Richard Lindner

Richard Lindner, “The Meeting”, 1953, Oil on Canvas, 152.4 x 182.9 cm, Museum of Modern Art, New York

Born at Hamburg in November of 1901, Richard Lindner was a German-American painter and illustrator. Unique as an artist, he created his own oeuvre: hard-edged paintings with stretches of color that melded human figures with machine-like elements. Lindner’s paintings in the 1960s used the sexual symbolism of advertising and investigated definitions of gender roles in the media.

Lindner’s career as an artist began at the age of forty after his arrival in New York City. Acknowledged as a significant and unique European-American painter, he was represented by prestigious galleries, including New York’s Cordier & Ekstrom and Betty Parson Gallery, and the Claude Bernard Gallery in Paris. Lindner had solo exhibitions at the Cleveland Museum of Art, Berkeley’s University Art Museum, the Walker Center in Minneapolis, and the Musée National d’Art Moderne in Paris. 

Richard Lindner did not fit into any modernist or post-modernist category. He was erroneously categorized  as a precursor of Pop Art. Lindner, however, regarded himself as a hard-edge painter with roots in European culture, particularly that of Germany in the Weimar years from 1919 to 1933. His work emerged from the New Objectivity (Neue Sachlichkeit) in the 1920s, a reaction against German Expressionism that created a new realism with a grim but precise, satirical edge. Another source, perhaps more important, was the work of French painter Fernand Léger whose figurative work consisted of formalized, mechanical bodies with bold outlines; after 1927, this work became more organic and irregular.

Thoroughly knowledgable about European art, Lindner thought of himself as a European artist in exile, having escaped safely from the clutches of the German government in the 1930s. He adored New York’s cosmopolitan nature as well as its glamorous and seedier sides, aspects of which were used as themes in his work. Lindner’s paintings were created from the icons of American fantasy: Times Square, Coney Island, Hollywood, Las Vegas and Disneyland. His works displayed an iconographic human circus removed from reality, fantastic and dangerous at the same time. 

“The Meeting” is considered Lindner’s first masterpiece; it is, surely, one of the odder paintings of the latter half of this century. Inside an impossibly claustrophobic room, Lindner has assembled tokens of obsession as well as friends and family: a buffoonish King Ludwig II of Bavaria, Lindner’s sister Lissy, the artist as a child with his aunt, and friends Hedda Sterne, Evelyn Hofer, and Saul Steinberg. The compositional anchors of the “The Meeting”, however, are a corseted woman whose back is toward us and a large cat who stares at the viewer in an accusatory manner. The bits-and-pieces quality of the painting is typical of Lindner’s compositions, although the space seen here is more “realistic” than the abstracted environments that were to follow. The isolation of each figure stems from Lindner’s collage-like sensibility. The portraits of Sterne and Steinberg, for instance, are based on photographs and their incongruity is due, in part, to the artist’s working methods. But Lindner’s best paintings don’t surrender to fragmentation, they flirt with it, and symbolic and pictorial density of “The Meeting” goes beyond cleverness.”

—Mario Naves, Richard Lindner: A New Yorker in Washington, The New Criterion, Art January 1997

Notes: In 1967, the “Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band” album appeared to wide acclaim at the height of Beatlemania. It was one of the most successful albums with more than eleven million copies sold in the United States alone. British painter Peter Blake designed the album cover which featured over seventy faces of recognizable people from Marilyn Monroe and Mae West to Marlon Brando and Edgar Allan Poe. Of all these famous faces, there was only one face that depicted a painter: Richard Lindner.

Second Insert Image: Richard Lindner, Untitled, Colored Lithograph, 44/125 Edition, 1975, “Eugène Ionesco” Series, 38.5 x 52 cm, Mourlot Printer, Paris

Bottom Insert Image: Richard Lindner, “Checkmate”, 1966, Cut-and-Paste Papers, Watercolor, Pencil, Crayon and Ink on Paper, 60.6 x 45.6 cm, Museum of Modern Art

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Henry Ernest Schnakenberg

Henry Ernest Schnakenberg, “Indians Trading with the Half Moon”, 1941, One of Four Fresco Murals, Post Office Fort Lee, NewJersey

Born at New Brighton, Staten Island, New York in September of 1892, Henry Ernest Schnakenberg was an American realist painter and etcher known primarily for his renderings of New York’s Central Park and other cityscapes. He began his art studies with evening classes at the Arts Student League in 1913. Schnakenberg’s experience of attending the 1913 International Exhibition of Modern Art at the city’s 69th Regiment Armory on Lexington Avenue, known now as the Armory Show, solidified his desire to be an artist. After that exposure, he began full-time classes at the League, that continued as three years of study under painter and printmaker Kenneth Hayes Miller.

After exhibiting two works at the Society of Independent Artists, Schnakenberg enlisted in the Army Medical Corps in 1917 at America’s entry into World War I. Discharged in 1919, he quickly returned to art, exhibiting alongside Joseph Stella at the Whitney Studio Club. Beginning in 1923, Schnakenberg taught for two years at the Art Students League and, later, became the League’s president in 1932. In addition to his teaching, he wrote essays and reviews throughout his career for art magazines.

Henry Schnakenberg regularly exhibited his work at the Society of Independent Artists as well as museum invitationals, including those at the Whitney Museum of American Art, the Art Institute of Chicago, the Corcoran Gallery of Art in Washington DC, and the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts in Philadelphia. He participated in the Carnegie International from 1920 to 1949 and exhibited alongside his mentor Kenneth Miller at the 1939 New York World’s Fair. Beginning in 1932, Schnakenberg was represented by New York’s C.W. Kraushaar Galleries.  

After completing mural commissions from the Treasury Department’s section of Fine Arts for post offices in Amsterdam, New York and Fort Lee, New Jersey, Schnakenberg relocated to Newtown, Connecticut. He would travel from there to paint the summer landscapes of Vermont and New England farmlands. A member of the National Institute of Arts and Letters, Henry Ernest Schnakenberg died at the age of seventy-eight in October of 1970 at Newtown. His body in interred at the Moravian Cemetery in New Dorp, New York.  

Bottom Insert Image: Henry Ernest Schnakenberg, “Air Plants, Puerto Rico”, 1927, Oil on Canvas, 77.2 x 92.1 cm, Whitney Museum of American Art, new York

Aleksei Ivanovich Borodin

Aleksei Ivanovich Borodin, “Tractor Drivers”, 1965-1980, Oil on Board, 95.3 x 132.1 cm, Private Collection

Born at Kirilovka, Samara Region in January of 1915, Aleksei Ivanovich Borodin was a Russian painter known for his figurative work and scenes of Russian rural life. After being orphaned during the Russian Civil War, he was placed in the care of a military educational orphanage for boys that trained them for military service. 

After leaving the orphanage, Borodin entered Saratov Art and Industry High School and graduated in 1936 with a teacher’s diploma in painting and drawing. He also briefly studied under Russian Post-Impressionist painter Igor Grabar noted for his distinctive style of painting that bordered on Pointillism. 

During World War II, Borodin was wounded during his service with an armored division of the Red Army. After the war, he returned to Saratov where he taught at his alma mater until the 1960s. Borodin relocated to Stalingrad, now Volgograd, where he was given a teaching position. 

A member of the Russian Union of Artists since 1939, Aleksei Borodin participated in local, regional, Republican and Union-sponsored exhibitions from the early 1950s through the 1980s. Honored for his work, he was given a solo retrospective in 1986 at the Volgograd Art Museum, which now houses his most famous painting, the 1964 “Volgograd Farmers”.

Aleksei Ivanovich Borodin died in Volgograd at the age of eighty-nine in 2004. His paintings are in numerous private collections around the world. The majority of his oeuvre, however, is in the Saratov Art Museum, Volgograd Art Museum, and the Museum of Defense in Volgograd. 

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Alberto Giacometti

Alberto Giacometti, “The Artist’s Mother”, 1950, Oil on Canvas, 89.9 x 61 cm, Museum of Modern Art, New York City 

Born at the city of Borgonovo in October of 1901, Alberto Giacometti was a Swiss draftsman, painter, printmaker and sculptor whose work was particularly influenced by Cubism and Surrealism. Around the age of thirty-five, he left Surrealism to deepen his understanding of figurative compositions. Although known for his figurative sculptures, Giacometti’s figurative paintings were equally as present after 1957. 

Dating from the drawings of his youth, Giacometti used his mother Annetta Giacometti, either alone or with other family members, as a model for his numerous works, both paintings and sculpture. Annetta Giacometti, a formidable presence in Giacometti’s life, returned after the war years to the family home in Stampa, Switzerland. This was the place where Alberto would spend the summers and create most of his mother’s portraits beginning from the end of the 1940s. There are at least five portraits of Annetta Giacometti known to have been painted in 1949.

As attested in his writings, Alberto Giacometti gave the most attention when painting a portrait to the the eyes of the model and the volumes of the nose. His 1950 “The Artist’s Mother”, painted in the family home in Stampa, is composed of layers upon layers of linear brushstrokes. Around the edges, the paint is laid on thinly to create a internal frame, a common element that appears in later works. In the center, the figure is painted more heavily in dark and bright lines that bristle with energy.

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Ultrawolvesunderthefullmooon has slowly developed over the years from a mainly visual site to more informative art site that requires more time and research. For many years, I have relied on my own personal funds to maintain an advertisement-free environment. If you find the articles in the site interesting, please make a small donation of support to cover its cost and reference subscriptions. 

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“The object of art is not to reproduce reality, but to create a reality of the same intensity.” -Alberto Giacometti