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Book Review A Path of His Own There were few maps and many detours on artist Richard Diebenkorn's journey to greatness. by Marianne Dresser |
So does the exhibition's catalog, a fascinating study of the artist's development. More than half of The Art of Richard Diebenkorn (Whitney Museum of American Art/University of California Press, 1997; $60 hardcover/$39.95 paperback) is devoted to high-quality reproductions on thick, oversize stock. A generously illustrated critical biography by curator Jane Livingston makes up the major part of the text. Livingston, who organized the exhibition with the help of the artist's widow and two children, enlivens her discussion with anecdotes from interviews and studio notes. There are also two short essays: Ruth Fine discusses Diebenkorn's representational period, and John Elderfield explores the psychological resonance of his later work. (Elderfield curated a 1988 Diebenkorn retrospective at New York's Museum of Modern Art.)
Diebenkorn, who died in 1993 at age 71, began drawing during his boyhood in San Francisco. He was encouraged by a lively grandmother who took him to museums and galleries. Entering Stanford in 1940, he immersed himself in the work of American painter Edward Hopper. (He also met fellow undergrad Phyllis Gilman, '42; the two married in 1943). Military service interrupted his studies and took him to Berkeley, Washington, D.C., and back again. In the Bay Area, he met and studied with mentors and fellow painters at Stanford, UC-Berkeley and the California School of Fine Arts. While on the East Coast, he visited museums and collections, gaining wide exposure to modern art, including the work of abstract expressionists Robert Motherwell and Willem de Kooning, among others. But three great modernists Cézanne, Matisse and Mondrian were to exert the greatest influence on Diebenkorn's vision.
But by 1955, Livingston says, he had "thoroughly solidified everything he had learned about abstract painting and was extending his knowledge in a number of directions." She skillfully traces the artist's defection toward a representational style a shift tantamount to heresy in a period when abstraction was considered the only serious genre. His friendships with figurative painters David Park and Elmer Bischoff and his graphic facility were factors in this shift, but there are foreshadowings of representation in earlier works the archer of Urbana No. 2, the evocation of landscape in some of the Berkeley series. Now, however, he took up the problems and challenges of this "new" path in earnest. Over the next 12 years, he produced powerful still lifes, interiors, figures and landscapes all well represented in the book. The book's cover image, a striking painting of poppies in a glass on a Cézanne-esque tilted tabletop, illustrates the tension between figurative and abstract styles that characterizes his works of this period. Diebenkorn spent 1963 as an artist-in-residence at Stanford and, shortly thereafter, began to move back toward abstraction. He was profoundly influenced by several rare Matisse works he saw in the Hermitage during a 1964 trip to the Soviet Union. He noted: "At about this time, the figure thing was running its course. Things really started to flatten out. . . . I'm relating this to Matisse, because of course [his] painting is much flatter in its conception than my own." In late 1966, the Diebenkorns moved to Southern California, where they lived for the next two decades. In a large, light-filled studio in the Ocean Park neighborhood near Venice, Diebenkorn was to produce his signature work.
These lyrical images took form only through sustained effort. For Diebenkorn, Livingston notes, painting was a "process of intense re-thinking." In his own words: "The more obstacles, obstructions, problems if they don't overwhelm the better. I would like to feel that I am involved at any stage of the painting with all its moments, not just this 'now' moment where a superficial grace is so available." There is nothing superficial about the work of Richard Diebenkorn and much that is graceful. He was one of the last great modern painters, and in his best works the classical virtues of draftsmanship and coherent structure express a singular vision. Marianne Dresser is a freelance writer and editor based in Oakland. |