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SELECTED REVIEWS AND ARTICLES
Balthus
Hernan Bas
Max Beckmann
Eric Bogosian
Michaël Borremans
Louise Bourgeois
James Casebere
Christine Hill
Jim Hodges
Dennis Hollingsworth
William Kentridge
Michelangelo
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Dana Schutz
Julian Stanczak
John Szarkowski
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FEATURED ARTICLE
Was Chicago artist Manierre Dawson the father of abstract painting?
By Dan Tranberg
1910 was a pivotal year in the history of art.
It was the year that Wassily Kandinsky, working in Munich, Germany and Arthur
Dove, working in Westport, Connecticut, independently made the world's first
abstract paintings.
At least that's what the history books say.
But history is written in curious ways.
Considering the enormous artistic and technological advances that took place
during the first decade of the 20th century, isn't it possible that other
artists of the time also stumbled upon the idea of painting something besides
the visible world?
Enter Manierre Dawson, a little-known Chicago-born artist who may just be
the undiscovered originator of abstract painting.
Last fall, the Cleveland Museum of Art acquired an unassuming 12-by-16-inch
painting by Dawson titled "Differential Complex." Made up entirely
of parabolas, straight lines, and circles, it is completely abstract. It's
also dated 1910.
According to Henry Adams, CMA's Curator of American Painting, the painting
is likely to have been executed several months before Kandinsky's and Dove's
earliest abstract canvases.
Perhaps as importantly, Adams asserts that "the Dawson painting is
far more conceptually radical than those of either Kandinsky or Dove."
While Kandinsky's and Dove's earliest abstract works clearly possess visual
elements derived from nature, Dawson, who worked by day as an architectural
engineer in Chicago, based his paintings from this period on mathematical
ideas.
Adams points out that "between 1890 and 1910, Chicago architects, particularly
Louis Sullivan and Frank Lloyd Wright, established the hallmarks of modern
architecture: the skyscraper, and the free-flowing house with an open plan."
In the midst of these creative innovations, Adams believes that Dawson applied
similar architectural ideas to painting.
"Engineers think of physical matter not in terms of its shape or surface
but rather in terms of the internal lines of force that run through it,"
says Adams.
With its web of darting and arching lines, Dawson's "Differential Complex"
seems to trace unseen energies across a loose grid that vaguely resembles
graph paper.
But proving that Dawson actually did the painting when he said he did is
another story.
In unraveling the details of Dawson's life, Adams and others have learned
all kinds of interesting details about the artist's life. Shortly after
painting "Differential Complex," Dawson traveled to Europe where
he met some of key players in the bourgeoning modern art scene. Among them
were Gertrude Stein (to whom he later sold his first painting), John Singer
Sargent, and Edouard Vuillard.
Upon his return, following a period of intense artistic activity, Dawson
married in 1914 and had a strange idea: to move to Michigan and become a
fruit farmer. According to Adams, Dawson initially thought that the plan
would allow him to paint in the winter while tending to the orchards in
the summer.
It didn't work. Short after establishing his business, Dawson disappeared
from the art world entirely. It wasn't until the 1960's that he re-emerged
as a millionaire farmer in the possession of some 250 paintings and sculptures,
which he had accumulated over the course of 50 years.
While Adams is among Dawson's champions, he's not the only one who believes
in Dawson's significance as a pioneer of Modernism.
Paintings by Dawson can be found in the Museum of Modern Art in New York,
the Whitney Museum of American Art, the Brooklyn Museum of Art, and the
Art Institute of Chicago.
Still, convincing the world of Dawson's place in the history of art may
take some time. "My guess," Adams says, "is that 20 to 50
years from now, this will be an extremely important painting."
In the meantime, the new Dawson remains an enigma within CMA's modest but
increasingly interesting collection of works tracing the still-unfolding
advent of Modernism.
___________________________________________
This article appeared in The Plain
Dealer, July 26, 2002
© 2007 Dan Tranberg. All rights reserved.
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