Saturday, August 10, 2013

Historical Co|So :: The Armory Show in Boston Part II



Every city on the Armory Show tour was taking a risk in exhibiting the controversial art of the Modernist painters.  Even New York City, the American art capital was nervous to see the work of the degenerate artists arrive.  While New York may have been taking a risk, Boston was causing a scandal! In the historically more conservative city, the works in the 1913 exhibition were considered downright outrageous to some of the members of the Copley Society of Boston.

John Monteiro, Horse, 14 x 16 1/2, scratchboard.

Before arriving in Boston, the Armory show stopped in in New York and Chicago.  Often thought of as the most famous event to link the European movements of Fauvism, Cubism, and Futurism to the U.S., the show took both cities by storm.  Hosted at the 69th Regiment Armory in NYC the show featured over 2,000 paintings by both European and American artists.  In comparison, space constraints at the Copley Society of Boston only allowed for 244 paintings, all by European artists, to be displayed.  Before traveling back east, the exhibition had a tumultuous reception at the Art Institute of Chicago, where students and patrons incited a protest against the art on display. 

Floor Plan of Copley and Allston Halls in the Grundmann Studio Building, 194 Clarendon Street, Boston.
Despite the willingness of the Copley Society to take a chance with the Armory Show, there was significant debate between the members.  A letter written by Frank Gair Macomber to fellow Copley Society member Edward R. Warren expressed his concern in being associated with supporting provocative European artists:

“We all feel that the Society should avoid seeming to give any sanction to the movement.”
               -Letter from Edward Warren to Frank Macomber, March 31, 1913

The Society made it clear that the exhibition was brought to Boston purely as an educational tool: they wanted to give the public a chance to form their own opinions of the art without seeming to endorse any of the movements. Even so, the Society worried about the immediate reception of the Boston public. In his letter to Walt Kuhn, secretary of the Association of American Painters and Sculptors, Warren lamented:

“It takes time in Boston, even in the case of an unusual exhibition to awake public interest.” 
               -Letter from Edward Warren to Walter Kuhn, March 21, 1913

Unfortunately, this turned out to be true as the Boston show attracted only a fraction of the number of New York and Chicago visitors. 

Vcevold Strekalovsky, Addison County I, 20 x 26, oil.
Though it may have taken a bit more time to awaken interest in Boston, the Copley Society is proud to have been a part of the historic show!  Join us in celebrating the centennial of this significant and momentous period of art in America with two unique exhibitions – a members show of contemporary artworks inspired by the Modernists represented in the Amory Show, and a historical show of archival print materials from the original 1913 exhibition. Both exhibitions run through August 21, 2013, and can be viewed online here: https://www.copleysociety.org/exhibitions/current.html.

Saturday, August 3, 2013

Historical Co|So :: The Armory Show in Boston

This year marks the centennial of a hallmark of art in America – the 1913 International Exhibition of Modern Art (commonly referred to as the Armory Show), and the Copley Society is celebrating! With a series of events and exhibitions centered on the historic show, this summer Co|So will explore the impact of the exhibition that first introduced Americans to European Modern movements such as Fauvism, Cubism and Futurism.  The show originated in New York City at the 69th Regiment Armory (hence the common name), spent two weeks at the Art Institute of Chicago, and then made its final U.S. stop in Boston at the Copley Society.

Tom Stocker, Armory Show Nickel, 30 x 30, acrylic on board.

The artists featured in the Armory Show have since become household names (including Marcel Duchamp, Henri Matisse, Constantin Brancusi and Wassily Kandinsky), but in 1913 they were unknown to American audiences. These controversial works were brought to America by members of the Association of American Painters and Sculptors (AAPS) including Walt Kuhn, secretary and Arthur B. Davies, president, with the goal of educating the American public about modern European art. Under the auspices of the AAPS, over 2,000 paintings were shipped from Europe and the U.S. and exhibited at the Armory on Lexington Avenue from February 17 – March 15, 1913. 

Letter from Warren to Macomber of March 31, 1913 discussing the merits and demerits of the exhibition.
Reviews panned the exhibition.  The reception of the show was strongly felt, with the majority of viewers and art critics regarding the works as “degenerate” and “bad art.” During the planning stages of the Boston leg of the show, Arthur Davies and Edward Warren of the Copley Society discussed the impact and educational merits of the exhibition:

It is interesting to note the sentiment which is being expressed here.  Deep interest on the part of some and violent disgust and opposition on the part of others.  All that the Copley Society aims to do in giving this exhibition in Boston is to satisfy the desire of the public for knowledge of a type of work which has excited great curiosity.  We think it is fair that the people of Boston should be given this opportunity of judging for themselves the merits or demerits of this movement.
-Edward R. Warren of the Copley Society of Boston in a letter to Arthur B. Davies, president of the Association of American Painters & Sculptors, dated March 29, 1913

In time, the majority of artists featured at the Armory show would go on to join the pantheon of great 20th-century artists. 

Wendy Hale, Bridge Crossing, 36 x 28, watercolor.
The Copley Society is excited to celebrate the centennial of this significant and momentous period of art in America with two unique exhibitions – a members show of contemporary artworks inspired by the Modernists represented in the Amory Show, and a historical show of archival print materials from the original 1913 exhibition. Both exhibitions run through August 21, 2013, and can be viewed online here: https://www.copleysociety.org/exhibitions/current.html.