“The artist must be free to
paint his effects.
Nature must not bind Him.”
Alfred H. Maurer
Nature must not bind Him.”
Alfred H. Maurer
“It’s
Complicated” is the relationship status the best describes that which existed
between the American painter Alfred H. Maurer
and his German born artist father, Louis. Whilst desirous of parental approval
the son was unable to ignore the need to paint works that expressed the zeitgeist
of European Modernism inspired by the Fauvists and Cubists; a tendency that
grieved the older man.
The
artist Jerome Myers wrote in his autobiography, Artist
In Manhattan, “His father, Louis
Maurer, was an old-time artist, who had worked on the Currier & Ives lithographs. When I met him at an
exhibition of the Independents at the Grand Central Palace, he was a
quiet-mannered man, whom I took to be about seventy-five years old. Later I
learned that he was then already ninety-five ... Speaking of his son, Alfred,
he evidently could not sympathize with—or, as he said, understand—the
ultra-violets and ultra-blues of that phase of Alfred's work. He seemed so
proud of what his son had done, but so grieved at what he was then doing.”
That the younger man took his own life weeks after the death
of his father was the culmination of 17 years dependence that the eminent art
critic Robert Hughes described as “a banishment to a hell of oedipal
conflict."
At
the age of 16 Maurer left school to work in his father’s lithographic studio. As
a 29 year old, Maurer escaped to Paris only to return four years later to show
his skeptical parent that he could indeed
paint. In a matter of hours Maurer painted arguably his most famous work An Arrangement (see above). A significantly
influenced Whistleresque genre style work in both execution and title, it was
awarded the first prize in the
1901 Carnegie
International Exhibition.
Seven
years later, back in Paris, Maurer abandoned the acceptable painting style of
the day for which he was gaining an international reputation to concentrate on
works inspired by Cezanne and Matisse. A genre that was to inform Maurer’s work
for the rest of his life.
The
advent of the First World War impelled Maurer to return to American and there
the disapproving parent provided him with a garret in his Manhattan home as a
studio. Maurer was unable to return to his beloved Paris and spent the rest of
his days in New York plagued by the torture of neglect.
About
his work Maurer is reported in a 1983 Whitney
Museum of American Art catalogue to have said "My main concern in painting is
the beautiful arrangement of color values -- that is, harmonized masses of
pigment, more or less pure. For this reason, it is impossible to present an
exact transcription of nature....It is necessary for art to differ from
nature....Perhaps art should be an intensification of nature; at least it
should express an inherent feeling which cannot be obtained from nature except
through a process of association.”
The
Exhibition Alfred Maurer: Art on the Edge
is currently on show at Arkansas’ Crystal
Bridges Museum of American Art until the 4th of January next
year.
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