Some artists seem almost indecently gifted. The painter Fairfield Porter wrote first-rate art criticism, posthumously collected in Art in Its Own Terms (1979). Donald Justice, one of our finest recent poets, was an accomplished watercolorist and composer. For fifty-six years a painter much admired by Justice, Charles Burchfield, kept one of the great American journals. In 1993, the State University of New York Press published a 737-page selection from it edited by J. Benjamin Townsend, Charles Burchfield’s Journals: The Poetry of Place. With it, Guy Davenport wrote, Burchfield “takes his place among American writers.”
Written in pencil, ink and
crayon, Burchfield’s journals amount to some 10,000 manuscript pages and more
than two million words, now housed at the Burchfield-Penney Art Center in
Buffalo, N.Y. Excerpts are also published online by the art center at Charles E. Burchfield in His Own Words. An Ohio native, Burchfield lived for most of
his life in West Seneca, a suburb of Buffalo. His journals chronicle the life
of an obsessive, hardworking artist who lived an otherwise conventional
American life. He was a husband and father of five who loved going to the
movies, reading and listening to classical music and big-band jazz. He loved
Sibelius and Ellington. By
profession he worked as a designer of wallpaper, in Cleveland and Buffalo. His
life was decidedly not bohemian. He was too busy painting to play dress-up and
outrage the neighbors.
Burchfield graduated from
the Cleveland Institute of Art in 1916, much influenced by one of his teachers,
Henry Keller. But he followed a singular path, seemingly immune to the dominant
trends of twentieth-century art. The vibrant and visionary coexist in his
paintings with the ominous and spooky. As Hilton Kramer wrote in 2005, reviewing
a Burchfield exhibition:
“It’s been suggested that
he was influenced by the short stories of Sherwood Anderson, and while that
influence may account for the feeling of isolation and abandonment in
Burchfield’s work, it doesn’t really shed much light on his penchant for
depicting both nature and the manmade world in such stark and threatening
terms. It’s certain, anyway, that he had a deeply introspective turn of mind.”
Burchfield’s best-known watercolors
are rhapsodic renderings of nature, though I’m partial to his urban and
industrial scenes. In Charles Burchfield’s Seasons (Pomegranate
Artbooks, 1994), Guy Davenport writes:
“Quite early in the
century Burchfield began to paint landscapes in an original Expressionist
manner, apparently without influence. He belonged to no school, had no master,
did not derive from any other painter. We can point to Van Gogh’s whorls of
light around stars and to his writhing trees. We can remember Samuel Palmer and
William Blake. But none of these influences can be traced. In many paintings
Burchfield uses cartoon-strip squiggles (agitrons, cartoonists call
them) to indicate movement or vibrancy. From the cartoonist's vocabulary he
took also squeans and blurgits to indicate shafts of light and
the sounds of crickets.”
Burchfield was born on
this date, April 9, in 1893 and died on January 10, 1967. Here he is, writing
in his journal on his sixtieth birthday:
“ . . . a huge column of
black smoke to the S.W. caught my eye, and I rushed in to ask Bertha [his wife]
if she wanted to go & see what it was. She was all for it & we were
soon on our way.
“It proved to be an
oil-dump along the railroad . . . south of the Indian Church Rd. Bridge. We
parked off the road near the top and had a fine spot to view it from. An
awe-inspiring fascinating sight; the sullen red of burning oil forcing its way
up into the black smoke mass. It was interesting to see a telegraph pile just
outlined in bluish white smoke, then suddenly burst into flame. All the towns
six companies were out, and they fought it with chemicals – when it was evident
that they were bringing at under control, we left.”
1 comment:
Thanks for the link to Burchfield's journal entries. I look forward to reading them.
When I was growing up, I also favored Burchfield's more realistic works and thought his later work was downright silly. But living in Northeast Ohio, I've come to appreciate how perfectly his abstract sign system captures the light and sound of the seasons here - especially the transitional periods, like March-April.
A show of his watercolors two years ago at the Cleveland Museum of art was revelatory, showing that his abstract style pre-dated his realistic style, and the realistic works were only a passing phase.
I was particularly struck by one early watercolor that attempted to depict the sun breaking through the clouds in the midst of a blinding snowstorm. Who else would even note such a phenomenon, much less attempt to paint it?
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