I Believe!
I believe in Art. Yes I have Faith, and
believe in God... and have strong ideas where He is concerned, but I
am talking here about a different kind of faith. My study of history
has shown me some important facts which I rely upon today- and this
confidence is embedded deep... a faith if you will, in Art as an
important element in community and international communication and
social healing. Therefore some form of art will always be necessary.
Yes it will change to different mediums... substrates, adapt to new
technologies. But we have to have art... our culture does, our
society does, in order to advance and prosper.
Art provides several powerful,
essential services. It is a bridge between cultures, and generations,
and is a basic form of communication- of philosophies and values and
social priorities. It can be mere decoration, or be harnessed to
manipulate the masses through advertisements, or it can educate and
inspire. Or just provide a cheap vacation on a hectic day. It can be
entertainment, or propaganda or even a channel for physical healing.
Our society cannot function without it.
In these times when factions of our
society are literally turning against many statements of art around
the country, with protests and destruction and anarchy... hopefully
just temporary group insanity, I look to history for what to expect
next. As America goes through a moment not dissimilar to the French
Revolution, which was a class war that erupted against most forms of
power and wealth, we as artists can see how our kinsmen in France, led by a mother and the most famous painter of mothers, served their society and eventually became a unified voice in it.
Berthe Morisot with her mentor and lover, Aime Millet,
who tried to make a sculptor out of her. She broke off
who tried to make a sculptor out of her. She broke off
their engagement and followed her destiny as a painter
instead. France and art would never be the same after
she gathered a bunch of rejected artists and goaded them
beyond their individual potentials. When her daughter
Julie was born, Berthe put her art career in the backseat,
and raised a beautiful girl who became a legendary model
for herself and eventually Renoir.
and raised a beautiful girl who became a legendary model
for herself and eventually Renoir.
[Among the hundreds of historical
tintypes I discovered in what I refer to as the Harper Bros image
boneyard, were scores of photographs of the French Impressionists and
their friends, models and families. The world is seeing these rare
images for the first time in this blog. They might well have posed
for Edgar Degas, who was quick to recognize the importance of
photography and learned the techniques of it.]
In the blink of an eye, the dominance
of Italian art, firmly associated with the Vatican, which had ruled
all art trends and standards of art for a thousand years, became an
anachronism and voila- gone and replaced with Humanism, Deism, even
Agnosticism. It was harsh, that's the nature of social change... but
it was, for the first time, an “even playing field.” Ignored
today is what a killing field it was first.
After Napoleon was routed and then the
French people revolted in response to a century of terrible losses
and the depravity in the aftermath of the Franco-Prussian war, the
French, and the world, were ripe for a pleasant breeze of rest and
peace... a true refuge. And artists led the way. Needless to say, art
had not been an important factor in all the death and destruction
which saturated French history. War and the guillotine had repeatedly
stifled, if not snuffed most artistic aspirations.
The Impressionists, then just a bunch of undisciplined, privileged youth who would not even attend art schools to learn their craft, the equivalent of 1970's “hippies,” had been drafted into the fray, or fled to England. Monet and Pissarro found refuge across the English Channel, while Monet's best friend Frederic Bazille joined the army, and Renoir and Degas were conscripted into the National Guard. The elder mentor of this motley group, Gustave Courbet led the “Communards,” a militant group of socialists and anarchists.
Monet
The Impressionists, then just a bunch of undisciplined, privileged youth who would not even attend art schools to learn their craft, the equivalent of 1970's “hippies,” had been drafted into the fray, or fled to England. Monet and Pissarro found refuge across the English Channel, while Monet's best friend Frederic Bazille joined the army, and Renoir and Degas were conscripted into the National Guard. The elder mentor of this motley group, Gustave Courbet led the “Communards,” a militant group of socialists and anarchists.
Pissarro
The occupying Prussian army
commandeered and destroyed Pissarro's home and studio, using his
canvases for aprons and groundcloths. In the end Courbet went to
prison for his communist passions and then was banished from France.
Renoir, still determined to paint plein air in his off-time, was
suspected as a spy and almost executed, but at the last minute his
former sympathies to a Communard leader in a similar crunch won him
mercy and he escaped with his life. Poor, generous and vastly
talented Bazille, perhaps the most gifted of all of them, was killed
in an inglorious retreat on a muddy road in a useless war. France
lost a great talent and a greater human being, and Monet lost his
benefactor and painting partner.
Pierre August Renoir with his two baby sitters,
Paule and Jeannie Gobillard, and son Jean.
Massive class indignation had led to
the trashing of the old France, the near extermination of the
educated and professional class, abandonment of the church,
destruction of proud French archives and institutions, and the
tearing down of the Monarchy, their statues, many government museums,
and in its place ushered in a new nationalism built on hatred of the
merchant class and any symbols of wealth. This animosity soon evolved
into fascism and totalitarianism, a return to the Napoleonic model,
which led to total disaster... and eventually the obliteration of
national pride.
Devoted yet constantly fighting friends,
Edgar Degas and Mary Cassatt pose
with a beautiful model, on the left.
Yet somehow, and this is the point of
this diatribe, after the smoke had evaporated, the bloody revolution,
the hubristic Napoleonic aggressions, and civil war and total
bankruptcy of the country... Art blossomed. Miraculously France soon
led the world in art and fashion from that time on... until WWI.
Unbelievably, draft dodgers and communists and National Guardsmen
came together and the love of art and beauty united them.
Humility and desperation helped all of them to gain a new desire for tolerance and freedom of expression. And eventually, actually led by two strong women, who shared almost none of their affinities, the French Impressionists emerged and prevailed in spite of organized, institutional opposition, to become the vanguard of the modern art movement.
When she first came to France, Mary Cassatt
studied under Jean Leon Gerome, a rare opportunity
for an American female. She found him too rigid
and obsessed with his process and minutia, then
found a home among the Impressionists, whom
Jerome persecuted as a Salon judge out of spite.
Humility and desperation helped all of them to gain a new desire for tolerance and freedom of expression. And eventually, actually led by two strong women, who shared almost none of their affinities, the French Impressionists emerged and prevailed in spite of organized, institutional opposition, to become the vanguard of the modern art movement.
Mary Cassatt and Berthe Morisot were very different
but quite unified in steering the Impressionists and
their movement. When Morisot got married and was
distracted with motherhood, American Cassatt stepped
in and provided crucial consistency, and timely financing and vision.
France was the place to be. American
artists, Belgians, Brits, Germans, Dutch, all came to sup from the
French stream of consciousness. The pain had turned into gain. Truly
great art has always emerged out of some significant human struggle.
Spanish and Italian artists took note... and began to look to France
for direction. Truly the Spanish masters such as Goya and Velasquez
had been a great influence on them, with their painterly style, and
strongly injected with political fire, and Courbet's socialistic
ideals, the French artists chose genre art as their platform. Popes
and generals and kings and queens no longer mattered. It was the
working man's and woman's life which was worthy of study and
edification. Regular people... living their peaceful lives, enjoying
French food and wine and culture, and their children... or a simple
picnic or boating on the lake... these former trivialities would now
occupy their canvases. And this had never been done before. These
were subjects considered, up until then to have been unworthy of Art.
Edouard Manet (center) with his best friend Emmanuel Chabrier (left)
and brother Eugene Manet, (right) who married Berthe Morisot.
Being of French ancestry, I am glad to
acknowledge these achievements, and since I count myself as an
American Impressionist, a descendant of their traditions, and someone
who appreciates their artistic vision, and the fact that their
movement was the last sane moment in the history of art!
We as artists, the real ones, the ones
who paint or sculpt because we must or lose our sanity, we must not
give up because sales are down. We
are the only true free voices in society. No publishers, no
art police to constrain us, free from the political agendas of most
of the Media and other sources of information.
Do not quit, or get discouraged
because Americans are not buying art right now... and galleries
(mostly irrelevant parasites), are going out of style... or because a
social upheaval is disturbing the flow of our economy, or worse the
flow of our creativity... These things are temporary.
WE MUST PAINT. I believe in art. It was
art that lifted France out of her own self-inflicted mire, and began
a century of art experimentation; an infinite evolution of art “isms”
and a great gift of a myriad of the art choices we enjoy today. Hard
times, social change, even cultural change, can be another door...
the next avenue for artists to lead the next cultural revolution. Our
country, in fact the developing world needs us more than ever,
to paint... create, to feel our way through the dark, to help define
what is our next platform for peaceful, artistic exchange; to
establish the positive fruits of our negative human struggles: To
discover the new “isms,” the new technologies which will speak to
the people... in a universal language. Without words.
That is how and why I don't just make
art, I BELIEVE IN IT.
The public is distracted right now.
Ignore the lull, believe in your role as an important outlet- for
yourself and for our social conscience, and understand the important
role that free artists play in the lasting threads of our social
fabric. We are the strands which hold our culture together... it's a
thankless job... it's never been about the money... it is a
calling... like a missionary. Besides raising children, it's the most
important thing you will ever do.