Sometimes You Feel Like a Nut, Just As This Eccentric Artist Wanted

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Sometimes You Feel Like a Nut, Just As This Eccentric Artist Wanted Sometimes you feel like a nut, just as this eccentric artist wanted “Springtime in Canary Flats” by Roy De Forest Collection of James A. Kidd BY VICTORIA DALKEY Bee Art Correspondent, Sacramento Bee Roy De Forest has been called a funk artist, a visionary, a mythmaker and a nut. Of these, he preferred the last appellation and wrote what many consider to be the “manifesto” of the Nut Art Movement, a strange and steadily proliferating style that sprang up among the almond trees in the orchards around the quiet university town of Davis in the 1960s and ’70s. De Forest once described the nut artist as a “peculiar individual” and nut art as “a squirrel in the forest of visual delights.” In his statement accompanying a large show of unconventional artists organized by well-known nut Clayton Bailey in 1972, he asserted that the “unfettered” nut artist created art as a “fantasy with the amazing intention of totally building a miniature world into which the nut could retire with all his friends, animals, and paraphernalia.” You couldn’t ask for a better description of DeForest himself or his next-door neighbor Bailey, or David Gilhooly, Maija Peeples-Bright, Peter VandenBerge, and Robert Arneson, his fellow faculty member at UC Davis. They were sometimes referred to as “The Candy Store Bunch,” for the quaint gallery in Folsom that had a national reputation for idiosyncratic art by the above-mentioned, as well as displaced Chicagoans Jim Nutt, Gladys Niilsson and Karl Wirsum, who taught at Sacramento State. “Of Dogs and Other People: The Art of Roy De Forest” at the Oakland Museum of California explores the dreamlike vision of this truly eccentric artist through 50 large and colorful paintings and sculptures. The show is accompanied by a lively, well-researched and beautifully illustrated catalog by noted art historian and curator Susan Landauer with an introduction by independent curator and critic Michael Duncan, who calls De Forest “a tough nut to crack.” Which he is. At times over the years I have found his work trivial and cute, overrun with dogs (his tutelary spirits) and horses, comical cowpokes and desert sages (reminiscent of traumatized Mr. Naturals), and dotted pathways made of thick candy kisses squeezed straight from the paint tube. At other times, I have marveled at his complex, interlocking compositions, psychic landscapes where a horse’s hay-colored vomit becomes a startled woman’s hair, a dog’s comic-book speech bubble holds a menacing image of a steamship on a dark sea, and a horse’s torso opens up on a woman held prisoner behind a barred window. Though seemingly primitive, his paintings and sculptures are sophisticated works that mix art brut rawness, Picassoesque invention, the innocent charm of Henri Rousseau, and the dreamy romanticism of Marc Chagall. De Forest’s vast knowledge of art history is apparent in “On the Sea Wall,” a witty takeoff on Emanuel Leutze’s “Washington Crossing the Delaware,” and the nonchalant seated nude in “Private Lives” that reminds one of Manet’s “Le Dejeuner sur l’herbe.” References to Greek and Celtic mythology pop up in “Tropic of Capricorn” and “Dogcart from Hell,” and he gives us a comic yet disturbing take on “Alice in Wonderland” in “We Catch a Bleeding Hare.” From the dark imagery and schizoid symmetry of the paintings “Recollections of a Sword Swallower” and “The Dipolar Girls Take a Voyage on the St. Lawrence” to the delicate whimsy of the mixed media sculptures “On the Way to Wales” and “Off the Coast of Patagonia,” one marvels at De Forest’s sheer powers of invention, brilliant use of color and fascinating mythologizing. He’s a nut well worth cracking, and this exhibition and catalog should be required viewing and reading for students of the remarkable art and art history of our area. OF DOGS AND OTHER PEOPLE: THE ART OF ROY DE FOREST When: Through Sunday, Aug. 20; 11 a.m.-5 p.m. Wednesdays-Thursdays; 11 a.m.-9 p.m. Fridays; 10 a.m.-6 p.m. Saturdays-Sundays Where: Oakland Museum of California, 1000 Oak St., Oakland Cost: $10.95-$19.95; free for museum members and children 8 and under Information: 510-318-8400; www.museumca.org .
Recommended publications
  • Download Press Release [PDF]
    NICELLE BEAUCHENE GALLERY Maija Peeples-Bright SEALabrate with Maija! May 31-June 30, 2019 Opening Reception: Friday, May 31, 6-8 pm Nicelle Beauchene is pleased to present a solo exhibition of paintings by Maija Peeples-Bright, spanning three decades of her career from 1971-1996. Titled SEALabrate with Maija!, this exhibition is the artist’s first in New York. For nearly thirty years, Peeples-Bright exhibited at Adeliza McHugh’s Candy Store Gallery in Folsom, California. McHugh was in her fifties and had no formal experience in the art world when she decided to open an art gallery after the local health department shut down her almond nougat business. The Candy Store Gallery became synonymous with the Funk Art movement and Peeples-Bright showed there along side Robert Arneson, Clayton Bailey, Roy De Forest, David Gilhooly, Irv Marcus, and William T. Wiley. Peeples-Bright was introduced to McHugh through her teacher at UC Davis Robert Arneson and had her first exhibition there in 1965. In the late 1960’s, frustrated with the limitations of Funk, Peeples-Bright was a founding member of the Northern Californian movement dubbed Nut Art. Along with Clayton Bailey, Roy De Forest, David Gilhooly, and David Zack, Nut artists sought to create fantasy worlds that were reflective of each artist’s idiosyncrasies and self-created mythologies. Peeples-Bright and others adopted alter egos for this purpose, she was known as “Maija Woof.” In 1972 at California State University Hayward, Clayton Bailey organized the first Nut Art exhibition. A manifesto written for the occasion by Roy De Forest declared: “THE WORK OF A PECULIAR AND ECCENTRIC NUT CAN TRULY BE CALLED ‘NUT ART’… THE NUT ARTIFICER TRAVELS IN A PHANTASMAGORIC MICRO-WORLD, SMALL AND EXTREMELY COMPACT, AS IS THE LIGHT OF A DWARF STAR IMPLODING INWARD.” SEALabrate with Maija! is a glimpse into the colorful world of the artist’s creation.
    [Show full text]
  • Oral History Interview with William T. Wiley, 1997 October 8-November 20
    Oral history interview with William T. Wiley, 1997 October 8-November 20 Funding for the digital preservation of this interview was provided by a grant from the Save America's Treasures Program of the National Park Service. Contact Information Reference Department Archives of American Art Smithsonian Institution Washington. D.C. 20560 www.aaa.si.edu/askus Transcript Interview PAUL KARLSTROM: Smithsonian Institution, an interview with William T. Wiley, at his studio in Woodacre, California, north of San Francisco. The date is October 8, 1997. This is the first session in what I hope will be a somewhat extensive series. The interviewer for the archives is Paul Karlstrom. Okay, here we go, Bill. I've been looking forward to this interview for quite a long time, ever since we met back in, it was the mid-seventies, as a matter of fact. At that time, in fact, I visited right here in this studio. We talked about your papers and talked about sometime doing an interview, but for one reason or another, it didn't happen. Well, the advantage to that, as I mentioned earlier, is that a lot has transpired since then, which means we have a lot more to talk about. Anyway, we can't go backwards, and here we are. I wanted to start out by setting the stage for this interview. As I mentioned, Archive's [of American Art] interviews are comprehensive and tend to move along sort of biographical, chronological structure, at least it gives something to follow through. But what I would like to do first of all, just very briefly, is kind of set the stage, and by way of an observation that I would like to make, which is also, I think, a compliment.
    [Show full text]
  • Clayton Bailey (1939 - )
    CLAYTON BAILEY (1939 - ) Clayton Bailey‟s incredible universe defies description. One of the University of California-Davis Funk artists, Bailey uses ceramics, metals, and mixed media to create sculptures that give life to the fantasies going on in his head. His amazingly crafted pieces have been described by others, and indeed by himself, as “Nut Art” or “Crock Art” - they move, they make noises, and above all they refuse to take themselves or the world seriously. ARTIST’S STATEMENT – CLAYTON BAILEY “I like the „magic‟ of converting mud into stone.”1 1. Quoted in: Susan Peterson. The Craft and Art of Clay. Englewood Cliffs, N. J.: Prentice Hall, 1992. RESUME – CLAYTON BAILEY 1939 Born, Antigo, WI 1957-1961 University of Wisconsin, Madison, WI, B.S. Art Education 1958 Married Betty 1961-1962 University of Wisconsin, Madison, WI, M.S., Art and Art Education 1962 Toledo Museum of Art glassblowing seminars Paoli Clay Company Instructor, People‟s Art Center, St. Louis, MO Instructor, Ceramic Sculpture, School of Architecture, Washington University, St. Louis, MO 1963 Instructor, University of Iowa, summer session Louis Comfort Tiffany Grant American Crafts Council Research Grant 1963-1967 Professor of Art, Wisconsin State University, Whitewater, WI 1967 Professor of Art, University of South Dakota Interim Professor, University of California-Davis, Davis, CA 1968-1996 Professor of Art, California State University, Hayward, CA (Chairman of the Art Department 1984-1987) 1979 National Endowment for the Arts Craftsmen‟s Fellowship 1982 Honorary Fellowship Award for Contributions to Education in the Ceramic Arts, NCECA 1990 National Endowment for the Arts Grant 1996-Present Professor Emeritus of Ceramics, California State University, Hayward, CA Studio Artist, Port Costa, CA BIOGRAPHY – CLAYTON BAILEY Although primarily identified with the Bay Area, Clayton Bailey was born in Antigo, WI, and grew up in the Midwest.
    [Show full text]
  • A Look at Upcoming Exhibits and Performances Page 34
    Vol. XXXIV, Number 50 N September 13, 2013 Moonlight Run & Walk SPECIAL SECTION page 20 www.PaloAltoOnline.com A look at upcoming exhibits and performances page 34 Transitions 17 Spectrum 18 Eating 29 Shop Talk 30 Movies 31 Puzzles 74 NNews Council takes aim at solo drivers Page 3 NHome Perfectly passionate for pickling Page 40 NSports Stanford receiving corps is in good hands Page 78 2.5% Broker Fee on Duet Homes!* Live DREAM BIG! Big Home. Big Lifestyle. Big Value. Monroe Place offers Stunning New Homes in an established Palo Alto Neighborhood. 4 Bedroom Duet & Single Family Homes in Palo Alto Starting at $1,538,888 410 Cole Court <eZllb\lFhgkh^IeZ\^'\hf (at El Camino Real & Monroe Drive) Palo Alto, CA 94306 100&,,+&)01, Copyright ©2013 Classic Communities. In an effort to constantly improve our homes, Classic Communities reserves the right to change floor plans, specifications, prices and other information without prior notice or obliga- tion. Special wall and window treatments, custom-designed walks and patio treatments and other items featured in and around the model homes are decorator-selected and not included in the purchase price. Maps are artist’s conceptions and not to scale. Floor plans not to scale. All square footages are approximate. *The single family homes are a detached, single-family style but the ownership interest is condominium. Broker # 01197434. Open House | Sat. & Sun. | 1:30 – 4:30 27950 Roble Alto Drive, Los Altos Hills $4,250,000 Beds 5 | Baths 5.5 | Offices 2 | Garage 3 Car | Palo Alto Schools Home ~ 4,565 sq.
    [Show full text]
  • Bennett Bean Playing by His Rules by Karen S
    March 1998 1 2 CERAMICS MONTHLY March 1998 Volume 46 Number 3 Wheel-thrown stoneware forms by Toshiko Takaezu at the American Craft FEATURES Inlaid-slip-decorated Museum in vessel by Eileen New York City. 37 Form and Energy Goldenberg. 37 The Work of Toshiko Takaezu by Tony Dubis Merino 75 39 George Wright Oregon Potters’ Friend and Inventor Extraordinaire by Janet Buskirk 43 Bennett Bean Playing by His Rules by Karen S. Chambers with Making a Bean Pot 47 The Perfect Clay Body? by JejfZamek A guide to formulating clay bodies 49 A Conversation with Phil and Terri Mayhew by Ann Wells Cone 16 functional porcelain Intellectually driven work by William Parry. 54 Collecting Maniaby Thomas G. Turnquist A personal look at the joy pots can bring 63 57 Ordering Chaos by Dannon Rhudy Innovative handbuilding with textured slabs with The Process "Hair of the Dog" clay 63 William Parry maker George Wright. The Medium Is Insistent by Richard Zakin 39 67 David Atamanchuk by Joel Perron Work by a Canadian artist grounded in Japanese style 70 Clayarters International by CarolJ. Ratliff Online discussion group shows marketing sawy 75 Inspirations by Eileen P. Goldenberg Basket built from textured Diverse sources spark creativity slabs by Dannon Rhudy. The cover: New Jersey 108 Suggestive Symbols by David Benge 57 artist Bennett Bean; see Eclectic images on slip-cast, press-molded sculpture page 43. March 1998 3 UP FRONT 12 The Senator Throws a Party by Nan Krutchkoff Dinnerware commissioned from Seattle ceramist Carol Gouthro 12 Billy Ray Hussey EditorRuth
    [Show full text]
  • Gareth Mason: the Attraction of Opposites Focus the Culture of Clay
    focus MONTHLY the culture of clay of culture the Gareth Mason: The Attraction of Opposites focus the culture of clay NOVEMBER 2008 $7.50 (Can$9) www.ceramicsmonthly.org Ceramics Monthly November 2008 1 MONTHLY Publisher Charles Spahr Editorial The [email protected] telephone: (614) 794-5895 fax: (614) 891-8960 editor Sherman Hall assistant editor Brandy Wolfe Ceramic assistant editor Jessica Knapp technical editor Dave Finkelnburg online editor Jennifer Poellot Harnetty editorial assistant Holly Goring Advertising/Classifieds Arts [email protected] telephone: (614) 794-5834 fax: (614) 891-8960 classifi[email protected] telephone: (614) 794-5843 advertising manager Mona Thiel Handbook Only advertising services Jan Moloney Marketing telephone: (614) 794-5809 marketing manager Steve Hecker Series $29.95 each Subscriptions/Circulation customer service: (800) 342-3594 [email protected] Design/Production Electric Firing: Glazes & Glazing: production editor Cynthia Griffith design Paula John Creative Techniques Finishing Techniques Editorial and advertising offices 600 Cleveland Ave., Suite 210 Westerville, Ohio 43082 Editorial Advisory Board Linda Arbuckle; Professor, Ceramics, Univ. of Florida Scott Bennett; Sculptor, Birmingham, Alabama Tom Coleman; Studio Potter, Nevada Val Cushing; Studio Potter, New York Dick Lehman; Studio Potter, Indiana Meira Mathison; Director, Metchosin Art School, Canada Bernard Pucker; Director, Pucker Gallery, Boston Phil Rogers; Potter and Author, Wales Jan Schachter; Potter, California Mark Shapiro; Worthington, Massachusetts Susan York; Santa Fe, New Mexico Ceramics Monthly (ISSN 0009-0328) is published monthly, except July and August, by Ceramic Publications Company; a Surface Decoration: Extruder, Mold & Tile: subsidiary of The American Ceramic Society, 600 Cleveland Ave., Suite 210, Westerville, Ohio 43082; www.ceramics.org.
    [Show full text]
  • David Gilhooly - (1943 - )
    DAVID GILHOOLY - (1943 - ) Along with Robert Arneson and others, David Gilhooly was part of the group that developed Funk Art and took ceramic art to another level. Although probably best known for his imaginative anthropomorphic frogs and other creatures, Gilhooly has had a wide career as an artist in a number of mediums and still continues to evolve. Gilhooly has given up working in clay (twice), but he is the first to state that his current metamorphosis is not the final one. ARTIST’S STATEMENT - DAVID GILHOOLY David Gilhooly is primarily known for his ceramic sculpture of animals, food, planets, and most particularly FrogWorld. He is a graduate of the University of California at Davis, studying under Robert Arneson and working with the group in TB-9 (temporary building 9) that evolved into the Funk Ceramic Movement in the San Francisco Bay area. A prolific ceramic artist, his irreverent, darkly humorous objects are in many collections throughout the world, and he has been the focus of a number of exhibitions. Gilhooly turned from clay to working with Plexiglas and now is working on shadow boxes using mixed media and found objects and has also worked in printmaking and drawing. He lists his hobbies as “shopping (fighting with little old ladies for jigsaw puzzles)” 1and his bad habits as “collecting souvenir totem poles and watching cartoons.”2 1. http://www.sites.onlinemac.com/cchang/vitalstats.htm 2. Ibid. RESUME - DAVID GILHOOLY 1943 Born, Auburn, California 1965 University of California, Davis, BA 1966 University of California,
    [Show full text]
  • Oral History Interview with Tony Natsoulas, 2004 August 9-11
    Oral history interview with Tony Natsoulas, 2004 August 9-11 Funding for this interview was provided by the Nanette L. Laitman Documentation Project for Craft and Decorative Arts in America. Funding for the digital preservation of this interview was provided by a grant from the Save America's Treasures Program of the National Park Service. Contact Information Reference Department Archives of American Art Smithsonian Institution Washington. D.C. 20560 www.aaa.si.edu/askus Transcript Preface The following oral history transcript is the result of a tape-recorded interview with Tony Natsoulas on August 9 and 11, 2004. The interview took place in Sacramento, California, and was conducted by Liza Kirwin for the Archives of American Art, Smithsonian Institution. This interview is part of the Nanette L. Laitman Documentation Project for Craft and Decorative Arts in America. Tony Natsoulas and Liza Kirwin have reviewed the transcript and have made corrections and emendations. The reader should bear in mind that he or she is reading a transcript of spoken, rather than written prose. Interview DR. KIRWIN: This is Liza Kirwin interviewing Tony Natsoulas at his home in Sacramento, California, for the Archives of American Art, Smithsonian Institution, August 9, 2004. And, Tony, you are just going to tell us everything in your life. MR. NATSOULAS: Oh, great. DR. KIRWIN: So, could you tell me when you were born, the year, and something about your early childhood, family background? MR. NATSOULAS: I was born in 1959, in Ann Arbor, Michigan. My father was teaching at the university there. At that time he was a graduate student at the University of Michigan.
    [Show full text]
  • Visions of the Davis Art Center
    Lost and Found: Visions of the Davis Art Center Permanent Collection 1967-1992 October 8 – November 19, 2010 This page is intentionally blank 2 Lost and Found: Visions of the Davis Art Center In the fall of 2008, as the Davis Art Center began preparing for its 50th anniversary, a few curious board members began to research the history of a permanent collection dating back to the founding of the Davis Art Center in the 1960s. They quickly recognized that this collection, which had been hidden away for decades, was a veritable treasure trove of late 20th century Northern California art. It’s been 27 years since the permanent collection was last exhibited to the public. Lost and Found: Visions of the Davis Art Center brings these treasures to light. Between 1967 and 1992 the Davis Art Center assembled a collection of 148 artworks by 92 artists. Included in the collection are ceramics, paintings, drawings, lithographs, photographs, mixed media, woodblocks, and textiles. Many of the artists represented in the collection were on the cutting edge of their time and several have become legends of the art world. Lost and Found: Visions of the Davis Art Center consists of 54 works by 34 artists ranging from the funky and figurative to the quiet and conceptual. This exhibit showcases the artistic legacy of Northern California and the prescient vision of the Davis Art Center’s original permanent collection committee, a group of volunteers who shared a passion for art and a sharp eye for artistic talent. Through their tireless efforts acquiring works by artists who were relatively unknown at the time, the committee created what would become an impressive collection that reveals Davis’ role as a major player in a significant art historical period.
    [Show full text]
  • Venus Over Manhattan Is Pleased to Present an Exhibition of Work by Roy De Forest, Organized in Collaboration with the Roy De Forest Estate
    Venus Over Manhattan is pleased to present an exhibition of work by Roy De Forest, organized in collaboration with the Roy De Forest Estate. Following the recent retrospective of his work, Of Dogs and Other People: The Art of Roy De Forest, organized by Susan Landauer at the Oakland Museum of California, the exhibition marks the largest presentation of De Forest’s work in New York since 1975, when the Whitney Museum of American Art staged a retrospective dedicated to his work. Comprising a large group of paintings, constructions, and works on paper—some of which have never before been exhibited—as well as a set of key loans from the Jan Shrem and Maria Manetti Shrem Museum of Art, University of California, Davis, and the di Rosa Center for Contemporary Art, Napa, the presentation surveys the breadth of De Forest’s production. In conjunction with the presentation, the gallery will publish a major catalogue featuring a new text on the artist by Dan Nadel, along with archival materials from the Roy De Forest papers, housed at the Archives of American Art. The exhibition will be on view from March 3rd through April 25th, 2020. Roy De Forest’s freewheeling vision, treasured for its combination of dots, dogs, and fantastical voyages, made him a pillar of Northern California’s artistic community for more than fifty years. Born in 1930 to migrant farmers in North Platte, Nebraska, De Forest and his family fled the dust bowl for Washington State, where he grew up on the family farm in the lush Yakima Valley, surrounded by dogs and farm animals.
    [Show full text]
  • Fire + Earth Catalogue
    Table of Contents Artists Robert Archambeau ................................................1 Ann Mortimer.....................................................112 Loraine Basque........................................................4 Diane Nasr..........................................................115 Alain Bernard..........................................................7 Ingrid Nicolai......................................................118 Robert Bozak ........................................................10 Agnes Olive.........................................................121 John Chalke ..........................................................13 Walter Ostrom ....................................................124 Ruth Chambers.....................................................16 Kayo O’Young.....................................................127 Victor Cicansky.....................................................19 Greg Payce ..........................................................130 Jennifer Clark........................................................22 Andrea Piller .......................................................133 Bonita Bocanegra Collins ......................................25 Ann Roberts........................................................136 Karen Dahl ...........................................................28 Ron Roy..............................................................139 Roseline Delise......................................................31 Rebecca Rupp .....................................................142
    [Show full text]
  • CLAYWORKS: 20 AMERICANS Museum of Contemporary Crafts of the American Crafts Council June 18-September 12, 1971
    CLAYWORKS: 20AMERICANS CLAYWORKS: 20 AMERICANS Museum of Contemporary Crafts of The American Crafts Council June 18-September 12, 1971 Raymond Allen Maps Robert Arneson The Cook Clayton Bailey Creatures Patti Warashina Bauer layered Drea ms Jack Earl Penguins Kurt Fishback Houses Verne Funk Mouth Pots David Gilhooly Animals Dick Hay Traps Rodger Lang Pies Marilyn Levine Garments William Lombardo Washington Cows James Melchert A's Richard Shaw Sinking Ships Victor Spinski Machines Bill Stewart Duck Houses & Snak~s Chris Unterseher Bookends Peter VandenBerge Vegetables Ken neth Vavrek Bullets William Warehall Cakes ) 20 Americans (from left 10 righI, lop 10 bottom) Rodger Lang David Gilhooly Clayton Bailey Robert Arneson Verne Funk Victor Spinski Dick Hay Raymond Allen William Warehall Jack Earl Richard Shaw Bill Stewart Chris Unterseher Peter Vanden Berge James Melchert Patti Warashina Bauer William Lombardo Kurt E. Fishback Kenneth Vavrek Marilyn Levine Acknowledgements We wish to express our appreciation to the artists for making their work avail­ able and to the galleries and collectors who loaned pieces for the exhibition: Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Andersen; Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Nones; Obelisk Gallery, Inc.; State University College, Potsdam, New York; Mr. and Mrs. Robert E. Stevenson; Ann Stockton and Peter Voulkos; and Allan Stone. Introduction Clayworks: 20 Americans represents Arneson and James Melchert must a group of ceramic artists with a certainly be mentioned among the very sensitive view of the world, artists who were instrumental who are engaged in making objects, in defining the object-oriented usually in a series, to develop a ceramic movement in the early particular theme with social, sixties.
    [Show full text]