi Gong Friends’ Hall* 11 a.m.12 p.m. 11 a.m.12 p.m.
Mask Changing (Bian Lian) Friends’ Hall* 2 p.m.

3 p.m.

2 p.m.

3 p.m.

 Readings / Book Signings
Author Oliver Chin & Illustrator Jennifer Wood Year of the Dragon** Overseers’ Room
11:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m.
11:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m.
  Demonstrations
Chinese Brush Painting by Pei-Fang Liang Library Lawn
11 a.m.-2 p.m.
11 a.m.-2 p.m.
Calligraphy Boone Gallery Foyer 11 a.m.-4 p.m. 11 a.m.-4 p.m.
Tai Chi Library Lawn
12:30 p.m.2:30 p.m.

-
Martial Arts – Shaolin Temple Cultural Center Library Lawn - 12:30 p.m.2:30 p.m.
Traditional Chinese Landscape Painter Bo Hong Entrance Pavilion 11 a.m.-4 p.m. 11 a.m.-4 p.m.
Noodle pulling by Chef Huang TBD 11:30 a.m.
1:30 p.m.
3:30 p.m.
11:30 a.m.
1:30 p.m.
3:30 p.m.
 Music
Spring Thunder Chinese Music Chinese Garden 11 a.m.-1 p.m. 11 a.m.-1 p.m.
String and Bamboo Orchestra Chinese Garden 2-4 p.m. 2-4 p.m.
 Other Highlights
Flower market Entrance Pavilion All day -
Penjing display, courtesy of the Southern Breeze Society Chinese Garden All day All day
Floral arrangements by Rosa Zee Chinese Garden/Entrance Pavilion All day All day
Scavenger hunt for children TBD 10:30 a.m.-2:30 p.m. 10:30 a.m.-2:30 p.m.

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