The expressionist artists like Franz Marc used colors, shapes, and lines to express their feelings about their subjects. This was a departure from the idea that artist’s create work to imitate nature or to illustrate a literary theme or human emotion. For the first time in history art was created out of an inner necessity on the part of the artist to create it. At the same time psychologists were beginning to suggest that lines, shapes, colors and spaces have specific emotional qualities - they could be joyful or sad, inspiring or depressing.
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Marc's The Large Blue Horses is an excellent example of The Blue Rider's use of color and line to symbolize universal principles. Marc chose animals as his subject because he believed in their "purer, more sublime relationship with the world," and he used abstract color (a brilliant blue) and line (the curving of the horses' necks) to communicate their spiritual harmony with nature.
The Large Blue Horses occupies a special place in the Walker Art Center's history as the first major modernist work to enter the collection. The painting was purchased in 1942 through the Gilbert M. Walker Memorial Fund, which had been established in the early 1940s to encourage a shift in the museum's collecting practices toward the contemporary and modern. Between 1942 and 1948, 60 works of art were purchased using this fund. In the years since, the Walker's permanent collection has continued to serve as a strong representation of 20th-century art practices.
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In 1948, the Walker Art Center and the Young-Quinlan Company (a local department store) copresented the Walker's fourth annual so-called "purchase exhibition," New Paintings to Know and Buy. An estimated 9,000 visitors saw the show at the Walker and 18,000 more were reported to have seen it at the department store. The exhibition of 127 paintings was intended both to introduce new art to the public by the "best known American artists" of the time and to support these artists through the potential sale of their work.
Although there are no records of public sales, documents show that the Walker accessioned eight works for its permanent collection, recommended by Visual Arts Curator Norman A. Geske, Walker Assistant Director William Friedman, and Walker Art School teacher Mac Le Sueur. Although Edward Hopper's Office at Night initially received only two of three votes, it became one of the eight acquisitions. These works were purchased through the Gilbert M. Walker Memorial Fund, which had been established specifically for the Walker's acquisition of modern and contemporary art.
Where has Office at Night been reproduced?
Office at Night's reproduction history is diverse and extensive. In addition to exhibition catalogues and reviews, publications addressing a wide range of topics have used this painting as an illustration. Reproduced on note cards, post-cards, and in wall calendars, this image has circulated extensively through our daily lives. Examples of this reproduction history are presented here.
clockwise, left to right:
Edward Hopper postcard booklet, New York: Dover Publications, 1994, Courtesy Dover Publications
Office at Night note card, Courtesy Walker Art Center Shop
Monograph #8, New York: American Artists Group, 1945, Walker Art Center Library
São Paulo 9: United States of America, Washington, D.C.: The Smithsonian Institution Press, 1967, Walker Art Center Library
The Smithsonian Institution organized the American display for the IX São Paulo Bienal and published this accompanying bilingual catalogue. Shown here, it represents one particularly noteworthy exhibition of Hopper's work which included Office at Night.
The IX São Paulo Bienal became, in part, a special tribute to Edward Hopper--he died five months after being invited to participate. Works by 21 other artists from a younger generation also were included. The pairing of Hopper with these artists was appropriate. As they sought unique ways to represent experiences of their rapidly changing world, all were influenced by Hopper's highly personal interpretation of American life.
The photograph of Hopper here shows the artist seated in the foreground, in front of his summer studio in South Truro, Massachusetts, in 1960. His wife, Josephine ("Jo") Hopper, an artist who modeled for all of her husband's paintings, appears in the distant background.
Walker Art Center, 1944, Moderne Facade added to the old Walker Art Galleries building as part of a renovation finished in 1944
Invitation to New Paintings to Know and Buy, Walker Art Center Archives
Gallery guide for New Paintings to Know and Buy, Walker Art Center Archives
below right:
Tally of recommendations for acquisitions from New Paintings to Know and Buy, Walker Art Center Archives
right:
List of works purchased from New Paintings to Know and Buy, Walker Art Center Archives
The "New Woman" Revised: Painting and Gender Politics on 14th Street, Ellen Wiley Todd, Berkeley: University of California Press, 1993, Courtesy Wilson Library, University of Minnesota
The Office, Élisabeth Pélegrin-Genel, New York: Flammarion Press, 1996, Walker Art Center Library
"How the Work Ethic Influences Sexuality," John Racy, Medical Aspects of Human Sexuality, April 1974, Courtesy Bio-Medical Library, University of Minnesota
The Office Book, Judy Klein, New York: Facts on File, Inc., 1982, Courtesy Minneapolis Public Library
Office Furniture, Lance Knobel, London: Unwin Hyman, 1987, Courtesy Minneapolis Public Library
Professions and Patriarchy, Ann Witz, New York: Routledge, 1992, Courtesy Walker Art Center Shop
Interpersonal Communication, 2nd Edition, Sarah Trenholm, Belmont, CA: Wadsworth Publishing, 1992, Courtesy Macalester College Library
T. B. Walker residence and Art Gallery, circa 1913
The T.B. Walker Collection was open to the public at this 803 Hennepin Avenue site from 1879 to 1927
Thomas Barlow Walker (1840-1928), circa 1880
T. B. Walker, "The T.B. Walker Collection," circa 1918
Statement by T.B. Walker written when he intended to donate his collection to the city of Minneapolis
R. H. Adams in the Walker Art Gallery, circa 1915
Self-taught curator of the T.B. Walker Collection, 1900-1935
Walker Art Galleries, circa 1930
Constructed in 1927 on the present site of the Walker Art Center, this building was torn down in 1969
List of the T. B. Walker Collection, circa 1936
Includes comments on the authenticity of some of the paintings
Shall We Take It, 1939
Brochure concerning the possible transformation of the privately operated Walker Art Gallery into a public Art Center with federal Work Projects Administration support
Welcome Flyer to the Walker Art Center, 1940
The Walker Art Center opened to the public January 5, 1940
A Survey in Pictures, Walker Art Center, 1940
Booklet describing the activities available to the public at the new Walker Art Center
Everyday Art Gallery, Walker Art Center, 1946
Brochure for a gallery devoted to the appreciation of industrial design
above:
Centergram, Walker Art Center, 1942
Walker newsletter announcing the acquisition of Franz Marc's The Large Blue Horses
Members of Walker Art Center staff in front of Franz Marc's The Large Blue Horses, circa 1950
Installation view of Marc's painting with (left to right): Ralph Dauphin, Alonzo Hauser, Carol Kottke, Assistant Director William M. Friedman, and Walker Director Daniel S. Defenbacher
Gilbert M. Walker Gallery, Walker Art Center, 1952
Sales and Rental Gallery, Walker Art Center, 1954
left to right:
Present Walker Art Center building under construction, 1970
Minneapolis Sunday Tribune, June 20, 1971
New York Times, May 18, 1971
All materials Collection Walker Art Center Archives
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[A painting] is only well painted if its spiritual value is completed and satisfying. "Good drawing" is drawing that can not be altered without destruction of this inner value, quite irrespective of its correctness as anatomy, botany, or any other science. This is not a question of a violation of natural form, but of the need of the artist for such a form. Similarly, colors are not used because they are true to only justified in using, but is under a moral obligation to use, only those forms which fulfill his own need. Absolute freedom from anatomy or anything else of the kind must be given to the artist in his choice of means. Such a spiritual freedom is as necessary in art as it is in life.5The spiritual element which impressed Kandinsky so much at this time came in part from having been introduced to Theosophy. Several of his acquaintances in Munich were investigating the tennets of this somewhat occult movement which had direct relationships to Indian philosophy and claimed special insight into the nature of the divine. These ideas found a particularly receptive listener in Kandinsky who himself, in his art, was attempting to renounce the natural and achieve the sublime. As Theosophists felt that divinity itself was the true nature of existence so too did Kandinsky feel that painting was the real subject of a picture. Thus his increasing non-objectivity could, in a way, lead only to pure abstraction."Improvisation" itself is an abstract title and has strong overtones of musical composition. This is hardly unintentional, for we know that the composer Schoenberg was a friend of Kandinsky from 1906 and both shared the creative conception of "inner necessity." In the words of the musician, "The artist does not create that which others think beautiful but that which he finds necessary to create."Kandinsky relates how, one evening at dusk, he entered his studio and was astounded to see, propped up against a wall, a painting of most fantastic beauty which he had never seen before. It glowed in the half light and seemed to convey, with its mysterious colors and unidentifiable forms, everything he had been attempting without success. It was with both consternation and delight that he discovered that his painting was in fact one of his own, resting on its side and obscured by the gloom of twilight. This experience served to convince him of the primacy of color and form and the uselessness of detail.It is in this frame of reference that we must consider the Minneapolis painting. At first appearance it is a conglomeration of colors and forms and conveys no direct statement about reality. This must have been especially true in 1910 when anyone viewing it would have not have had, as we, the benefit of a half-century of visual experience in looking at abstract compositions. The picture must be seen for the innovation it was, for the truly revolutionary concepts it espoused.It is basically a landscape, however, and on close inspection is still tied to the world of reality. In the right foreground is a woman in blue looking at or working in a garden, the flowers of which are in full bloom at the left. Further, there are trees, bushes, and plants everywhere about. Clearly it is late spring or summer, and the joyous fecundity of the season is fully expressed in the exuberant colorism. In the background, in a motif used consistently by Kandinsky until 1912, are two horsemen vaulting a fence. They recall elements of Russian folklore, the freedom of the Steppes, and add to the generally fluid and happy feeling.Kandinsky has expressed these feelings, however, less through the use of recognizable elements than through the harmony of his color scheme. He well understood that reds and yellows are warm and moving colors while blue and purple tend to be cool and stable. Between these he constructs his balance. Further, the shapes that contain these colors add to the total effect; some of the outlines are sketchy and vibrant while others are solid and stable. When the artist chooses to reduce the significance of or totally omit the object, his then non-objective painting has only form and color on which to rely. This indeed is what Kandinsky desired to do and in so doing hoped thereby to find the pure principals of art.Kandinsky experienced reality in terms of color and color in terms of emotion: ". . . color is the most powerful medium in the hand of the painter. It has a psychic as well as a physical effect upon the observer . . . color is the artist's means by which he can influence the human soul."6 Kandinsky felt that the colors, first, and the forms, second, had the greatest power to reach the observer; that color, like sounds in music, could express emotions that no words or representational objects could ever hope to do.After 1914 objects were gone from his paintings, and he experimented increasingly with his new theories. His abstractions were to go through many phases in future years but always remain abstract, nonobjective, or "concrete" as he preferred to call them. Groups grew up about Kandinsky, such as the famous Blue Rider of 1911 and the Blue Four of 1924. He had left Germany and returned to Russia during the years of the First World War, but returned again in 1921 to become one of the most influential teachers at the Bauhaus; he was the last professor to leave as this famous school closed under the pressure of the Third Reich. In 1933, at 67, he left for Paris.Today he is regarded as one of the major figures of 20th-century painting. His theories and practice have fathered both artists and movements up to our own time.Endnotes
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