New York City - Spanierman Gallery has announced the opening on February 17, 2011 of "American Modernism," an exhibition encompassing the multi-faceted nature of American modernist art in the first half of the 20th century.
Modernist influence took root in America in the first decade of the 20th century. Although realism - exemplified by the Ashcan School - was ascendant at the time, a concurrent awareness of new European modes was emerging quietly, both in this country, where Alfred Stieglitz began to show the works of French progressives at his Photo-Secession Gallery in New York in 1908, and in Europe, where a number of American artists became exposed directly to the avant-garde.
Patrick Henry Bruce,
Alfred Maurer, and
Marsden Hartley frequented the famed Parisian salon of
Gertrude and Leo Stein, which encouraged their adoption of the influences of cubism and fauvism as well as of the styles of
Matisse and
Picasso. These are apparent in Maurer's Fauve "Landscape" (ca. 1909) and Bruce's "Still Life with Plate" (ca. 1912). In Paris at the same time,
Max Weber studied with
Matisse and befriended
Picasso, drawing on the inspiration of their art for "Joel's Café" (ca. 1909-10).
The Armory Show of 1913, held in New York, Boston, and Chicago, was the pivotal point at which modernism took hold in America. The art of the cubists, fauvists, futurists, orphists, and dadaists in this large-scale exhibition outraged the public, but younger artists were exhilarated by it and quickly appropriated its novel approaches. One of the key organizers of the show,
Arthur B. Davies created an original group of paintings from 1914 to 1918 in which he melded the tenets of cubism and synchromism into decoratively patterned images, such as "Composition with Figures" (ca. 1914). Other artists who responded to the new aesthetic modes include
Allen Tucker, who also helped organize the show and developed a unique
van Gogh-inspired approach, and
Myron Lechay, who rendered scenes of urban life noted for their economy of means and delicate color.
European artists, who emigrated to America at the time of World War I, spurred the spread of modernism in this country, which continued into the 1920s, as demonstrated in the works of
Yasuo Kuniyoshi and
Jan Matulka. However, this trajectory was suppressed by the arrival of the Great Depression, when the isolationist attitude that descended over the art world compelled artists to focus on distinctly American content and eschew European styles. Nonetheless, a resistance movement supportive of abstract modes of expression gradually gathered force, culminating in the formation in 1936 of American Abstract Artists, consisting of a group of artists committed to abstract and non-objective expression, including
Burgoyne Diller,
Balcomb Greene (the group's first chairman),
Gertrude Glass Greene,
Carl Holty,
George L. K. Morris,
Charles Green Shaw, and
Willard Grayson Smythe.
Many of these artists were featured in the Museum of Non-Objective Painting (the Guggenheim Foundation's first museum), which opened in 1939 under the guidance of the German painter
Hilla Rebay, a strong supporter of the art of
Rolph Scarlett. Influences from advanced European modes are also present in works from the 1930s such as
Alexander Calder's "Untitled" (Biomorphic Forms) (1933),
Francis Criss' precisionist and divisionist "El Station" (ca. 1935),
James Daugherty's "Synchromist Landscape" (1933).
Spurred by artists from the School of Paris who sought sanctuary in America from the ravages of World War II, such as
Max Ernst and
Yves Tanguy, modern modes revived and diversified in America in the 1940s, a decade represented in paintings by
Gershon Benjamin,
Ben Benn,
Byron Browne,
José DeCreeft,
Fannie Hillsmith, and
John Wilde.
Artists working in the 1950s continued to draw from a versatile vocabulary of modernist forms, including
Emil Bisttram,
Conrad Buff,
George Segal,
Jan Müller,
William Sanderson, and
George Segal. Their art and the varied and innovative works of other early twentieth century American moderns provided a bedrock from which abstract expressionism and the New York School evolved.
For more than a half century, Spanierman Gallery, LLC, located at 45 East 58th Street, has been dedicated to dealing fine American art of the 19th century to the present.
Spanierman Modern, located next door at 53 East 58th Street, features a varied inventory of modern and contemporary works by abstract expressionists and emerging artists. Gallery hours are Monday through Saturday, 9:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m.
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