John Singer Sargent (1856-1925), Léon Delafosse, 1895, Oil on canvas, 39 3/4 by 23 7/16 in., Seattle Art Museum |
Sidney E. Dickinson (1890-1980), Gentleman in a Brown Overcoat, Oil on Canvas |
Sidney E. Dickinson (1890-1980), Portrait of Paul P. Juley,
Oil on Canvas
|
The trouble with traditional figurative painting today is
that most painters take their own photographs of their paintings. It is cheap and easy to do, what with all the
digital imaging gadgets now available.
But painters aren’t skilled enough photographers to eliminate
the glare caused by obvious brushstrokes in their work. Only a professional photographer can get rid
of that glare perfectly, and who wants to pay big money to a pro when digital
photography is so quick and easy, and pretty darn good at getting a fair
representation of the color and values of the original work.
So to get around this glare problem, today’s painters just
eliminate all obvious brushstrokes in their work. Backgrounds and figures are
painted uniformly flat, often with a thin layer of paint barely staining their canvases
or panels.
Problem solved. Photographs
are glare-free. Masterpieces are denied. You can’t paint a masterpiece without obvious
brushwork. Brushstrokes equal passion
and passion equals masterpieces. That’s
all there is to it. And as has often
been said, oil painting is really sculpture in low relief.
What about Bouguereau and his academic friends, what about
Vermeer, what about all those other painters who created flawless surfaces in
the old days with no obvious brushstrokes?
Well, just look closely at the surfaces of their paintings. Those painters learned at an early age how to
draw and paint simultaneously with a fully loaded brush. They knew how to handle paint – how to build
up form, how to use it transparently when necessary.. Today’s
painters get a much later start on learning traditional painting techniques and
never really connect with their medium in the same way.
Anybody can paint in very thin layers with a careful
preliminary drawing to achieve photo-like copies of their subjects on canvas if
they have the patience to work long hours on each painting. The digital images of those paintings look
great on a computer screen, but lifeless in person. A substantial layer of oil paint is essential
to bringing a canvas to life. That’s all
there is to it! It’s the paint itself
that is the life force. How thick or how
thin that paint layer has to be is up to the individual painter. But it has to be more than a mere
watercolor-like stain on the canvas. Of
course, most people who buy art don’t know the difference, so I suppose knowing
how to really push the paint around is not worth a whole lot anymore.
I got to thinking about the subject of brushstrokes the other
day when I saw the Sargent exhibit at the Met.
Another great show full of masterpieces that were obviously painted with
great passion, because when you looked at any one of them in raking light you
could sometimes barely see the image because of all the reflections on the
surface of the paintings.
I had to laugh then at my own conflicted views on
brushstrokes because only a day or so before, I was closely inspecting in
raking light the background of a painting I was working on. The prestretched canvas was only primed with
two coats of acrylic gesso. I was so
annoyed because every little nub of the cheap cotton canvas was reflecting
light. So I mixed up a liquid batch of
the background color and sludged it on wet in wet and then used a wide flat
brush to smooth out the heavy layer of paint to eliminate any glare. I got rid of most of the reflections. What a disaster for the painting, though.
It was my own fault for not giving the surface a couple more
coats of acrylic gesso. The old painters
had the advantage of working on prestretched canvases primed with a lead ground
by canvas preparers who did all that work for the artists in those days. Think Sargent ever stretched and primed his
own canvases? Maybe early on, but
certainly not later in life.
Sargent didn’t give a damn about glare! He never had to photograph his own work! What did he care about raking light creating
glare on obvious brushstrokes? All that
mattered to him was getting a feeling of real life on canvas from his vantage
point. And that’s what he always did,
whether you like the way he painted or not.
That’s because this shy man, who couldn’t speak in public and who didn’t
like to teach painting because nobody listened to his advice anyway, was finally able
to let loose with unbridled passion when he was painting.
My old friend Albert H. Wasserman and I were talking about
brushstrokes the day after I saw the Sargent show. Al is 94 years old, but still teaches two art
classes a week, draws and paints a couple of days a week with members of The
Art Students League and exhibits paintings at the Salmagundi Club and Allied
Artists of America.
Al was a very good friend of Sidney Dickinson (1890-1980), a
highly acclaimed mid-20th Century portrait painter who worked in a
style that was obviously inspired by Sargent’s brush work. Dickinson
taught at the League and Al subbed for him occasionally in the 1950s.
“Sidney’s
paintings were so thick with brushstrokes that you couldn’t photograph them,”
Al said.
Arthur Brown, a guy who studied with Dickinson at the end of
Sidney’s teaching career told me of the time Dickinson returned to his evening
class after a few beers at Carneys, the Irish pub around the corner, and
proceeded to demonstrate how to put a highlight on the forehead of Arthur’s portrait.painting. With a big brush, Dickinson
scooped up a load of white paint and slapped it on the canvas. Nothing.
He tried it a couple more times.
Nothing. By the time he finished,
the highlight was drooping like a melting ice cream cone from the canvas.
So when Dickinson
had to get his paintings photographed, Al said Sidney
did what just about every other famous American painter of the time did – he
took his paintings to Peter A. Juley and let him photograph them.
Al also went to Juley on occasion and tells an amazing story
of how Juley managed to eliminate all glare from a painting’s surface in the
black and white photographs he took.
Al said Juley took off his shoes, kept the lens of his
Linhof large format camera open, and with a black velvet cloth in his hands he walked
in stocking feet slowly from side to side of the painting, shadowing any glare
he saw coming off the surface of the painting.
Now I don’t know how that could
work, but it did. And the world of art
owes Juley and his son an enormous debt for figuring out a way to get flawless
images of paintings and portraits of America’s
greatest artists for almost 80 years. He
got rid of the brushstrokes for them.
The Peter A. Juley & Son Collection at the Smithsonian
American Art Museum
in Washington, D.C.,
holds 127,000 photographic black-and-white
negatives documenting the work of 11,000 American artists. The firm served
artists, galleries, museums, schools, and private collectors from 1896 to 1975.
The Juley collection also contains 3,500 portraits of artists, including formal
poses as well as candid shots that depict artists working in their studios,
teaching classes, and serving as jurors for exhibitions.
So take it from Sargent.
Paint with passion and don’t worry about glare from obvious brushstrokes. You’ll thank him for it.