Movatterモバイル変換


[0]ホーム

URL:


Jump to content
WikipediaThe Free Encyclopedia
Search

Ralph Stackpole

This is a good article. Click here for more information.
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
American artist (1885–1973)
Ralph Ward Stackpole
Stackpole in his studio in 1940
photo byPeter Stackpole forLIFE magazine
Born(1885-05-01)May 1, 1885[1]
DiedDecember 13, 1973(1973-12-13) (aged 88)
Puy-de-Dôme, France
EducationCalifornia School of Design
École des Beaux-Arts
Known forSculpture

Ralph Ward Stackpole (May 1, 1885 – December 10, 1973)[2] was an Americansculptor, painter, muralist, etcher and art educator,San Francisco's leading artist during the 1920s and 1930s. Stackpole was involved in the art and causes ofsocial realism, especially during theGreat Depression, when he was part of thePublic Works of Art Project,Federal Art Project of theWorks Progress Administration, and the Treasury Department'sSection of Painting and Sculpture. Stackpole was responsible for recommending that architectTimothy L. Pflueger bring Mexican muralistDiego Rivera to San Francisco to work on theSan Francisco Stock Exchange and its attached office tower in 1930–31.[3] His sonPeter Stackpole became a well-known photojournalist.

Early career

[edit]

Stackpole worked as a laborer early in life to support himself and his mother following the death of his father in a lumber mill circular saw accident.[4] At sixteen, he came toSan Francisco to study at theCalifornia School of Design (now San Francisco Art Institute) beginning in 1903; he was influenced strongly byArthur Frank Mathews, muralist and painter at the school. He met painter Helen Arnstein (later Helen Salz) while both were teenagers, and she became his first girlfriend. Arnstein, the daughter of wealthy Jewish art lovers and one year Stackpole's senior, described him as "a remarkable draftsman" who painted and sketched constantly.[5] She was less impressed with his sense of color than with his precision in line. Stackpole polished his craft by working with artists at theMontgomery Block, playfully called "Monkey Block", a bohemian hangout which included studios for painting and sculpture. After the1906 San Francisco earthquake, he used a grant ofUS$200 ($7,000 in current value) to travel to France to attend theÉcole des Beaux-Arts in the class ofAntonin Mercié in 1906–1908, exhibiting at the Salon in 1910.[6] It was in Paris that he became friends with painterDiego Rivera[7] He painted underRobert Henri in New York in 1911.[4]

San Francisco

[edit]

Stackpole returned to San Francisco in 1912 and married Adele Barnes, two months younger than he, an art student ofXavier Martínez and one of the first graduates of theCalifornia Academy of Arts and Crafts. Adele Stackpole was a perfectionist in many ways, including the precision of her bookplate engravings and the demands she placed on her relationships.[5] On June 15, 1913, the Stackpoles' son,Peter, was born in San Francisco.[8]

Stackpole was part of the foursome that founded, early in 1913, the California Society of Etchers (CSE). The other founders wereRobert B. Harshe, an etcher and art professor atStanford University, etcher and educatorPedro Lemos, who taught at the San Francisco Institute of Art, andGottardo Piazzoni, an Italian-American painter and muralist who was Stackpole's master in France. The CSE exhibited twice in 1913, and grew to 78 artist members and five associate after two years.[9] In 1926, the annual publication listed 46 artist members and 156 associate members: Stackpole was still a member. Decades later, the CSE merged with another group to become theCalifornia Society of Printmakers.

Panama-Pacific International Exposition

[edit]
"Tympanum group of Varied Industries" (1915)

Around the same time, Stackpole was commissioned to sculpt architectural features for the 1915Panama–Pacific International Exposition, a major assignment that was to take two years to complete, even with the aid of assistants. To give a grand entrance portal to the Palace of Varied Industries, he completed a copy of the main entrance to the Hospice of Santa Cruz, built inToledo, Spain in the 16th century. Stackpole's design replaced the original figures of Catholic saints with figures of industry.[10] His works for the Palace of Varied Industries included "Man with a pick", "Tympanum group of Varied Industries", "New World Receiving Burdens of Old", "Keystone figure", and "Power of Industry". Stackpole also sculpted figures of "Thought" on the columns flanking the half domes of the west facade of the Palace Group.[10] At thePalace of Fine Arts, Stackpole produced a kneeling "Venus" on the Altar of Inspiration. Visitors wishing to view "Venus" were kept some 50 yards (50 m) away by a man-made lagoon.[10]

Modern trends

[edit]

With Piazzoni, Stackpole went to France again in 1922, taking his family; he enrolled his nine-year-old son in theÉcole alsacienne, a private school in Paris. The two artists wished to investigate the most modern trends in Europe,[11] and they encountered Diego Rivera.[12] While there, Stackpole's marriage unraveled, and he returned to the Bay Area in 1923 with a 24-year-old French still life artist and model named Francine Mazen, nicknamed "Ginette"; his wife and son returned after the school year to take up residence across the bay inOakland. Stackpole obtained a divorce, and then married Ginette in Mexico.

In late 1923, Stackpole organized a major art exhibit, in partnership with Piazzoni. This was the first large-scale art show in San Francisco since 1915; there had been no expected rush of artists after the Panama-Pacific International Exposition. The exhibit, held in Polk Hall in the Civic Auditorium, was companion to a nearby print exhibit which included Gauguin and Matisse works. Critic and author Laura Bride Powers felt that the event was a disappointment—it displayed "inconspicuous examples" of leading artists, and failed to show anyPicasso, avant-garde orDadaist works.[13]

In 1926, Stackpole delivered the William A. Coleman Fountain to the city ofSacramento, a Moderne work (centrally located in what is now known as Cesar Chavez Park) which celebrated the city's completion of a difficult water filtration project.[14][15] That same year, Stackpole traveled toMexico City to see Rivera working on some of his 124 frescoes in the courtyard of theSecretariat of Public Education.[12] Returning with a small Rivera painting, Stackpole gave it toSan Francisco Arts Commission president William Gerstle (who was initially unimpressed), and began a several-year effort to bring Rivera to work in California.[12]

Stackpole accepted an offer to teach at his former school, its name having changed to the California School of Fine Arts (CSFA) [nowSan Francisco Art Institute]. For a stretch of almost twenty years,[16] he taught a number of subjects.Dorr Bothwell studied sculpture under Stackpole, then the head of the Sculpture Department, and thought him to besexist—she said he told the women in the class that "the place they really belonged was in bed."[17]

Site placement ofIndustry (1932) shows its position at the right of the formerSan Francisco Stock Exchange building.

Kenneth Rexroth wrote of Stackpole in 1929 that "He knew everybody in town from top to bottom ... and he took us everywhere."[4] Stackpole's sizable San Francisco studio at 716 Montgomery (adjacent to Montgomery Block) served as a social center for San Francisco's artist community. PhotographerDorothea Lange rented upstairs studio space there in 1926, and Helen Clark andOtis Oldfield, both artists, married there the same year.[18] Lange's husbandMaynard Dixon had his studio next door, and the Stackpole and Dixon families were close—both men were members of theBohemian Club.

Throughout the 1930s, Stackpole worked frequently with architect Timothy Pflueger on various commissions. Beginning in 1929 when the two men first met, Stackpole was given responsibility for selecting the artists who worked to execute and augment Pflueger's basic design scheme for the San Francisco Stock Exchange and its associated Tower, especially the Luncheon Club occupying the top floors of the Tower.[19] Stackpole said later of the experience, "the artists were in from the first. They were called in conference and assumed responsibility and personal pride in the building."[20] At the Sansome Street tower entrance, Stackpole worked on a scaffolding with a crew of assistants todirect carve heroic figures in stone.[21] After the building was completed, Stackpole was finally successful in winning a commission for Rivera; Pflueger became convinced that Rivera would be the perfect muralist for decorating the staircase wall and ceiling of the Stock Exchange Club. This was a controversial selection considering Rivera's leftist political beliefs in contradiction to the Stock Exchange's capitalist foundation.[22] Into the mural, Rivera painted a figure of Stackpole's son Peter holding a model airplane.[citation needed]

During his stay, Rivera and his wifeFrida Kahlo lived and worked at the studio, becoming in the process lifelong friends with Stackpole and Ginette. They met tennis championHelen Wills Moody, an avid painter-hobbyist, who soon agreed to model for Rivera at the studio.[23] Neighbor Dixon saw the attention, and the American money being given to Rivera, and with etcherFrank Van Sloun organized a short-lived protest against the Communist artist. However, both Dixon and Van Sloun quickly realized that the San Francisco art world "oligarchy" who were obviously smitten with Rivera, including Stackpole's well-connected patrons, were the same group that they themselves would need to support their own art aspirations.[12]

For much of 1931, Stackpole partnered with other artists to decorate Pflueger'sParamount Theatre in Oakland, an Art Deco masterpiece. A bas-relief scene of horses, waves and a central winged figure was placed over the stage's proscenium arch, finished in gold-tonedmetal leaf—the work jointly designed by Stackpole andRobert Boardman Howard.[24] The design worked into Pflueger's metal grille ceiling grid likely came unattributed from Stackpole's sketches. Pflueger was an able project leader; Stackpole later described his involvement: "He was the boss alright, as an architect should be ... He would call the plays just as a symphony conductor does ... There wasn't a lock, molding, or window that he did not inspect in the drawings and in the actual building with the utmost thoroughness and care."[25]

Stackpole worked through ten months of 1932 on a monumental pair of sculptures flanking the grand entrance of the Stock Exchange: a male and a female grouping showing the polarity of agriculture and industry, showing in their rounded human shapes the influence of Rivera. Chiseling into 15 short tons (14 t) of Yosemite granite, he wore goggles and a mask. The unveiling ceremony took place in the cold of New Year's Eve, with MayorAngelo Rossi joining Stackpole, Pflueger and artisans in smocks.[26]

Stackpole took his son Peter to visit their photographer friendEdward Weston inCarmel in the early 1930s, and the two older men spent the day discussing photography, "the difference between making and taking a photograph, between the intended and the random".[8] This conversation, and the 1932 exhibit byGroup f/64, a collection of innovative photographers such as Weston andAnsel Adams, was later seen as foundational to Peter Stackpole's conception of photography.[8]

In July 1933, Stackpole completed a model of a design to be incorporated into theSan Francisco–Oakland Bay Bridge's central anchorage on the western side. The anchorage, to be constructed of concrete rising 197 feet (60 m) above the water, was to display over much of its height a bare-chested male figure standing solidly between the two suspension spans. However,Arthur Brown, Jr., Pflueger's colleague on the Bay Bridge project, did not like the scale of the figure, which belittled the bridge. EngineerRalph Modjeski agreed, writing "The gigantic figure which is proposed for the centre anchorage is out of place for a structure of this kind and would not harmonize with the end anchorage."[27] Stackpole's design was abandoned in favor of a largely flat expanse of poured concrete.

In 1933 and 1934, Stackpole took part in thePublic Works of Art Project assignment to paint murals forCoit Tower.[28] Many of the murals were executed in styles reminiscent of Rivera, and Stackpole himself was portrayed in five of them;[29] in one he is shown reading a newspaper announcing the destruction of a Rivera mural in New York.

In 1937, Stackpole received a commission to sculpt his interpretation ofColorado River explorerJohn Wesley Powell, for display in theMain Interior Building of the U.S. Department of Interior. It was to be a companion piece toHeinz Warneke's portrayal of theLewis and Clark Expedition. Warneke learned that Stackpole intended a water scene, so he changed his portrayal of Lewis and Clark to be one of them on land. Stackpole and Warneke delivered their stone reliefs in 1940, and the two panels were mounted on either side of the stage of the building's auditorium.[30] Another work of Stockpole's, "Dispossessed," one of his most notable canvases and a painting of great power and (unfortunately but apparently) permanent relevance, is also in Washington, D.C., at the Smithsonian.

"Reverence"

[edit]
original 1915 version ofReverence

In 1938, Stackpole was contacted by the President of the United States,Franklin Delano Roosevelt. While visiting the 1915 fair, in San Francisco, as Assistant Secretary of the Navy, FDR had seen Stackpole's figure ofReverence, also known asWorship, on the long-gone altar at the Palace of Fine Arts.[31] It had stuck in his mind somehow. He wanted one. Stackpole responded that the original had deteriorated, and was lost, but that he would be happy to undertake another version in travertine as a commission. FDR agreed, with regular inquiries on the progress of the piece over the next five years. In April 1943, Stackpole explained the result about to be revealed:

The changes of 28 years, in the world, in you, and in me, made the exact copying or reproduction of the first statue unattractive... So I did the job as I would do it now... here are a few things I thought of when I was working. Big mass movements in thinking and labor naturally reflect in art. The slender and graceful belong less to us now. I’ve tried to make heavy and strong forms. She is more bent and the burden heavier.[32]

This was not what the President had remembered or wanted. He ordered it to a secluded area of Hyde Park, where it was re-discovered in 1987, identified, then concealed all over again within a new ring of trees according to FDR's wishes.[33]

Golden Gate International Exposition

[edit]
The eight-story-tall figure ofPacifica was the central spirit of theGolden Gate International Exposition.

Pflueger made certain that Stackpole was given a major commission for art in preparation for theGolden Gate International Exposition, also called the Pacific Pageant, a world's fair to be held onTreasure Island between San Francisco and Oakland. Stackpole worked to create an 80-foot (24 m) tall frame-and-stucco embodiment ofPacifica, the theme of the exposition. By November 1938, whenLife photographerAlfred Eisenstaedt was capturing images to promote the event,Pacifica was ready for his camera. The magazine carried the image of this, Stackpole's most monumental work, "a peaceful, contemplative, almost prayer-like female figure" intended only for temporary placement.[34] The heroic sculpture stood in front of a 100-foot (30 m) tall "prayer curtain" of regular star-shaped steel bangles that rippled in the wind.[35] Vivid orange and blue lights washed the curtain at night, whilePacifica, the image of Peace, was brilliant in white. Over two years, 16 million visitors came to the exposition.[36] When it was over, Stackpole proposed that the sculpture be recast in a more permanent form—steel, stone or concrete—and positioned prominently on an island in the San Francisco Bay, perhapsAlcatraz orAngel Island, in a manner similar to theStatue of Liberty in New York Harbor.[4]The plan was not seriously considered by civic leaders whose attention was on the gathering war clouds in Asia and Europe. The sculpture and most of the exposition buildings were dynamited in 1942, and the U.S. Navy took ownership of the island as a base inWorld War II.[4]

Later life

[edit]
Artist Louise Gilbert rendered this flyer advertising a sculpture class Stackpole was to give in 1945 at the California Labor School.

In the early 1940s, Stackpole left the CSFA to teach privately. In April 1945, he led a sculpting class at the California Labor School, a leftist organization advocating equal rights for workers. From 1941 to 1945, he served on theU.S. Commission of Fine Arts, the first commission member from the West Coast.[37]

In 1949, Stackpole moved toChauriat in thePuy-de-Dôme area of central France, returning with his second wife Ginette to her birthplace.[38] There, his art became less figurative and more abstract, both in sculpture and in painting.[39] He kept a flow of correspondence with his old friends in San Francisco, including Helen Salz, who described his letters as devoid of any mention of sculpture or painting, or any project that Stackpole might have been working on—instead, he wrote of musicians and music, and of his encounters with people.[5] Salz bought a Stackpole bust of poetGeorge Sterling and donated it to the University of California in 1955–56, to be displayed inDwinelle Hall. In early 1964, Stackpole visited San Francisco to see his family, and he called up his old friendKenneth Rexroth. In hisSan Francisco Examiner newspaper column, Rexroth wrote of having lunch with the Stackpole family, and reminded his readers that the man had been known "for 20 years or more [as] San Francisco's leading artist."[28]

Stackpole died in France in 1973, his wife in 1978.[16]

Some of Stackpole's sculptures, paintings and drawings were destroyed in theOakland firestorm of 1991, a blaze which leveled the home of Peter Stackpole. Floyd Winter, a neighbor, helped rescue a very few items "moments before the conflagration consumed the house".[8]

Selected works

[edit]

See also

[edit]
Wikimedia Commons has media related toRalph Stackpole.

References

[edit]
Notes
  1. ^"Ralph Ward Stackpole (1885–1973)". AskART. 2000–2010.Archived from the original on May 25, 2011. RetrievedApril 23, 2010.
  2. ^ObituaryArchived 2019-04-10 at theWayback Machine,The New York Times of December 13, 1973.
  3. ^"The Commission".Diego Rivera Mural. San Francisco Art Institute. 2007. Archived fromthe original on September 9, 2006. RetrievedApril 23, 2010.
  4. ^abcdefgStarr 2002, p. 151.
  5. ^abcSalz, Helen Arnstein; Suzanne Reiss (1975)."Sketches of an improbable ninety years". Berkeley: The Regents of the University of California and the Trustees of the Judah L. Magnes Memorial Museum. RetrievedApril 16, 2010.
  6. ^abJames, Juliet Helena Lumbard (1915). "Appendix: Biographies of the Sculptors".Sculpture of the Exposition Palaces and Courts. San Francisco: H. S. Crocker Company.Archived from the original on February 13, 2011. RetrievedApril 23, 2010.
  7. ^Rivera, Diego ‘’Portrait of America: With an explanatory text by Bertram Wolfe’’, Covici Friede, Publishers, New York, 1934 p. 12.
  8. ^abcd"Finding Aid for the Peter Stackpole Archive"(PDF). Tucson: Center for Creative Photography, University of Arizona. Archived fromthe original(PDF) on July 20, 2008. RetrievedApril 15, 2010.
  9. ^Harshe, Robert B. (1916). "The California Society of Etchers".Art in California. San Francisco: R. L. Bernier. pp. 116–120.
  10. ^abcMacomber, Ben (1915).The Jewel City. J.H. Williams. pp. 28, 33,195–196.
  11. ^Ryan, Beatrice Judd (March 1959). "The Rise of Modern Art in the Bay Area".The California Historical Society Quarterly.38 (1):1–5.doi:10.2307/25155221.JSTOR 25155221.
  12. ^abcdStarr 2002, p. 235.
  13. ^Bosa, Nancy (1997).The Society of Six: California colorists. University of California Press. p. 101.ISBN 0-520-21054-9.Archived from the original on 2020-08-19. Retrieved2016-10-05.
  14. ^"Sacramento Walking Tour Map"(PDF). Sacramento Heritage. Archived from the original on July 27, 2011. RetrievedApril 16, 2010.
  15. ^Carunchio, Kevin."Turning Mud Into Liquid Gold: A History of Sacramento's Water Supply, 1849–1924"(PDF).Sacramento History Journal.VI (1–4). Sacramento Historical Society: 275.Archived(PDF) from the original on July 27, 2011. RetrievedApril 16, 2010.
  16. ^abc"Ralph Stackpole (1885–1974)".Detailed History. Paramount Theatre.Archived from the original on January 8, 2010. RetrievedApril 23, 2010.
  17. ^Trenton, Patricia; D'Emilio, Sandra (1995).Independent spirits: women painters of the American West, 1890–1945. Autry Museum of Western Heritage; University of California Press. p. 25.ISBN 0-520-20203-1.Archived from the original on 2020-08-19. Retrieved2016-10-05.
  18. ^"Otis Oldfield and the San Francisco art community, 1920s to 1960s: oral history transcript". Internet Archive. 1982. RetrievedMarch 28, 2018.
  19. ^abcPoletti, 2008, pp. 90–91.
  20. ^Stackpole, Ralph (May 1948). "(untitled)".Art & Concert.
  21. ^abPoletti, 2008, pp. 92–93.
  22. ^ab"History". The City Club of San Francisco.Archived from the original on March 24, 2010. RetrievedApril 23, 2010.
  23. ^"716 Montgomery Street, San Francisco". Wikimapia.Archived from the original on May 23, 2010. RetrievedApril 23, 2010.
  24. ^Poletti, 2008, p. 118.
  25. ^Poletti, 2008, p. 128.
  26. ^abPoletti, 2008, p. 102
  27. ^Poletti, 2008, pp. 164–166.
  28. ^abRexroth, Kenneth (February 23, 1964)."Ralph Stackpole and the Coit Tower Murals".San Francisco Examiner. Bureau of Public Secrets.Archived from the original on March 8, 2010. RetrievedApril 23, 2010.
  29. ^Johnson, 2003, p. 20.
  30. ^Cunningham, Mary Mullen; Heinrich Warneke (1994).Heinz Warneke, 1895–1983: a sculptor first and last. American Art. University of Delaware Press. p. 87.ISBN 0-87413-470-6.Archived from the original on August 18, 2020. RetrievedApril 16, 2010.
  31. ^Hailey, Gene (1 January 1937).California Art Research: Ralph Stackpole, Jo Mora, Beniamino Bufano. California Art Research Project. p. 17. Retrieved16 February 2019.
  32. ^"Kneeling Woman (1943) by Ralph Stackpole".Franklin D. Roosevelt Presidential Library.Archived from the original on 6 August 2020. Retrieved16 February 2019.
  33. ^Faber, Harold (31 July 1987)."Project Interrupts Solitude Of Statue F.D.R. Spurned".New York Times.Archived from the original on 16 February 2019. Retrieved16 February 2019.
  34. ^"Hard Times, High Visions: Golden Gate International Exposition". Library, University of California, Berkeley. 2001.Archived from the original on November 29, 2014. RetrievedApril 17, 2010.
  35. ^James, Jack; Earle Weller (1941).Treasure Island "The Magic City" 1939-1940. San Francisco: Pisani Printing. p. 35. RetrievedApril 17, 2010.
  36. ^James, 1941, p. 166.
  37. ^Thomas E. Luebke, ed.,Civic Art: A Centennial History of the U.S. Commission of Fine Arts (Washington, D.C.: U.S. Commission of Fine Arts, 2013): Appendix B, p. 555.
  38. ^Karel, David (1992).Dictionnaire des artistes de langue française en Amérique du Nord: peintres, sculpteurs, dessinateurs, graveurs, photographes, et orfèvres. Presses Université Laval. pp. 555–556.ISBN 2-7637-7235-8.
  39. ^Albright, Thomas (1985).Art in the San Francisco Bay area, 1945–1980: an illustrated history. University of California Press. p. 315.ISBN 0-520-05193-9.Archived from the original on August 18, 2020. RetrievedApril 15, 2010.
  40. ^Newbegin, John J. (1915). "Appendix: Sculptures".The Jewel City. San Francisco and Tacoma: H. S. Crocker Company.Archived from the original on February 13, 2011. RetrievedApril 23, 2010.
  41. ^Johnson, Mark Dean;Gray A. Brechin; Tillie Olsen (2003).At Work: Art of California Labor.Heyday Books.ISBN 1-890771-67-8.Archived from the original on 2020-08-18. Retrieved2016-10-05.
  42. ^abLee, Anthony W. (1999).Painting on the Left: Diego Rivera, Radical Politics, and San Francisco's Public Murals. University of California Press.ISBN 0-520-21977-5.Archived from the original on 2016-06-17. Retrieved2016-10-05.
  43. ^"Pacific Pageant".Time. January 2, 1939. Archived fromthe original on October 26, 2012. RetrievedApril 23, 2010.
Bibliography

External links

[edit]

International
National
Artists
Other
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Ralph_Stackpole&oldid=1324377844"
Categories:
Hidden categories:

[8]ページ先頭

©2009-2025 Movatter.jp