Monday, May 25, 2015

WILLIAM BAZIOTES: SURREALIST WATERCOLORS AT ALLENTOWN ART MUSEUM

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On view through August 23, 2015
WILLIAM BAZIOTES:
SURREALIST WATERCOLORS
Allentown Art Museum
31 North Fifth Street
Allentown, PA

The museum notes “Baziotes (1912-1963) was an important contributor to Abstract Expressionism who also upheld the mysterious, dreamlike, and poetic aspects of Surrealism.”

On Wednesday, June 3, at noon, Elaine Mehalakes will give a gallery talk on the exhibition. Call to reverse a space: 610-432-4333 ext.110. Museum members $15, Others $20.

Link to Gallery site:
http://www.susantellergallery.com/cgi/STG_art.pl?artist=baziotes

The William Baziotes drawings in this show are early, 1936 to 1939. They are pre-Abstract Expressionism and pre-World War II. It is Surrealism of swimmers menaced by lightening, bulls 
--> raising their fists, and struggling pictographs. Sometimes, however, there is a bizarre joie de vivre: sunbathing girls with multiple body parts on city rooftops. The frequent use of gouache adds brightness and intense color.
 
Sunbather with Hose, 1936-39
A Greek-American, William Baziotes (1912-1963) was born in Pittsburgh and raised in Reading, Pennsylvania, where an early mentor was the poet Byron Vazsakas. In 1931 Baziotes saw an exhibition of work by Henri Matisse at the Museum of Modern Art. It was a defining experience and he moved to New York City in 1933. He attended the National Academy of Design and worked with Charles Curran, Ivan Olinsky, Gifford Beal, and Leon Kroll. He graduated in 1936 and then worked on the Works Progress Administration. He was a teacher at the Queens Museum of Art, 1936-38, and an easel painter, 1938-40.

In 1936 Baziotes met the surrealist Giorgio de Chirico and he showed his work for the first time, at a group show at the Municipal Art Gallery. By 1940 he knew Jimmy Ernst, Gordon Onslow-Ford, Gerome Kamrowski, Andre Masson, Roberta Matta, and Jackson Pollock. Also in 1940 Baziotes exhibited with the surrealists in a group show at the New School.

Baziotes attended Stanley William Hayter’s printmaking studio, Atelier 17, which opened its New York venue in 1940. It was a gathering place for the European ex-patriots and the American modernists; automatism was a frequently used technique and subject of endless discussion. The work Collaborative Painting, an exercise in automatism, made by Baziotes, Gerome Kamrowski, and Jackson Pollock, is dated 1940-41.

In 1941 Baziotes married Ethel Copstein; they lived in Morningside Heights. Also that year Matta introduced Baziotes to Robert Motherwell. In 1942, at the invitation of Masson, Baziotes showed with Motherwell and David Hare in the First Papers of Surrealism show at the Whitelaw Reid Mansion. However, he was gradually drawn to abstraction.

Baziotes’ first one-man show was at Peggy Guggenheim’s Art of This Century Gallery in 1944. A show in 1946 at the Kootz Gallery established representation that continued until 1958. In 1948, with David Hare, Robert Motherwell, and Mark Rothko, Baziotes founded the Subjects of the Artist School on East Eighth Street. He taught at the Brooklyn Museum School, the Museum of Modern Art, Hunter College, and New York University.

In 1962 his work was in the landmark show Ten American Painters at the Sydney Janis Gallery. In the 1965 the Guggenheim Museum held a Memorial Exhibition.

In 2012 the Reading Public Museum held Baziotes’ 100th Anniversary Exhibition, and William Baziotes, A Centennial Exhibition, Drawings of the 1930s, was shown at the Susan Teller Gallery, New York, NY.