Northwest School (art)

Northwest School (art)
Carl Morris Agriculture, c. 1941, mural, Eugene, Oregon post office

The Northwest School was an art movement based in small-town Skagit County, Washington, and was at its peak in the 1930s and 1940s.[1][2]

Contents

The big four

The movement's early participants, and its defining artists, have become known as "the big four": Guy Anderson, Kenneth Callahan, Morris Graves and Mark Tobey. Their work became recognized nationally when LIFE magazine published a 1953 feature article on them. It was the first such broad recognition of artists from this corner of the world beyond traditional Northwest Native American art forms, which had been long recognized as "northwest art."

These artists combined natural elements of the Puget Sound area with traditional Asian aesthetics to create a novel and distinct regional style, particularly in painting and sculpture, with some drawing, printmaking and photography. Tobey, Callahan, Graves and Anderson were all immersed in and greatly influenced by the atmosphere of the Pacific Northwest environment.

Seattle was a common locale which they all shared at points in their lives, and some of them were closely associated for a time with the Seattle Art Museum in Volunteer Park. Over time, the influence of the natural setting of Western Washington, especially the flat lands, meandering river channels, and wide open skies of the Skagit Valley, became a unifying aspect of their art.[3]

The media most commonly used by the painters in this group of artists were tempera, oil and gouache on canvas. They also used these media on paper and wood. Morris Graves worked for periods in three dimensional forms, using steel and glass and stone, among other materials. Guy Anderson, whose main medium was oil painting, also made works from bronze and had "collages" around his home of found objects from beach walks and deteriorating metal which he saw beauty in. These forms influenced his painting.

Style

The style of the Northwest School is characterized by the use of symbols of the nature of Western Washington, as well as the diffuse lighting characteristic of the Skagit Valley area. The lighting and choice of earthy tonal ranges in the color is one of the most important qualities of Northwest art. Tobey, whose artwork did not include as much natural Northwest subject matter, is identified as Northwest style because of the soft pastel colors which he used, and the dark mist chroma of lighting, with few stark shadows.

The Northwest artists were labeled as mystics, although some forcefully denied this label. They denied being a "school" of art, but they did know one another. Callahan hosted salons in which the others participated. Anderson and Graves travelled together and painted in the North Cascades and elsewhere.

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dealers such as Zoe Dusanne, Gordon Woodside and John Braseth of the Woodside/Braseth Gallery as well as museum professionals grouped the four artists together, as did journalists. Their styles showed unifying themes that suggested something unique and previously unseen from a far corner of the planet. A review of the titles of some of the paintings leads to spiritual interpretations of northwest life.

In addition to the local natural setting and the Asian influence, the Northwest School also shows some influence from surrealism, cubism and abstract expressionism. The cubist influence is shown to some extent in Kenneth Callahan’s Prism and the Dark Globe (1946) and Tobey’s Western Town (1944). All these artists both loved the pacific northwest and were keenly aware of the larger world of which it was part. Their work was recognized for being both essentially northwest and far from provincial.

Many younger artists around the Pacific Northwest found resonance in how qualities of the region seemed so strongly evident while something universal also glowed in these earlier artists' works. Influences and inspirations traceable to these earlier painters can be seen in work by many contemporary artists. One notable example would be Jay Steensma, who died in 1997. He left numerous moody, misty, "northwesty" paintings-some of them titled with admiring reference to Anderson, Tobey, Graves, and Helmi Juvonen.

The works of artists such as photographer Mary Randlett and sculptor Tony Angell relate strongly to the Northwest School. Angell’s sculpture often incorporates birds, as did Washington’s, Gilkey’s and McCracken’s work. The flowing and silhouette style of Angell’s work closely ties it to McCracken’s sculpture. Randlett takes black and white photographs of northwest landscapes that often have wonderfully painterly qualities.

Museums and Galleries

The Museum of Northwest Art in La Conner, Washington is dedicated to the works of the original artists of the Northwest School and their successors. The Gordon Woodside/John Braseth Gallery has been and continues to be committed to the representation of several of the Northwest Masters such as Morris Graves, Guy Anderson, Kenneth Callahan and William Ivey just to name a few

List of Northwest School artists

Further reading

  • Ament, Deloris Tarzan (2002), Iridescent Light: The Emergence of Northwest Art, Seattle: University of Washington Press, ISBN 0295981474 
  • Conkelton, Sheryl, What It Meant to be Modern: Seattle Art at Mid-Century, Henry Art Gallery, Seattle, 1999. ISBN 0-935558-38-1.
  • Conkelton, Sheryl, and Landau, Laura, Northwest Mythologies: The Interactions of Mark Tobey, Morris Graves, Kenneth Callahan, and Guy Anderson, Tacoma Art Museum, Tacoma WA; University of Washington Press, Seattle and London 2003
  • Cumming, William, Sketchbook: A Memoir of the 1930s And the Northwest School, University of Washington Press, 1984. ISBN 0-295-96156-2.
  • Kingsbury, Martha, Art of the Thirties: The Pacific Northwest, University of Washington Press for Henry Art Gallery, Seattle and London 1972. ISBN 0-295-95215-6.
  • Wehr, Wesley, The Accidental Collector: Art, Fossils & Friendships, University of Washington Press, 2004. ISBN 0-295-98382-5.

References

  1. ^ LaConner -- Thumbnail History, Section Artists Arrive, HistoryLink.org Essay 5655.
  2. ^ Mystic Painters of the Northwest Life magazine, September 28, 1953 p. 84.
  3. ^ Laskin, David, "The Mystic Artists: A Puget Sound Quest", The New York Times, March 12, 2006.
  4. ^ [1]]
  5. ^ [2] HL
  6. ^ [3] HL
  7. ^ [4] Medford historical
  8. ^ [5]
  9. ^ [6] Obituary
  10. ^ [7] HL
  11. ^ [8] HL
  12. ^ [9] HL
  13. ^ [10] HL
  14. ^ [11] Wedu.
  15. ^ [12] HL
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  17. ^ [14] AAA
  18. ^ [15] HL
  19. ^ [16] Wedu.

External links


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