James
Brooks, muralist and abstract painter, was born on October 18,
1906, in St. Louis, Missouri, one of four children of William
Rodolphus and Abigail F. (Williamson) Brooks. His father was a
traveling salesman, and the Brooks family moved frequently until
1916, when they settled in Dallas. Following his graduation from
Oak Cliff High School in 1922 Brooks studied art at Southern Methodist
University for two years. He then studied with James A. Waddell
at the Dallas Art Instituteqv and took private lessons with Martha
Simkins.qv In 1926 he moved to New York City, where he worked
as a commercial artist to fund his night classes with Boardman
Robinson and Kimon Nicolaides at the Art Students League.
Brooks
began exhibiting paintings and prints in a social realist style
in various group shows around New York in the early 1930s. He
executed three murals for the WPA Federal Art Project between
1936 and 1942, during which time he met the painters Jackson Pollock
and Philip Guston. His best-known mural, Flight, runs 235 feet
around the rotunda of the Marine Air Terminal at La Guardia Airport
in Queens. The mural was painted over without explanation in the
1950s, possibly because some saw left-wing symbolism in it, but
following the protests of art historians and curators it was fully
restored in 1980. Brooks enlisted in the United States Army in
1942 and served as an art correspondent in Egypt and the Near
East. He spent the last few months of the war at the Office of
Special Services in Washington, D.C.
Upon his
return to New York in September 1945 he renewed his friendships
with Guston, Pollock, and Bradley Walker Tomlin and began to solicit
criticism from Wallace Harrison. Brooks developed an abstract
style influenced by the synthetic Cubism of Pablo Picasso and
Georges Braque. In the summer of 1948 he developed a more fluid
abstract style after being inspired by the random shapes that
occurred on the back of canvases to which he had glued paintings
with black paste. He subsequently executed a series of stained
and dripped canvases that were featured at his first solo exhibition
the following year at the Peridot Gallery in New York City.
Many of
Brooks's early works in the Abstract Expressionist style retained
vestiges of the Cubist grid. He experimented with enamels, gouache,
and thinned oils over various backgrounds such as crayon; his
palette generally alternated between browns, grays, or blacks
and more vivid colors. Later in his career Brooks introduced more
assertive forms, but shied away from developing any dominant method
or style, wishing to avoid "nausea with one's own pictorial
clichés." In the late 1960s he switched from oils
to acrylics, a change that prompted the use of a wider range of
colors, broader strokes, and simpler compositions with larger
color areas. He used numbers and letters to identify his paintings.
He frequently added nonsense syllables to the letters as a mnemonic
device, forming such titles as Pask, Burwak, and Jondol.
Although
Brooks's service in the army excluded him from participation in
ground-breaking exhibitions at Peggy Guggenheim's Art of This
Century gallery, he has nevertheless been considered by critics
to be a member of the first generation of Abstract Expressionists.
He participated in many group exhibitions around the country,
among the most important being the historic, artist-organized
Ninth Street Exhibition (1951), which included the work of Pollock,
Hans Hofmann, Franz Kline, Willem de Kooning, and Robert Motherwell,
and two influential exhibitions organized by the Museum of Modern
Art in New York City, Twelve Americans (1956) and New American
Painting (1959). His work has been featured in many solo exhibitions;
retrospectives of his work were organized by the Whitney Museum
of American Art in New York (1963) and the Dallas Museum of Fine
Arts (1972).
Throughout
his career Brooks supplemented his income from painting with teaching
posts at various institutions, including Columbia University,
New York (1946-48); Pratt Institute, New York (1948-58); Yale
University, New Haven, Connecticut (1955-60); New College, Sarasota,
Florida (1965-67); Miami Art Center, Miami, Florida (1966); Queens
College, Queens, New York (1966-69); Southampton College of Long
Island University, Southampton, New York (1968); and the University
of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia (1971-72). He was the artist-in-residence
at the American Academy in Rome, Italy, in 1963. Brooks was awarded
a Guggenheim Fellowship in 1969 and in 1973 was elected to membership
in the National Institute of Arts and Letters.
James
Brooks married Mary MacDonald in 1938 and in 1947 married Charlotte
Park. He developed Alzheimer's disease in 1985 and died on Long
Island on March 9, 1992. Examples of his work are at the Brooklyn
Museum, the Detroit Institute of Art, the Solomon R. Guggenheim
Museum and the Museum of Modern Art in New York, the Tate Gallery
in London, the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York, the
Museum of Fine Arts, Houston,qv the Art Institute of Chicago,
the Boston Museum of Fine Arts, the Dallas Museum of Art,qv the
Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, Southern Methodist University,
Dallas, and the Archer M. Huntington Art Gallery,qv Austin.
BIBLIOGRAPHY:
Sam Hunter, James Brooks (exhibition catalog, New York: Frederick
A. Praeger, 1963). James Brooks: Paintings, 1952-1975; Works on
Paper, 1950-1975 (exhibition catalog, New York: Martha Jackson
Gallery, 1975). New York Times, March 12, 1992
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