Oscar Florianus Bluemner

Oscar Bluemner

1903 self-portrait
Born Friedrich Julius Oskar Blümner
(1867-06-21)June 21, 1867
Prenzlau, Germany
Died January 12, 1938(1938-01-12) (aged 70)
South Braintree, Massachusetts
Nationality German American
Education Royal Academy of Design, Berlin
Known for Painting

Oscar Bluemner (June 21, 1867 – January 12, 1938), born Friedrich Julius Oskar Blümner[1] and after 1933 known as Oscar Florianus Bluemner,[2] was a German-born American Modernist painter.

Early life

Bluemner was born as Friedrich Julius Oskar Blümner in Prenzlau, Germany, on June 21, 1867.[1] He studied painting and architecture at the Royal Academy of Design in Berlin.[3]

Architecture

Bluemner moved to Chicago in 1893 where he freelanced as a draftsman at the World's Columbian Exposition. After the exposition, he attempted to find work in Chicago. In 1901, he relocated to New York City where he also was unable to find steady employment. In 1903, he created the winning design for the Bronx Borough Courthouse in New York,[4] although it is credited to Michael J. Garvin. The scandal that arose around this took down borough president Louis Haffen for corruption and fraud.[5]

Painting

Evening Tones
Form and Light, Motif in West New Jersey (1914)
Old Canal Port
Illusion of a Prairie, New Jersey (Red Farm at Pochuck), 1915

In 1908 Bluemner met Alfred Stieglitz, who introduced him to the artistic innovations of the European and American avant-garde. By 1910, Bluemner had decided to pursue painting full-time rather than architecture.

He exhibited in the 1913 Armory Show. He said that the Americans' contribution failed to match that of the Europeans because the American selection process reflected rivalries and compromises rather than curatorial judgment, resulting in a "melée of antagonistic examples".[6] Then in 1915 Stieglitz gave him a solo exhibition at his gallery, 291. Despite participating in several exhibitions, including solo shows, for the next ten years Bluemner failed to sell many paintings and lived with his family in near poverty.[4]

He created paintings for the Federal Arts Project in the 1930s.[3]

Later life

After his wife's death in 1926, Bluemner moved to South Braintree, Massachusetts. From there in 1932 he contributed a letter to an ongoing debate in the New York Times on the question "What is American Art?". He wrote:[7]

America sells its shoes, machines, canned beef and so forth in Europe and all over the world not because they have an American style or are wrapped in the American flag, but simply because they are best. Thus also, the French export their paintings and birth-control, and the Germans export sauerkraut and prima donnas, because those things, each, are best. Today, for quality, nationalism, as a race-attribute, means nothing; chemistry, astronomy, or engineering admit, nowhere, of any national flavoring, nor do higher things like religion or philosophy.

Let us, here, make progressive and best painting, each one as he is fit to do, and merely ask: What and when is painting, in a critical sense?... How can the people agree on what is American style, if the painters themselves, and by their work, disagree profoundly as to what real painting itself is! And there is, and always was, nothing more contemptible, ridiculous and, to art, disastrous, than patrioteering, which thinly veils profiteering.

Ideally, art, pure, is of a sphere and of no country; the first real artists, always and everywhere, have either been importers or immigrants bringing the light with them. El Greco, an immigrant...defied the Spanish professors...; we, now, call his work more truly Spanish than that of his local contemporaries. And in the same sense, the future will not fail to stamp that of our own work as peculiarly American in which the living painter, here, has injected no conscious thought of his hailing from Hoboken or Kankakee, and every consideration of pure and modern painting and of the supreme quality he maybe capable of.

He had a successful one-man show in 1935 at the Marie Harriman Gallery in New York City. In the New York Times, Edward Alden Jewell called it Bluemner's "apotheosis". He wrote:[8]

He is very mush alive and has been working of late ...with robustious [sic] results. These twenty-eight canvases bear the generic title , "New Landscape Paintings." That is because Mr. Blkuemner feels that some degree of "representation" is essential if abstract ideas are to be put over with entire success. However, the artist more fully and more exactly classifies them as "compositions for color themes." He might, if he chose, even call them "color music" without risking the opprobrium that usually attends excursions into so hazardous a field.... These startling pictures build harmonies and rhythms that depend as a rule on simple statement. Here we find none of the overtones and undertones that some other artists have employed in projecting visual music. Bluemner relies for his effect upon plain, resonant chords. Though modulations of tone occur, these seem of secondary importance in his scheme. There is decidedly something in this new, bold, exclamatory style.

Bluemner committed suicide on January 12, 1938.[9]

Legacy

Stetson University holds more than 1,000 pieces of Oscar Bluemner's work bequeathed in 1997 by his daughter, Vera Bluemner Kouba. In 2009 the Homer and Dolly Hand Art Center at Stetson opened with a primary mission of housing a providing exhibition space for the Kouba Collection.[10] Often overlooked in his lifetime, Bluemner now is widely acknowledged as a key player in the creation of American artistic Modernism, with better-known colleagues such as Georgia O'Keeffe and John Marin.

In 2013, the Montclair Art Museum in New Jersey presented an exhibition of Bluemner's works depicting the landscapes and industrial areas of Paterson, painted between 1910 and 1917, drawn from the Stetson holdings.[11] It marked the centenary of the Paterson silk strike, which had inspired his politics.[12]

An oil painting by Bluemner, Illusion of a Prairie, New Jersey (Red Farm at Pochuck) (1915) sold at Christie's, New York, for $5,346,500 on November 30, 2011.

Artworks

Year Title Image Collection Comments
1932Imagination, casein with ground watercolors (prepared by the artist) on paper board view Corcoran Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C. IAP 08260662

Notes

  1. 1 2 Haskell 2005, p. 11
  2. Haskell 2005, p. 204
  3. 1 2 Phillips Collection; Susan Behrends Frank (2013). Made in the U.S.A.: American art from the Phillips Collection 1850-1970. New Haven : Washington, D.C: Yale University Press; The Phillips Collection. ISBN 9780300196153.
  4. 1 2 Corley, Erin (1960). A Finding Aid to the Oscar Bluemner Papers, 1886-1939. Archives of American Art.
  5. "Landmarks Preservation Commission June 22, 2010, Designation List 430 LP-2388" (PDF).
  6. Panero, James (February 25, 2013). "The Forgotten Americans". Wall Street Journal. Retrieved February 16, 2015.
  7. Bluemner, Oscar (January 31, 1932). "What is American Art?". New York Times. Retrieved February 16, 2015.
  8. Jewell, Edward Alden (January 6, 1935). "Holiday Lull Ends in New Activities". New York Times. Retrieved February 16, 2015.
  9. "O.J. Bluemner a Suicide". New York Times. January 13, 1938. Retrieved February 16, 2015.
  10. "The Vera Bluemner Kouba Collection". Stetson University.
  11. Johnson, Ken (April 25, 2013). "Interrupted Awakening for American Works". New York Times. Retrieved February 16, 2015.
  12. Zeaman, John (February 17, 2013). "'Oscar Bluemner's America: Picturing Paterson, New Jersey' at the Montclair Art Museum". Bergen Record. Retrieved February 16, 2015.

References

Further reading

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Oscar Bluemner.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.