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Augusta Stylianou Gallery
Arthur Garfield Dove (August 2, 1880 – November 23, 1946) was an American artist. An early American modernist, he was one of America's first abstract painters.
Dove was born to a wealthy family in Canandaigua, New York. His parents, William George and Anna Elizabeth, were of English ancestry. William Dove was interested in politics and named his son Arthur Garfield, after the soon-to-be-elected Republican Vice President, Chester Arthur and Presidential candidate James Garfield of the 1880 election.[1][2] Arthur Dove grew up loving the outdoors on a farm; however, his father was a very successful businessman who owned a brickyard (along with city real estate) and expected his son to become wealthy.[3] Dove's childhood interests included playing the piano, painting lessons, and being a pitcher on a high school baseball team.[3] As a child, he was befriended by a neighbor named Newton Weatherby. Weatherby was a naturalist who helped form Dove’s appreciation of nature. He was also an amateur painter who gave Dove pieces of leftover canvas to work with. 'Sunrise', 1924, Milwaukee Museum of Art, Education Dove attended Cornell University, where he was chosen to illustrate the Cornell University yearbook. Dove's illustrations proved popular because they brought life to the characters and situations they depicted.[3] After graduation, he became a well known commercial illustrator in New York City. At 23 years old, this well-educated young man had left small town life to live in the largest city in the country.[3] Dove's choice to forgo the life of material advantages (following a degree from an Ivy League school) to become an artist upset his parents to the point that they never showed him any sympathy toward the disadvantages of choosing a career in art.[4] In 1907, Dove and his first wife traveled to France. They moved to Paris, the capital of art.[4] They made short trips to both Italy and Spain.[1] While there he joined a group of experimental artists from the United States. One of theses artists was Alfred Henry Maurer. Dove and Maurer remained friends until Maurer’s suicide in 1932. While in Europe, Dove was introduced to new painting styles, in particular the Fauve works of Henri Matisse, and he exhibited at the annual Autumn Salon in 1908 and 1909. Feeling a clearer sense as an artist, he returned to New York.[1] His return to the commercialism of illustration dissatisfied him so Dove moved out of New York to make a living off farming and fishing while devoting his time to his career as a painter.[1] His son William C. Dove was born on July 4, 1909.[2] It is believed that Maurer wrote to Stieglitz to introduce Dove.[1] New York When Dove returned to America in 1909 he met Alfred Stieglitz. Stieglitz was a well known photographer and gallery owner who was very active in promoting modern art in America. In his attempt to educate the art public, he began to introduce other art besides photography.[1] In addition to American modernists he exhibited works by European artists.[1] These pieces had never been seen in the United States.[1] Stieglitz was a New York art world celebrity.[1] Dove made the decision to quit his career as an illustrator but was in need of artistic identity along with emotional bolstering and Stieglitz filled both these roles.[5] The photographer was 16 years older than Dove and his urban, Jewish and European cultural roots were in contrast to Dove's rural Anglo-Saxon Protestant heritage. Dove was said to be gentle, quiet, and a good friend while Stieglitz was known as being argumentative and shrewd.[1] They found their common ground in the idea that art forms should embody modern spiritual values not materialism and tradition.[4] With Stiegliz’s support, Dove produced what are known as the first purely abstract paintings to come out of America. Dove exhibited his works at Stieglitz’s “291” gallery in 1910 and again in 1912 when he had his first one-man exhibition. The 1910 show “Younger American Painters” put Dove in the company of his old friend Maurer.[1] Dove showed one painting, a large still life painted in France entitled “The Lobster”, which would be his last representational work.[1] The 1912 show at the “291”, Dove's only one-man show, contained a group of pastels that came to be known as “Ten Commandments” and was the first public exhibition of abstract art by an American.[1] In the two years after meeting Stieglitz, Dove became a leader in international art developments.[1] From 1912 to 1946 Dove showed his work annually at Stieglitz’s galleries, “291”, “Intimate Gallery” and “An American Place.”[1] Dove’s works were based on natural forms and he referred to his type of abstraction as “extraction” where, in essence, he extracted the essential forms of a scene from nature. 'Out of the Window' 1939, Museum of Art, St. Louis, Missouri Career and Exhibitions Dove used a wide range of media, sometimes in unconventional combinations. Dove did a series of experimental collage works in the 1920s. He also experimented with techniques, combining paints like hand mixed oil or tempera over a wax emulsion. In 1937 Phillips purchased “Goin Fishin” for $2,000.00, the largest sum paid to that date for any of Dove's work.[1] Phillips also purchased “Huntington Harbor 1.”[6] Dove produced about twenty-five assemblages between 1924 and 1930.[2] After the war In spite of support from various members of the art community, it was often necessary for Dove to earn money through farming, fishing and commercial illustration. Dove’s most consistent supporter was Duncan Phillips, founder of the Phillips Collection in Washington, D.C., which now holds the majority of Dove’s work. Dove’s work convinced Philips that abstract was an artistic process, not just an art style.[6] Stieglitz’s gallery was first visited by Phillips because of Dove, and he continued to return to see Dove's work.[6] In exchange for first choice of paintings from each exhibition, Phillips paid Dove a commission of $50.00 a month.[5] Interestingly, Dove met Phillips only once in his lifetime in 1936.[1] Sun by Arthur Dove, 1943, Smithsonian American Art Museum Washington DC Personal life He spent a seven-year period on a houseboat called Mona with Helen Torr, known as "Reds" for the fiery color of her hair. Torr was also a painter. Although the psychological consequences benefited Dove’s art, his life with Torr was difficult. Florence Dove never cared about Dove's passion for art, and was more socially inclined. After 25 years of marriage, Dove left Florence.[1] Florence would not grant him a divorce and flatly refused to let him see his son.[1] When he departed, he left behind everything except his copies of Camera Works and Stieglitz’s letters.[1] When Dove’s wife Florence died unexpectedly, he paid $250.00 for the funeral expenses and sent flowers, but did not go to the funeral in Geneva.[1] Although distressed about her death, he was now able to see his son and marry Torr. For the first time in eight years, Dove met with his then nineteen-year-old son, Bill, who was also an artist. The two established a friendship and later in life his son became a help to Dove with creating a technique for silvering frames. Dove and Torr were not able to wed immediately as Torr had not divorced her first husband. Dove and Torr did eventually marry on April 1932 in the New York City Hall with a brief service and a using a ten-cent store ring.[1] Dove identified himself as a "frame maker" on his marriage registry. The 1933 at the Gallery 291 exhibition was the only time Stieglitz allowed Torr and Dove to exhibit together.[2] “Seven Americans” brought Dove back into the coverage of major newspapers and art magazines as well as back into the public eye.[1] Dove's work had an impact on later abstract landscape painters, such as Hatton and O'Keeffe, in terms of having an "unbridled love of pure, hot color."[7] Later Life and Death Dove suffered a heart attack in 1939 and his health never fully recovered. In 1946 Dove had his last show with nine new paintings and made his final visit to the gallery and saw Stieglitz for the last time. In July of that year their first grandchild Toni was born. A little more than a month after the show closed in July, Stieglitz died of heart failure. Badly shaken from his friend’s death, Dove lived for only four more months.[1] Although he became partially paralyzed by a stroke, he continued with Torr's help by guiding the brush as he painted until he collapsed and died at Huntington Hospital.[1] Arthur Dove died on November 23, 1946 following a second heart attack and kidney failure. In October,just before his death, Dove wrote to Phillips for the last time: You have no idea what sending on those checks to me at this time. After fighting for an idea all your life I realize that your backing has saved it for me and meant to thank you with all my heart and soul for what you have done. It has been marvelous. So many letters have been written and not mailed and owing to having been in bed a great deal of time this summer, the paintings were about all I could muster up enough energy to do what I considered the best of my ability. Just before Stieglitz’s death I took some paintings to him that I considered as having something new in the. He immediately walked right up to them and spoke of the new ideas. His intuition in that way was remarkable and I am so glad to have been allowed to live during his and your lifetimes. It has been a great privilege for which I am truly thankful. Arthur Dove’s granddaughter is the interactive artist Toni Dove. Arthur Dove's Cottage In July 1924 when Arthur Dove and Helen Torr sailed into Huntington Harbor aboard their 42-foot yawl, Mona, they could not have anticipated the extent to which Long Island’s North Shore would inspire some of their greatest paintings. They lived in Halesite until the Great Depression when both Dove and Torr moved back to the Dove's estate located in Geneva, NY. Longing to be back on Long Island, in 1938 they moved back into their first home, a former post office and general store on Center Shore Road in Centerport, New York. They purchased the house for $980.00. Their tiny, one-room cottage stood on the edge of the Titus Mill Pond. Almost immediately, Dove was found to have pneumonia; he eventually suffered from a heart attack and was diagnosed with a debilitating kidney disorder. In terrible health for the remainder of his days, he lived quietly, finally about to devote himself entirely to painting, and focusing on the inspiration of his surroundings and his home. Some of the most powerful paintings of his career, including Indian Summer, were painted in Centerport. Red remained in the house on the millpond but never painted again but after her death in 1967, both Red and Dove had their work hung together in The Museum of Modern Art in 1979.[4][9] Arthur Dove-Helen Torr Cottage was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 2000.[8] Selected list of works * 1910 Abstraction No. 1 - 6 List Of Exhibitions * 1940-1946 Untitled from Sketchbook “E” Arkansas Arts Center American
1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y Morgan, Ann Lee'' ARTHUR DOVE Life and Work with a Catalogue Raisonne’ (1984 Associated University Presses)
* Raynor, Vivien (1983-10-16). "Out of History's Mists Comes Arthur Dove". http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=980DE7DA143BF935A25753C1A965948260. Retrieved 2006-06-03. Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org/ ", Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License ==--==--== |
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