| Art
Extra ...
By J D Larson
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The Blank One Gallery at the Des
Moines Art Center is hosting a portraiture
exhibit with a Van Gogh etching recently
acquired by the museum as the centerpiece.
Photo courtesy of Rich Sanders, Des Moines
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You might have heard of the legendary painter
Vincent Van Gogh. He’s famous as the iconic
artist, a genius unappreciated in his lifetime,
a man tortured by mental illness who ultimately
took his own life in 1890. He shows up on the
evening news from time to time when one of his
paintings sells for freakishly large amounts
of money (one sold for $82 million more than
20 years ago). During his brilliant and bitter
lifetime, he put down his paint brush only once
to try his hand at the process called etching.
An etching is like a drawing except instead
of drawing lines on paper, an artist applies
lines to a copper plate. These lines are then
etched into the plate, filled with ink and printed
on paper. The end result is a deep, rich image
with a striking visual effect.
From the one and only Van Gogh etching plate,
only about 60 prints were made. That’s fascinating,
and so is this: the Des Moines Art Center now
owns one. It is “Portrait of Doctor Gachet:
L’Homme a la Pipe” and serves as the launchpad
for a robust exhibition called “The Psychology
of Portraiture” on display at the museum now
through Feb. 6.
Assembling a show with the Van Gogh etching
as the focal point was the task given to curator
Laura Burkhalter. Considering a theme, she was
inspired by a simple fact: the Van Gogh print
was a portrait of someone the artist knew personally.
Expanding on this idea, Burkhalter searched
the museum’s permanent collection for other
portraits where a relationship existed between
artists and their subject. It’s a simple but
compelling idea and a perfect context for displaying
a wide range of work.
The exhibition is near the entrance in the modest
space of the Blank One Gallery, which is about
the size of a residential apartment. Entering
this intimate space, what grabs you first is
a bronze sculpture with a striking green patina
titled “First Portrait of Isobel” from 1932.
This was sculpted by Jacob Epstein, and the
young Isobel was an artist and muse whose beauty
infatuated Epstein. She is shown in a resigned
pose, shoulders relaxed, slouching a little,
her thoughts adrift, perhaps downright bored
but alluring. Her figure is not so much a depiction
of form (as if she were an anonymous figure
model) but really shows the absence of inhibition
that exists between people who know each other;
she is no more uncomfortable with her undraped
figure in the presence of her swain than if
she were alone. The green patina of the bronze
surface is amplified powerfully by the green
wall behind her. The harmony of the green color
shared by the sculpture and the wall actually
provides a fantastic stage for the entire show.
There is the portrait by George Bellows of his
Aunt Fanny, an oil painting with a kind of gravitas
that belies its depiction of a very old and
very fragile human being. His beautiful, old
aunt is contrasted by a young mother and child
by Mary Cassatt, a perfectly executed pastel
from 1900. Pastel chalk is difficult to control,
and aside from admiring Cassatt’s mastery of
using it to render form, also take in the bottom
third of the composition and the splendiferous
abstraction that appears when you force your
eye to stop concentrating on the face of the
mother and child.
This exhibition is a tour de force for works
on paper: the dreamy, wavy melancholy of the
Van Gogh etching, the superb depiction of the
grouchy titan of modern art, Paul Cezanne, as
done by his mentor Camille Pissarro. There is
the magnificent whisper of a pencil drawing
by Gwen John, the mysterious but elegant 1959
color photograph by Harry Callahan showing his
young daughter sunlit in front of a dark pathway.
There is a Japanese woodblock print, and a soft
ground etching by Käthe Kollwitz, with its ambrosial
quality enhanced by its tiny size.
Because works on paper account for the strength
of this show, that should give you added motivation
to see it. Works on paper are delicate, more
so than paintings, sculptures and so on. Because
of this fact, the Art Center displays them sparingly
and some of these jewels might be locked away
in storage vaults for quite some time after
they come down. Don’t miss this opportunity
to see them up close before they return to their
dark hibernation. CV
J D Larson is an artist who has written
numerous times for Cityview. He is a buyer and
seller of old coins and banknotes for Christopher’s
Rare Coins. Contact: jdl.artwork@gmail.com. |