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Van
Dearing Perrine (1868 -1955) |
Rediscovery:
Van Dearing Perrine by John H. Baur
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may seem incongruous to “rediscover” a painter whose
work was bought for the White House by John La Farge on the request
of Theodore Roosevelt, who won awards at the Carnegie Institute
in 1903 and the Panama Pacific Exposition in 1915, who was called
by Richard Watson Gilder “the most original figure in American
landscape art today” and who was elected a National Academician
in 1931. The cycle of taste, which spins faster with each decade
of the century, has relegated Van Dearing Perrine’s later
art—with its brilliant color, its playing children and unabashed
sentiment to a limbo from which it may still be too soon to recall
it. But it is not too soon, I think, to reappraise the early paintings
which Perrine did in the decade 1902-1912, when he lived like a
hermit at the foot of the Palisades and painted the somber patterns
of cliff, ice and river in almost abstract designs of considerable
strength. Perrine’s life story has been told in a full length
biography by Lolita L. W. Flockhart, “A Full Life” (Boston,
1939), with a foreword by Royal Cortissoz. It is over worshipful
but preserves the essential facts. Briefly, he was born in 1869
in Garnett, Kansas, son of a homesteader and trader whose early
death left the family destitute. His youth was one of hung and hardship.
After the family broke up he farmed, worked as a cowboy, lived for
several years as a hobo, learn plastering and lathing. This supported
him after he came to New York, probably in the early 1890s, to study
art at Cooper Institute, then at the school of the National Academy
of Design. Among
Perrine’s close student friends were Maurice Sterne, Alfred
H. Maurer and Maurice Prendergast. In 1899 he shared a studio with
Sterne at 835 Broadway, and this became headquarters for the Country
Sketch Club, of which Perrine was a founder. The members painted
together in New Jersey. Perrine’s emergence as a mature artist
began in 1902, when he moved to an abandoned quarry-worker’s
shack on a narrow shelf of land under the Palisades near the later
site of the Dyckman Street ferry. At that time it was accessible
only by rowboat from the New York shore, or by a steep path from
Coytesville, New Jersey, which skirted the Devil’s Elbow.
This is the scene of one of Perrine’s first paintings done
here, The Robbers, which is in fact a picture of himself and a friend,
Sammy Weiss, bringing down provisions to the cabin. Painted in the
fall of 1902, it won Perrine an honorable mention at the Carnegie
Institute a year later and was bough for the Institute’s collection.
In 1903, the artist rented a slightly more comfortable building,
which had served as both a chapel and schoolhouse, in Palisades
Park. In the same year he had his first one man exhibition at Glaenzer’s
in New York, selling $1,100 worth of paintings. That summer he went
to Europe with his lifelong friend and patron Carlton Noyes, who
was to see him through many financial crisis. Mrs. Montgomery Sears
was also an early buyer of his work. In 1904-05 his reputation began
to grow. Durand-Ruel gave him an exhibition, and slightly later
(1906-08) Mary Bacon Ford handled his work at her New Gallery. In
1908 his converted chapel burned, but he found and rented another
house near the site of his first shack. This was his home when he
married Theodora Snow in 1911, and they lived there until the Park
Commission expelled them 1n 1922. The somber canvases or rock, sky
and water in severely simplified masses which won Perrine his reputation
as the Thoreau of the Palisades and which today seem his most interesting
work were painted in these various cliff side home between 1902
and 1912. Some are still owned by his daughter, including Coasting
Firewood and End of the Squall. Others have recently entered museum
collections, such as Ice Floes, shown in the Armory Show of 1913
and now in the Whitney Museum of American Art, or Hudson River,
in the National collection of Fine Arts in Washington. Many have
disappeared but can be studied in two early articles on Perrine,
one by John Spargo in The Craftsman (August 1907), the other an
anonymous biography in Current Literature (October 1906). To a Mr.
Skinner of the Brooklyn Eagle (quoted in Current Literature), these
paintings of the Palisades were “grand, gloomy and peculiar,”
witnessing “an individuality so assertive as to threaten anarchy
to academic methods.” Now they seem less revolutionary, more
in the tradition of Ryder and Blakelock, though perhaps more consciously
abstract. After 1912 Perrine became increasingly obsessed with color.
Starting in that year he designed and built the first of four or
five “color machines” which projected abstract color
patterns on a screen or wall. One, described in The World Magazine
(May 26, 1918), consisted of a light shining through four reels
of architect’s transparency painted in strips of color and
moving, apparently by a crank, in four opposed directions. The headline
called it “A unique Invention for Giving Actual Dynamic Expression
to the Universal Idea Sometimes Vaguely Called 'Cubism’ or
‘Futurism.’” Perrine’s painting reflected
his new concern. In 1917 he exhibited at the Rochester Memorial
Art Gallery sixty “leaf impressions” under such titles
as Movement From Green Through Gray Yellow to Gray Orange. His aim,
as quoted later in an exhibition catalogue of the Montclair, New
Jersey, Art Museum (1965), was “an abstract art of color and
light, one in which the deflection of sunbeams may play subservient
to the dreams of man.” His pictures of children and his landscapes
entered an impressionist phase, full of blue shadows and strong
contrasts of warm colors. The paint was piled on in a thick impasto,
the surface rough and glittering. In the best of these, such as
Sunburst of about 1930, the artist’s instinctive feeling for
abstract design controlled the exuberant color and created a nature
poetry not unlike that of Arthur G. Dove. At all times Perrine was
a draftsman of great vitality. A series of drawings that he did
of Isadora Duncan in 1915 capture her dance movements with spirit
and economy; she liked them so much that she reproduced one on the
cover of her Metropolitan Opera House program (November 21, 1916),
relegating another by Bourdelle to the back. Perrine also drew anatomical
studies with forceful realism, and was the author of a book, “Let
the Child Draw.” The artist died at his home in New Canaan,
Connecticut, on December 11, 1955. |
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