Editor's note: Today's headline is italicized and has an exclamation
point at the end, because this is the title of a book that Lawrence Jeppson
is writing about the artist whose life and works are the subject of today's column.
Before
the Great War, art winds changed slowly. Esthetic impulses could not
sweep the world in quick moments like avaricious hurricanes and then
perish quickly like spent epidemics. New, sometimes revolutionary,
art concepts sank tentative roots, grew painfully, flowered, spread,
then ultimately weakened and were crowded out.
Usually,
it was a drawn process in which the best never quite died but mutated
in natural evolution. An art movement turning brown in its original
field might still be only a seedling in another.
Air
transportation began changing all that, speeding up the slow
evolution. The internet and social media killed artistic evolution. A
new thought can be echoed anywhere in the world the next day. Or even
sooner than that.
Impressionism,
born more than a century and a quarter ago in France, took 30, 40, 50
years to naturalize in North America. And in other countries. Many
latter-day art observers, infected with the virus of the
it-has-got-to-be-new cult, pay heed to only the first plow, the
pioneer, believing no genius could flower in Impressionism after
1900.
They
give scant credit to the horticulturalist who did come later to
breed, cross-breed, adapt, and purify — simply because he/she
came later. Since the artist came later he/she could not be original.
Since the artist could not be original he/she could not be worth a
whole lot of attention. So the circle says, so erroneously.
In
America for the best part of a century the native Impressionists who
crowded most of the art books and important museums had one blatant
commonality. They had studios on the Eastern Seaboard, close to New
York and Philadelphia, where they had easy access to the national art
establishment.
Local
boys got the glory, the standing, the preemptive notoriety.
Myopic,
chauvinistic, and poorly financed, early art publications seldom
acknowledged that talent lay elsewhere. Nor was there a plethora of
formidable museums and art galleries in the hinterlands. Good
painters from these far reaches were simply ignored. They had little
way to pierce the Eastern establishment.
They
would have to wait for history to catch up — long after they
were dead.
William
Henry Clapp (1879-1954) was both a follower and a pioneer. He was
also a horticulturalist, a measured scientist who took what
Impressionism and Post-impressionism had to say — which he
found in the original French fields of cultivation — and then
cross-bred and pollinated and shared his seeds in Canada and
California.
Beach scene, ca 1907
To
be sure, chronologically Clapp was a follower. He was a generation
younger than Monet, Renoir, Degas. His painting, though, never aped
their styles, nor the styles of any other Frenchman. He was almost
the same age as Pierre Bonnard (1867-1949) and Edouard Vuillard
1868-1940). The term follower should be no more derisory for him than
it would be for them.
Clapp
was a pioneer because he took his Impressionist vision into lands
that were still overgrown with an earlier academia. Nearly 40 years
after the first exhibition of Impressionism in France was forced to
close because of public derision, the message of this new esthetic
had not penetrated public Canada.
Clapp,
back from four or five years of study and painting abroad, found his
Impressionism too extreme for his native Montreal. The only
sympathetic newspaper critic wrote, "Clapp paints what he thinks
he sees and is not obsessed by what others see or think they see."
Farmstead, 1917
Neither
his art nor a sympathetic critic could convince the public.
He
found favor with his peers — but no one else. After spending
two years in Cuba, Clapp fled to East Bay, 1917, where for the rest
of his life he painted his landscapes and figure pieces as he saw
them, became luminary and theoretician for a close-knit Society of
Six, and for more than three decades ran a city museum, the Oakland
Art Gallery, in four rooms in an upstairs corner of the Municipal
Auditorium.
Clapp
deserves credit as a pioneer, too, because in his years of museum
stewardship he made certain that every legitimate art viewpoint, no
matter how much in conflict with his own, had opportunity to search
an audience.
Bunkhouse, 1930s
To
make sure of this he invented a three-jury system to judge
conservative, modern, and radical art for the annual exhibitions. At
one point hysterical women threatened to tear the museum apart chunk
by chunk unless certain unflattering nude paintings were removed.
Clapp stood by his guns.
Quietly
fearless, he was the first museum director in the United States to
give exhibition to the Blue Four — Jawlensky, Feininger, Klee,
and Kandinsky — and he made his museum in the years thereafter
the launching platform for American forays by this group and many
others.
Yet
William Henry Clapp is best seen today as the horticulturalist who
took the seeds he brought from Europe and bred them so successfully
to California light and vitality that they transcended regionalism
and became part of a universal world of exquisite beauty.
Lawrence Jeppson is an art consultant, organizer and curator of art exhibitions, writer, editor
and publisher, lecturer, art historian, and appraiser. He is America's leading authority on
modern, handwoven French tapestries. He is expert on the works of William Henry Clapp, Nat
Leeb, Tsing-fang Chen, and several French artists.
He is founding president of the non-profit Mathieu Matégot Foundation for Contemporary
Tapestry, whose purview encompasses all 20th-century tapestry, an interest that traces back to
1948. For many years he represented the Association des Peintres-Cartonniers de Tapisserie and
Arelis in America.
Through the Smithsonian Institution Traveling Exhibition Service, the American Federation of
Arts, the Museum of Modern Art, and his own Art Circuit Services he has been a contributor to
or organizer of more than 200 art exhibitions in the United States, Canada, Japan, and Taiwan.
He owns AcroEditions, which publishes and/or distributes multiple-original art. He was co-founder and artistic director of Collectors' Investment Fund.
He is the director of the Spring Arts Foundation; Utah Cultural Arts Foundation, and the Fine
Arts Legacy Foundation
Lawrence is an early-in-the-month home teacher, whose beat is by elevator. In addition, he has spent the past six years hosting and promoting reunions of the missionaries who served in the French Mission (France, Belgium, and Switzerland) during the decade after WWII.