Sir William Orpen (1878–1931), Self-Portrait, Leading the Life
in the West, ca. 1910, Oil on Canvas, 40
1/8 by 33 1/8 in., Metropolitan Museum of Art
|
William Orpen, Self-Portrait with Sowing New Seed, 1913, Oil on Canvas, 48 3/8 by 35 3/8 in., St. Louis (Missouri) Art Museum |
Portrait Photographs, National Portrait Gallery, London |
William Orpen Sketches: Pleading with Sargent, Slugged by Yvonne Aubicq, Army Examination, Suffering from Blood Poisoning |
William Orpen, Mrs.Evelyn St. George, 1912, Oil on Canvas, 85 by 47 in., Private Collection |
James
Sinton Sleator (1885–1950), Portrait of Sir William Orpen, 1916, Oil on
Canvas, 38.11 by 36.14 in., Crawford
Art Gallery,
Cork, Ireland
|
Fats Waller (1904-1943),
www.morethings.com
|
I read a story some years ago in a New
York tabloid about a little kid from South
Africa who was afflicted with progeria, that
rare genetic disorder where kids age prematurely and die young. At the age of 10, the poor kids who suffer
from this disorder have stunted growth, look like 70 and really stand out in a
crowd. At the end of this article, the
kid asks his mother why he looks so different from all the other kids. His mother tries to comfort him by telling
him that he is “special.” But the little
kid replies, “It’s not nice to be the only one.”
I cried my eyes out when I read that story, mostly for the
little kid’s misery, but also for myself a little bit, too. I’ve always felt that I was the only one in
the crowd who was different. Most
introverts feel that way, I suppose. But
because your state of mind and corporeal identity are what matter most to you,
everything is relative, and it’s hard to erase that feeling of being one of a
kind and all alone in this world.
I developed a sense of deep melancholy early on that has
lasted all my life. I often think I
should just throw myself in front of an oncoming subway train or bus, jump in the
Hudson River, or turn on the gas jets some night – the usual things, I’m not
very creative.
My preferred rite of departure would be to just lie down in
a snow bank and go to sleep, like Per Hansa in Ole Rolvaag’s “Giants in the
Earth,” a dismal novel about Norwegian pioneers in the Dakota Territory. One winter Per goes to find help for his
family, gets caught in a blizzard and freezes to death. But New York City
is not in prairie country and very seldom gets blizzards or snowstorms. When it does, the snow banks don’t last long
enough to serve as a proper burial ground.
Per’s lasted until the spring thaw.
I can’t seem to convince my tribe’s medicine men to certify
me and load me down with happy pills to alleviate my transitory bouts of
depression. And I always erase my darkest thoughts with the chilling
introspection that I’ll die soon enough anyway.
I made it through grade school and high school without
experiencing too many horribly embarrassing moments. And those were usually the result of my own
foolishness, an incurable disease if ever there was one. There always seemed to be one or two other
kids who were easier targets for the class jokers. Besides, the wiseguys and practical jokers were
quite scarce in my little farming community on the prairie in the middle of nowhere
corn country. Most of my classmates were
farm kids who worked too hard to waste time figuring out how to humiliate each
other. Of course, you can’t avoid
hearing things people say about you that sting a lot more than sticks and
stones. Are you listening up there, Ma? And then in college and the army you really
get to see yourself as others see you, and you are too mortified to seek a
second opinion. But life goes on and you
find ways to cope with your neuroses, at least if you aren’t really as crazy as
you think you are. Now I know that depression can be devastating and is no
laughing matter for a lot of people, but that’s what works for me.
In my early 30s, I left the real world behind to study
drawing and painting in an art school.
All of a sudden I was surrounded by lots of other people who seemed to
be like me in many ways, perhaps also harboring some secret hurt that prevented
us from living the “American Dream” in the suburbs, with a wife and kids, a
two-car garage, a good-paying job, seasonal sightseeing vacations, skiing trips
in the winter and barbecues on the backyard patio in the summer to break the
monotony. Isn’t that how it goes?
All of a sudden I had finally found something to occupy my
time that was so much more important than spending years on an analyst’s couch
trying to pump up my self-esteem. All of a sudden I was having downright fun
for the first time in my life. Thoughts
of leading a normal life like most other people no longer consumed me. Of course I have no idea how other people
really live. But I’ve heard rumors.
Painting religiously turned out to be the best therapy for all
those times I was made to feel miserable by certain comments delivered by mean
or insensitive people or by having to fulfill all those cringe-provoking social
obligations along the way that I wasn’t clever enough to avoid, like Junior and
Senior Prom Nights. And that Sadie
Hawkins Day dance. Lord have mercy!
The great Irish painter William Orpen, whose God-given
talent for capturing likenesses earned him a fortune, knew something about
depression. And like me, he was the
youngest of four sons. That’s not the
most enviable rung on the family ladder, in my long-held and well-considered
opinion.
Major Sir William Newenham Montague Orpen, KBE, RA, RHA (27 November 1878 – 29 September 1931) was born in
Stillorgan, County Dublin
into an affluent Protestant family. His
father was a lawyer who wanted his youngest son to study law and enter the
family firm. But Sir William had a
talent for drawing and his mother supported his desire to go to art school. And mother always knows best, doesn’t she?
Orpen was small in stature, just over 5 feet tall, and
self-conscious about his appearance his entire life. He had a very miserable childhood, by his own
account.
In a 1924 memoir, Orpen writes, “My general appearance, and
especially my face, have always been a source of depression to me, even from my
early days. I remember once, by mistake,
overhearing a conversation between my father and mother about my looks – why
was it I was so ugly and the rest of the children so good looking … I remember
creeping away and worrying a lot about the matter. I began to think I was a black spot on the
earth and when I met people on the country roads I always used to cross to the other
side.”
Despite overhearing this devastating conversation, which
precipitated his lifelong depression, Orpen is said to have doted on his mother
until she passed away in 1912, leaving him disconsolate for a time.
The art world of the early 20th Century didn’t care about Orpen’s
depression. It cared about his art. He won all the honors and all the accolades
and attracted all the cash anybody would ever want. One reviewer called him “the last of the
great society painters.” By the start of
World War One, Orpen was the most famous and commercially successful artist
working in Britain. John Singer Sargent, who was easing out of
the portrait business at the time, promoted Orpen’s work, which was more daring
than that of his rivals. He often lit
his figures from two sides, giving his portraits a luminous quality and a dramatic,
almost cinematic look that is highly effective.
But it’s not a technique that is easy to master, as I have discovered. It’s hard enough to paint a decent portrait using
just one light source.
Orpen married Grace Knewstub in 1901, and the couple had
three daughters. But it was an unhappy marriage, and despite his self-loathing, Orpen was a determined
heterosexual who manfully entered into affairs with many women, sometimes more
than one at a time. The British website “Articles and Texticles” provides a
pretty thorough account of Orpen’s intimate relationships. He had affairs with many of his models. He
kept a French mistress, the beautiful, feisty Yvonne Aubicq, an affair that
provided enough plotlines for a novel. Most
importantly for his career, he had a celebrated affair with Mrs. Evelyn St George,
the London-based eldest daughter of George F. Baker, a filthy rich American
banker.
Eight years older than Orpen, Mrs. St George had grown tired
of her husband and is said to have had numerous extramarital flings. The humorous turn of phrase, “No sex please,
we’re British,” hardly applied to these two.
(Yes, I know, one was Irish and the other American, but they were in London
at the time. Give me a break once in
awhile.) When the diminutive Orpen and Mrs.
St George, who was over 6 feet tall, appeared in public, as they frequently did,
they became known as “Jack and the beanstalk.”
They had a “lively and adventurous love affair,” according to one Irish
newspaper account. And Orpen was the
father of Mrs. St. George’s youngest child, Vivien.
“Evelyn St George was undoubtedly the most important person
in William Orpen's life,” wrote a reviewer in Dublin’s
Irish Independent in 2001. “She gave him
happiness and she gave him love. She inspired him as an artist. She told him
what a great painter should do, what sort of pictures he should paint, how he
should view the world and how he should address it.”
Orpen’s frenzied extramarital activities were probably great
fun at the time, but depression and all the sex destroyed him. He became an alcoholic and died a lingering
death from syphilis in 1931 at the age of 53, thus depriving the art world of
maybe 20 more years of his dazzling portraiture.
At the outset of this disease it wasn’t given its name. A doctor who examined him during his years as
a WWI artist concluded that Orpen was suffering from “blood poisoning,” after
other health workers had attributed his severe bouts of itching first to lice
infestation and then to scabies. He candidly
describes suffering recurring bouts of this “blood poisoning” during the war
years in “An Onlooker in France
1917-1919.” This fascinating personal account
of his painting activities and life during the war, with many black and white
reproductions of his artwork, is available for reading online or
downloading. After the war, Orpen
continued to paint outstanding commissioned portraits before falling ill and finally
dying from this awful disease.
In a review of the exhibit, William Orpen, Sex, Politics and
Death, at the Imperial War
Museum in London
in 2005, Berendina “Bunny” Smedley writes,
“…it seems fair to say that compared with politics and death, sex was a topic
that appealed to Orpen. Probably he discovered it early at art school, and then
effectively forgot it again in his grim last years, when, as syphilis took its
toll, his relationships both with his wife and mistresses fell badly apart. Sex
was there, often, in his pictures, sometimes very evidently so.
“Not for Orpen the icy academic nude, the female form as an
exercise in mass and contour, [an] ironic art-historical allusion. Orpen really
did love women, not as abstractions, either, but for all their physicality and
flaws. And if it’s true, as suggested earlier, that his paintings of men were
often better than his paintings of women, the reason may lie less in misogyny
and objectivisation than in tact, kindness and the hope of an earthly reward
for his efforts.
“There are paintings here that read like love-letters,
albeit those of the most delightfully flippant, non-serious sort and they form
one of the most attractive aspects of Orpen’s oeuvre.”
What a brilliant and incredibly perceptive analysis of
Orpen’s love for women and his paintings of them – whether depicted in the
nude, in a washerwoman’s clothes, in a nun’s habit worn by his French mistress,
or in the elegant, floor-length gowns worn by the tall, beautiful women he
adored and chased after. As Smedley
described far more eloquently than I can, Orpen’s paintings are not flawless academic
renderings or empty society portraits.
They are simply mesmerizing images of the opposite sex – nothing less
and a whole lot more.
“It is my business in life to study faces,” Orpen once
said. “It is also my lot in doing my job
to get to know automatically what is in the mind that is behind the face, and I
do not hesitate to say that there is no such thing as real beauty of face
without beauty of mind. And there is a lot of both kinds of beauty today.”
For someone as disgusted with his own appearance as he
claimed to be, Orpen painted a surprising number of self-portraits in oil on
canvas and drew countless cartoon images of himself on letters to his friends. They were all exaggerations of his physical
appearance and often savage caricatures.
Painting was Orpen’s salvation, women his fatal attraction
and alcohol his escape mechanism. The excellent Irish painter Sean Keating, a friend
and former studio assistant to Orpen, called him a "two bottles of whisky
a day man"
In the midst of composing this blog post, I watched a
YouTube video called “Fats Waller, the Very Best,” uploaded by a poster named
Ugaccio. Near the end of the video, Fats
is on camera singing his big hit “Ain’t Misbehavin’ when an unidentified male
voice comes on to speak about him. The unseen
commentator concludes with words that could just as easily have described Sir
William Orpen: “He lived in a fast
lane…He dissipated a lot, drank a lot…Takes a toll after awhile…People with a
whole lot of talent don’t usually live very long. They’re here, they do their thing and get
outta here.”
I don’t know if Thomas Wright “Fats” Waller was depressed. I think he was too active for introspection
during his brief life. But he was a
large man, with a very distinctive appearance.
He had a massive head, a massive girth and a massive appetite. He was 6 ft. tall and weighed in at nearly 300
pounds. He died of pneumonia in 1943 at
the age of 39. Sir William Orpen, called
“Orps” by his friends, was an undersized man, very scrawny in his younger
days. He outlasted Fats by 13 years on
this earthly paradise before leaving his noteworthy legacy to the world.
Hearth and home and the simple pleasures of life enjoyed by most
so-called normal people were not meant for these two supremely talented artists.
They were too “special” for any of that
humdrum sort of stuff.