The Frank and Michelle Hevrdejs
Collection at Tacoma Art Museum
By Alec Clayton
Published in the Weekly Volcano, Nov. 16, 2017
“The Writer’s Tale – A Precarious Moment,” oil on canvas by John Frederick Peto, from the Frank and Michelle Havrdejs Collection, courtesy Tacoma Art Museum
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Two galleries in
the Tacoma Art Museum are filled with 60 paintings from 200 years of American
still life painting from the Frank and Michelle Hevrdejs Collection. Included are
works by such masters as James Peale, Georgia O’Keeffe, Andrew Wyeth and
Wayne Thiebaud, plus many lesser known artists. The paintings are clustered
chronologically from the early 19th century through contemporary 21st
century paintings.
From the
earliest American still life paintings until the advent of Pop Art, the
European influence is strong, especially 17th century Dutch painting
in the early years, French Impressionism from the late 1800s and into the early
20th century, and then European modernism, most notably Cezanne and
Cubism.
America became
fascinated with Trompe l’oeil or “fool the eye” painting in the late 1800s,
with paintings by such artists as William Merritt Chase; John Frederick Peto;
and most celebrated of all, William Michael Harnett. Paintings by these artists
look so realistic that audiences at the time said you couldn’t tell them from
photographs —although even the most skillfully painted Trompe l’oeil pictures
fell far short of the photographic illusionism of late 20th century
Photo Realism.
The most
noticeable feature of the earlier works in this show is how dark they are.
Nearly every painting has black or exceedingly dark backgrounds, and brown,
dark green and black predominate. When we move into the 20th
century, palettes lighten significantly.
There is a large
section of Impressionist paintings featuring little known American
Impressionists (with few exceptions, American Impressionism never rivaled
French Impressionism). Frankly, these paintings do not belong in this
exhibition. They are not still lifes. They are pictures of women in gardens and
in interior scenes and are included only because the interior scenes contain a
few still life elements.
The beauty, the
excitement, and the artistic quality that makes this exhibition worth seeing is
nearly all to the found in the paintings from the 1920s to the most recent work
in the show. Scott Fraser’s “Lemon, Lemon,” for example, an oil painting from
2014 of two lemons sitting on sticks with long, spiral peels hanging down. With
its dark background and golden yellow lemons, it is like a reemergence of
Trompe l’oeil, but with a clever modern twist.
What makes the
later works stand out so much from the earlier, in addition to the lighter
palettes, is that they are more concerned with the elements of art than with
the faithful reproduction of the appearance of objects. They distort
perspective, use color expressively, and are concerned with the arrangement of
objects in relation to one another.
Thomas Hart
Benton’s “Abstract Still Life,” for example, depicts a flower with solid,
abstract forms that have a sculptural look and beautifully glowing colors, and
Emil Bisttram’s “Still Life with Red Apples” is like a Cubist still life by
Picasso or Braque with a dance across the surface of contrasting dark and light
forms.
William H.
Bailey’s “Still Life with Pitcher and Eggs” is as realistic as any of the
paintings by earlier artists but is clearly more about balance and contrast
than it is about the appearance of the pitchers and eggs, and the velvety nuances
of brown and white make you want to reach out and touch them.
And then there
is Wayne Thiebeaud’s “Jelly Rolls (for Morton),” three jelly rolls in a line on
a counter with a dark blue background and glowing, lighter blue shadows. I
would venture to say that everyone who loves art has seen reproductions of
Thiebeaud still lifes in books and magazines, but to see them in person — the
thickness of his brushstrokes and the lushness of his colors —is to experience
pure beauty that is transformative. Seeing this painting alone is worth the
price of admission. It is a small painting at 19-by-22 inches, and
unfortunately presented in a ridiculous frame, but how anything so small and so
simple can have such a powerful impact is almost beyond comprehension.
I recommend you
see this show for the Thiebeaud, for the William H. Bailey, and for the history
lesson.
Tacoma Art
Museum, Tuesday-Sunday, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., through Jan. 7, $13-$15, third
Thursday free 5-8 p.m., 1701 Pacific Ave. Tacoma,
http://www.tacomaartmuseum.org/
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