Arts Club of Chicago

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Arts Club of Chicago
Established 1916
(current location since April 4, 1997)
Location 201 E. Ontario Street,
Chicago, Illinois 60611
United States Flag of the United States
Website none

Arts Club of Chicago is a private club located in the Near North Side community area of Chicago in Cook County, Illinois, United States, a block east of the Magnificent Mile, that exhibits international contemporary art. It was founded in 1916, inspired by the success of the Art Institute of Chicago's handling of the Armory Show.[1] Its founding was viewed as a statement that art had become an important component of civilized urban life.[2] The Arts Club is said to have been pro-Modernist from its founding.[3] The Club strove to break new ground with its shows, rather than collect the works of established artists as the Art Institute does.

The club presented Pablo Picasso's first United States showing.[4] In addition, the 1951 exhibition by Jean Dubuffet and his "Anticultural Positions" lecture at the Arts Club were tremendous influences on what would become the mid 1960s Imagist movement.[2] Another important presentation in the history of the Arts Club was the Fernand Leger showing of Le Ballet Mecanique.[3]

The Club's 1997 move to its current 201 E. Ontario Street location was not without controversy, because the club demolished its former interior space designed by Ludwig Mies van der Rohe and moved only the central staircase to the new gallery space.[5] However, the new space is 19,000 square feet (1,800 ), which is 7,000 square feet (650 m²) larger than the old space.[6]

Contents

[edit] Mission and purpose

The inaugural mission of the club was "to encourage higher standards of art, maintain galleries for that purpose, and to promote the mutual acquaintance of art lovers and art workers."[7] This mission arose from the contemporary Chicago active art scene, which had 30 commercial art galleries showing traditional art and an internationally recognized museum. Additionally, the local mass media gave equitable coverage to the visual arts. The art scene also had an adequate number of clubs and organizations for musicians, writers and artists. Unfortunately, the lively art scene did not adequately represent the avant-garde art. The local galleries emphasized American, English and the occasional French work, emphasizing prints and drawings. This necessitated trips to New York City, London or Paris for Chicagoans who wanted to buy art.[8]

The club does not generally show traveling exhibitions curated by others. Instead, it curates its own exhibits, often with very original works. This places emphasis on cutting edge and avant-garde art.

[edit] History

Mies van der Rohe staircase and Alexander Calder mobile
Mies van der Rohe staircase and Alexander Calder mobile

The club was founded in 1916 and experienced its first coverage in the Chicago Tribune on March 16, 1916.[9] It had office space in the Fine Arts Building that became too limiting to serve the club's mission. In 1918, the club elected Rue Winterbotham Carpenter to replace Mrs. Robert McGann as president. She moved the club to 610 South Michigan Avenue .[10] The first exhibition included portraits by Whistler, Renoir, Cassatt, August Johns and others. By 1922, the club had outgrown its quarters and sponsored supplementary space at the Art Institute of Chicago until 1927 when the cost of doing so became prohibitive. In 1924, the club moved to the north tower of the Wrigley Building.[11] Among its first exhibitions at the Wrigley building was the first major United States show (seventeen sculptures, nineteen drawings and a painting) of Brancusi. The show was installed by Marcel Duchamp.[12] Rue Carpenter died on December 7, 1931,[13] and Mrs. Charles Goodspeed was elected president in 1932.[14] The club moved to more spacious accommodations at the Wrigley Building in 1936. "Bobsy" Goodspeed served as president until 1940. Then, Rue Winterbotham Carpenter’s niece Rue Winterbotham Shaw was elected President.[15] In 1947, the club scaled down its operations for four years after losing its Wrigley Building lease. In 1951, it moved to 109 East Ontario in quarters built to specification that were designed by Ludwig Mies van der Rohe.[16] Using Arts Club furnitur, he designed a gallery, dining room, and lecture hall in a pre-existing building. The gallery was built around Constantin Brâncuşi's The Golden Bird and the stairway was renowned for its simplistic elegance.[17] Shaw died in January 1979 and James Phinney Baxter was elected to serve until 1981 when Stanley Freehling was elected.[18] The club struggled financially in the 1980s.[19]

In the 1990s, the club was located west of Michigan Avenue and behind the 620 building which was home to many of Chicago's finest art dealers including Richard Gray and Richard L. Feigen & Co. The Arts club did not own the land upon which their famous Mies clubhouse was built; instead, the club held the land in a longterm leasehold. In 1990, the owner of 620 N. Michigan and the Arts Club land decided to sell. At first the Arts Club hoped to raise the mony to purchase its land along with the 620 N. Michigan Avenue property in an effort spearheaded by Richard Gray, but it quickly became apparent that the club would lose a bidding war over this valuable land. A developer bought the property and demolished the entire block to make way for a movie complex and shopping center.

With the prospect of losing its home, the Arts Club opted to sell one of the most valuable items in its collection to finance the purchase of new land. The club decided to sell Brancusi's Bird to the Art Institute of Chicago.[20] To finance the purchase, the Art Institute sold several second tier works from its famous Impressionist collection at Sotheby's in guaranteed lots which was a new concept in the auction world in 1990. While without permanent home, the club continued to meet regularly in space loaned by the Casino, another famous Near North Side club.

The 19,000 square feet (1,800 m²) John Vinci designed building is a two-story structure that cost $9 million for the land, building, landscaping, and interior design. The exterior facade is buff brick with black granite windowsills and thresholds and white-painted steel windows.[6] The building features furniture dating back to the club's founding as well as Mies van der Rohe designs.[6] Several elements of the new building's design are considered homages to Mies. The fact that the building was so Miesian thirty years after his death while the club focussed on avant-gard art was a bit of a controversy.[21] The building's atrium that allows filtered light into the central galleries and dining areas is its primary feature.[5] Another focal point of the building is the restored Mies van der Rohe steel staircase that provides access to the second floor.[6] The design includes white-painted steel, travertine marble, floor-to-ceiling curtains, dark-stained wood floors, and large areas of glass.[6] The color palette of saffron, black, gray, scarlet, and white is consistent with the former building.[6] Also notable are the veil of north side metal screens.[5] The building also has a 1,600 square feet (150 m²) outdoor landscaped garden.[6] The building accommodates a 200 person audience seating.[6]

[edit] Collection

The Arts Club's collection is a combination of acquisitions from its exhibitions and donations from both members and artists. It includes works by Georges Braque, Alexander Calder, Natalia Goncharova, Paul Klee, Henri Matisse, Joan Miró, Henry Moore, Isamu Noguchi, Francis Picabia, and Pablo Picasso. The club has made recent acquisitions of contemporary works by Malcolm Morley, Alex Katz, and Peter Doig.[7] The Club maintains a document collection, mostly of correspondence with its artists, at the Newberry Library.[5] Further information on the club collection can be found in The Arts Club of Chicago: The Collection 1916-1996 by Sophia Shaw, granddaughter of the Club's dynamic past president Rue Winterbotham Shaw.[22]

[edit] Highlights

Notable works in the club's private collection include:

  • Red Petals, plate steel, steel wire, sheet aluminum, soft-iron bolts, and aluminum paint, 1942,[23] by Alexander Calder
  • Main Staircase for The Arts Club of Chicago, steel, travertine marble, 1948-1951,[24] by Ludwig Mies van der Rohe
  • Untitled, charcoal on ivory laid paper, 1922,[25] by Henri Matisse
  • Personage an Birds in Front of the Sun (Personnage et oiseaux devant le soleil), ink and gouache on paper, 1942,[26] by Joan Miró
  • This Thing is Made to Perpetuate My Memory (Cette Chose est faite pour perpetuer mon souvenir), ink, gouache or watercolor, and silver and bronze paint on board, 1915,[27] by Francis Picabia
  • Head of a Woman (Tete de femme), red and black chalk with chalk wash on tan laid paper, laid down on lightweight Japanese paper, 1922,[28] by Pablo Picasso

[edit] Exhibitions, performances and lectures

Until the Museum of Modern Art was founded in 1929, Chicago and The Arts Club in particular was the most receptive exhibtor of modern art in the United States. At that time, no institution in the United States, especially none in Manhattan, would exhibit European modernism. By renting space at the Art Institute of Chicago's Building the Arts Club was able to arrange showings in Chicago's most prestigious museum.[4]

The club has exhibited an impressive number of well-known 20th century visual artists. Many of the century's most controversial artists made their United States or midwest solo exhibition debuts at the club including: Alexander Calder, Marc Chagall, Salvador Dalí, Jean Dubuffet, Pablo Picasso, Jackson Pollock, Auguste Rodin, Georges Seurat, and Henri Toulouse-Lautrec. In addition, many artists have given lectures at the Club, including Martha Graham, Kathleen Battle, Leonard Bernstein, Kenneth Branagh and Robert Altman. Aside from visual artists, the Club also has hosted lectures and performances from such prominent musicians as John Cage, Philip Glass, Ramsey Lewis and Igor Stravinsky, and poets W. H. Auden, Gertrude Stein and William Butler Yeats.[7] Most notable among these exhibitions was Picasso's first United States showing,[4] Original Drawings by Pablo Picasso from March 20 to April 22, 1923,[29] by the Arts Club at its installation at the Art Institute of Chicago. In the 1930s, when Isamu Noguchi was still known as a sculptor, they hosted him.[30] In 1970 when Varujan Boghosian was a timely sculptor known for depicting the legend of orpheus, The Arts Club hosted a showing.[31]

[edit] Locations

The current location is the club's seventh location. However, this is the first building owned by the club. The location history is listed below.[7]

The first home at the Fine Arts Building had no exhibition space. The club was not able to put on its first exhibition until December 18 when it moved to a location with exhibition space. The club's early gallery spaces were not sufficient to achieve the club's goals and it agreed to assume cost and selection responsibilities for works in a series of shows at The Arts Club Exhibition Room at the Art Institute of Chicago from 1922-1927.[32]

Name Street Address Years Architect/Interior Designer
Fine Arts Building 401 S. Michigan Avenue 1916-18 Arthur Heun/Rue Winterbotham Carpenter
610 S. Michigan Avenue 1918-24 Arthur Heun/Rue Winterbotham Carpenter
Wrigley Building (north tower) 410 N. Michigan Avenue 1924-36 Arthur Heun/Rue Winterbotham Carpenter
Wrigley Building (south tower) 410 N. Michigan Avenue 1936-47 Arthur Heun/Elizabeth “Bobsy” Goodspeed Chapman
109 E. Ontario Street 1951-95 Ludwig Mies van der Rohe
222 W. Superior Street 1995-97
201 E. Ontario Street 1997- Vinci/Hamp Architects, Inc.

[edit] Leadership

The club has had seven Presidents:[7]

Name Years
Mrs. Robert McGann 1916-18
Rue Winterbotham Carpenter 1918-31
Elizabeth “Bobsy” Goodspeed 1932-40
Rue Winterbotham Shaw 1940-79
James Phinney Baxter IV 1979-81
Stanley M. Freehling 1981-2005
Marilynn B. Alsdorf 2005-present

[edit] References

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ Kruty, Paul (2005). Armory Show of 1913. The Electronic Encyclopedia of Chicago. Chicago Historical Society. Retrieved on 2007-06-27.
  2. ^ a b Warren, Lynne (2005). Art. The Electronic Encyclopedia of Chicago. Chicago Historical Society. Retrieved on 2007-06-27.
  3. ^ a b Roeder, George H., Jr. (2005). Artists, Education and Culture of. The Electronic Encyclopedia of Chicago. Chicago Historical Society. Retrieved on 2007-06-27.
  4. ^ a b c Fitzgerald, pp. 120-1
  5. ^ a b c d Honor : The Arts Club of Chicago. American Institute of Architects Chicago. Retrieved on 2007-06-28.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h The Arts Club of Chicago Building Fact Sheet. www.artn.com. Retrieved on 2007-06-29.
  7. ^ a b c d e Fact Sheet. www.artn.com. Retrieved on 2007-06-29.
  8. ^ Wells, p. 6
  9. ^ Wells, p. 6.
  10. ^ Wells, p. 7.
  11. ^ Wells, p. 8.
  12. ^ Wells, p. 9.
  13. ^ Wells, p. 9.
  14. ^ Wells, p. 10.
  15. ^ Wells, p. 11.
  16. ^ Wells, p. 39.
  17. ^ Pridmore, Jay and George A. Larson (2005). "The Meaning of Mies and the Rise of Modernism", Chicago Architecture and Design. Harry N. Abrams, Inc.. ISBN 0-8109-5892-9. 
  18. ^ Wells, p. 72.
  19. ^ Wells, p. 73.
  20. ^ Shaw, p. 29.
  21. ^ Pridmore, Jay and George A. Larson (2005). "Chicago's Second Modern Period", Chicago Architecture and Design. Harry N. Abrams, Inc.. ISBN 0-8109-5892-9. 
  22. ^ Shaw, Sophia, editor The Arts Club of Chicago: The Collection 1916-1996. The University of Chicago Press. Retrieved on 2007-08-08.
  23. ^ Shaw, pg. 40
  24. ^ Shaw, pg. 76
  25. ^ Shaw, pg. 74
  26. ^ Shaw, pg. 78
  27. ^ Shaw, pg. 86
  28. ^ Shaw, pg. 90
  29. ^ Shaw, pg. 123
  30. ^ Third Noguchi. Time. Time, Inc. (1932-10-10). Retrieved on 2008-04-30.
  31. ^ The Mythmaker. Time. Time, Inc. (1970-02-09). Retrieved on 2008-04-30.
  32. ^ Wells, p. 8

[edit] External links