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Mark Tobey:
Painter of
the Humane Abstract
Through the month of
April and the first week of May [1951], the California Palace of the Legion of
Honor is showing a comprehensive exhibit of the work of Mark Tobey. It is a very
large show, one of the largest I have ever seen devoted to a contemporary
American painter. With a small background exhibit of Chinese calligraphy, it
fills just half the museum. This is a lot of painting, and it makes it possible
to come to some fairly definite conclusions about Tobey, his influence, his
development, his significance.
As I left the show, I
came on a little case with a tatter of ancient Peruvian cloth, two tones of dim,
worn red crossed with angular lines of white. For hundreds of years it had lain
close to the body of a Peruvian woman while the processes of final mortality
seeped through it. It seemed to be saturated with the pathetic fallacy of life
itself. The white threads meandered like withering thoughts over once fleshy
reds now almost grey. From a little distance it looked so exactly like a Tobey
that I thought some of the show had overflowed into an outer corridor.
There are many objects
like that in Tobeys studio. Certain painters, writers, philosophers, a
religious temper of life, other big things, have given his art its form and
inner meaning. Objects, artifacts, like this one, have given it its tone and
superficial appearances. His later pictures look like things made with a
draftsmans sensuality, but worn and broken, the colors all faded to white or
dulled to grey except the blurred mineral reds.
Of important artists
today Tobey is one of the most completely self-educated. For this reason he is
independently, widely, and seriously educated, at home in those provinces of art
and thought, distant in time or space, which interest him. He has assimilated
only what he wanted, but he has wanted much, and he has been thorough about it.
His influences may, until recently, lie off the mainstreams of modern artistic
ancestry, but they are completely part of him.
Tobey was born in
Centerville, Wisconsin, December 11, 1890. At twenty he went to New York and had
his first exhibitions, at Knoedlers and Romany Maries, of portrait drawings.
For a few years he alternated between New York and Chicago. Then he went out to
Seattle to teach at the Cornish School. In those days Seattle was still in the
flush of a regional awakening which was sparked by the intellectuals around the
I.W.W. Figures like Jimmy Chaplin, Charley Ashleigh, Ted Abrams, Morris Pass,
flamboyant characters from the last frontiers who read Ernest Dowson and Carl
Sandburg, admired Beardsley and Van Gogh, rode boxcars, soapboxed, got shot at
and put in jail, were the leaders of a bohemian radicalism that was certainly
closer to actual workers on the march than the proletarian aesthetes of the
depression period. The Wobbly Preamble, Free Verse, The New Art, Free Love, and
lots of straight whiskey . . . they were not enough to found the new society
which then seemed just around the corner, but they were plenty for a
short-lived, boisterous renaissance. Those years were formative. I met Tobey
then in Seattle. He was painting skidrow figures, migratory workers,
lumberjacks, and sailors. They were not very good pictures. Twenty-five years
later, he is still painting the same kind of models. They are very good
pictures. I dont want to suggest that he is a proletarian artist. He is about
as far from it as possible. But his art is not just abstract, forms and
dispositions of places and positions, as Gertrude Stein said of Cubism. It is
also humane. It started being that way, however clumsily, at the beginning.
In 1925-26 Tobey traveled
in Europe and the Near East. In those days he must have started looking long and
hard at paintings whose influence was to show up many years later. In 1927 he
returned to Seattle. From 1931 to 1938 he taught at Dartington Hall, Totnes,
Devon, England, and traveled extensively in Europe, Mexico, and the Far East. In
1934 he was in China and Japan. He became deeply interested in Chinese
calligraphy, and his present style began to take form. Since 1938 he has been
back in Seattle.
The earliest Tobeys are
not in this show. It starts with some simple landscapes and still lifes, and
other exercises, of value chiefly for showing how little the young Tobey was
touched by the sophisticated taste of that time. They are careful, honest, and
clumsy. Then come some typical early American abstractions, like 1920 Chicago,
or the post-Armory explosion of half a generation earlier. They are notable for
their modest color in a day when, in America, modernism meant loud.
Considerably later come some studies of wave motion. Space is considered as
being defined by moving forces rather than occupied by volumes. The impact of
the picture is carefully muted; range of color, value, hue, all the elements are
reduced and quieted. There is just the beginning in the smoky reds of Modal
Tides of the influence of Tintoretto. This was the right track, if only the
beginning. There would be divagations and side experiments, but the field of a
very special sensibility had been found.
Sometimes in those years
of travel Tobey must have stood a long time in the Doges Palace and the Scuola
San Rocco, looking finally and longest at things many people do not consider
important the interplay of gauzy drapery, blades of low lit grass, rippling
water and light the cobwebbed space in the Annunciation the black and
white chinoiseries of the other St. Marys the batlike silhouettes (due to
faulty retouching) which plunge through the Paradiso; and even at paintings
which most people consider dull the studio jobs of battle scenes, mostly the
work of Aliense, that well-named man, and the younger Robusti vast dull red
paintings, filled with rigging and spars, hedges and waves of spears, beams and
bars of dark and light, fire and smoke, and, lacing all the spaces, serried
flights of arrows. He must have absorbed, too, some of the peculiar space of
Tintoretto, which, though not rushing infinitely up and away like the ceilings
of later Counter-Reformation Baroque, seems to have no limits, no bottom or top
or end only an inexhaustible ruddy vastness. There are other Venetian echoes
the desolate, simple faces of Longhi, the splashing brush work of Guardi,
even Tiepolo could have contributed something, the calligraphic Tiepolo of the
half-transformed Actaeon and the other black background pictures in the
corridor of the Academia.
After the studies of wave
motion come some texture paintings, then some stiffly-placed still lifes in
tones of grey, and some dark, transparent Cubist ones, rather like Tamayo or
Gris, essentially volumes in space accomplished, but not Tobeys métier, and
then back to filled space. At first the space is filled with tumbling volumes,
for instance in Pinnacles, which gives something of the impression of a
Pontormo drawing, or of Tobeys colleague, Kenneth Callahan, and finally the
emergence of a fully calligraphic style.
The first calligraphic
pictures are organized along poles in three dimensions, usually swaths of bright
color, the calligraphy widely spaced, sparkling black or very dark lines,
sometimes outlined with a glow, on white or neutral backgrounds. This is
abandoned, probably as too confined, still too close to the painting of objects.
The backgrounds get dimmer and smokier and their almost invisible modulations
create shifting depths which are only variations of indefinitely expanding
monochrome.
With Broadway Norm
in 1935, the lines become predominantly white; the white writing now
identified with Tobey has appeared. The darker lines and the background create a
movement in deep space which is caught and defined and, as the eye travels,
continuously molded by the overlapping nets of pale grey and white. The first of
its kind, Broadway Norm is formally a rather simple picture, small, a
first step.
This major change follows
the year spent in the Far East. Is this new turn Chinese in any very complete
sense? I think not. I have a feeling that the great art of China is too much for
Tobey. It was a determinative influence in the change itself, the deliberate
adoption of calligraphy, but the Sung landscapists and their Zenist descendants
in Japan are a great deal more than calligraphers. I am afraid their scope, and
the capacity and conditions for their inexhaustible peace an ontological
peace are gone from the world. For all Tobeys openness to Oriental
influence, he is still another Western Man, like the rest of us, troubled and
doomed. His ancestors are in Venice, the Wests window on the Orient in the
crucial centuries, and his cousins are the later Turner and Odilon Redon.
Seattle today, of course, like San Francisco, has a commercial position
analogous to Renaissance Venice, and its Museum contains some of the better
works of the former Eumorfopoulos Collection of Far Eastern art. I suspect that
Tobey, who was in England at the time of the sale, may have had something to do
with this purchase.
This brings up another
influence which must be mentioned. Before the Eumorfopoulos purchase there
wasnt very much art in Seattle of any importance, except the work of the
Northwest Indians. Tobey has spent much time in Indian villages, owns several
fine examples of their work, has purchased much for others, and has steered his
students toward careful study of Northwest Indian motives and methods. Some of
his paintings, notably Eskimo Idiom in this show, use these motives
directly. In this instance the forms of masks, ivory carvings, and implements
are built up as on a shield. The first impression is rather like that of
analytical Cubism. Then a sense of transparency and interpenetration comes as a
sharp surprise after the picture has been seen for a while, and at last the
forms resolve themselves into calligraphic vectors, directions of tensions. In
other pictures the idiom of Northwest woodcarving and textiles is immediately
resolved into pure calligraphy. Incidentally, it should not be forgotten that
this idiom is so close to that of primitive Japan, Ainu, and Shang bronze that
critics like Fenollosa have postulated the existence of a Pacific Basin
primitive formal endowment, a plastic culture complex as pervasive as that
of La Tene in Europe.
I think, actually, this
Northwest idiom shows most strongly in a group of massed figure paintings, of
which The Gathering (1944) is a good example. The faces have the same
masklike quality, the bodies the same tense stiffness, wooden but dynamic. But
there are other aspects too, ultimately more important. The overall color is one
of dirty flesh, as crowded as Rowlandson, and again, like him, calligraphic, but
in Tobeys case not the War of the Fat and the Lean, but a more fundamental
conflict. Possibly this particular painting is an artists ball. The effect is
that of a skidrow mission on Christmas Eve, crowded with ungainly movement, busy
with aimlessness and embarrassment. Here and there expectant, bemused faces
stare into the air above the spectators head, so that he feels overlooked
with incomprehension unemployed shepherds watching the caroling angels as
cripples watch skywriters. It makes no difference, artists ball or hoboes
feast, the judgment is the same.
In two slightly variant
paintings, Skidrow Figures (1948), studies in isolated silhouette, rather
like Morris Graves, this judgment is intensified. The figures slip away from
human into reptilian or birdlike forms. One central one rises into a kind of
supplication, a Gethsemane of the gutter.
Similar in tone are the
paintings of city streets, Flow of the Night, Broadway, many others,
saturated complexes of calligraphic light filled with little people. An electron
model spins; lines of women move away on an escalator; an aged whore stands like
a verger at the door of an English cathedral; a desolate flophouse room,
inhabited by a sinister little vortex, floats in space; ears bloom in the air; a
nude is hung up by the heels; and everywhere, men with the wise, battered,
hopeless faces of aging migratory workers wander, eyes lost in space, not even
bothering to ogle the girls legs.
Finally come the pure
calligraphic abstractions, Chrysalis, City Radiance, a whole series of
paintings which are the culmination to date of Tobeys art. City Radiance
is a complete crystallization of space, straight lines meeting mostly in acute
angles and equilaterals, with rectangles traveling across like sonorous pedal
notes, the whole volume doubly folded, envelope-wise, on itself and, across the
fold, a form, defined by rising lines, somewhat like Brancusis birds, and like
them, ineffably soaring. These pictures are the other side of the coin, the
religious affirmation which supersedes the mordant analysis of the mind of
benighted cities. After all, the title is City Radiance. The pictures of
this group may be abstract, but their calm and order and purity grow technically
and personally, and even representationally in a sense, out of knowledge of
suffering and disorder and brutal ignorance. This is compassion. In these
paintings Tobey touches the tradition of the Zen landscapists. He is a humane
painter.
KENNETH REXROTH
1951
This essay originally
appeared in Art News (May 1951) and was reprinted in Bird in the Bush
(New Directions, 1959). Copyright 1951. Reproduced here by permission of the
Kenneth Rexroth Trust.
[Other Rexroth Essays]
[REXROTH ARCHIVE]
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