artNotes from Hyde House: Colorful Coney Island and Helen Frankenthaler

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I have been at the New Yorker again; or rather the New Yorker has been at me! Grabbed me the minute I lifted the most recent issue from the mail box. What a gloriously celebratory cover! The perfectly titled illustration, “Coney Island Swings Back”, painted by Lorenzo Mattotti, pictures a colorfully clad, happy couple suspended high and sharing a kiss midair against a cerulean sky above a tented, roller-coastered, ferris-wheeled midway. Just makes me smile really, really wide!

When I scanned the table of contents and saw articles by a couple of my best loved writers I knew I was in for a pleasing read. My husband David has gotten me in the habit of scanning the cartoons before I delve into any text. The ones in this issue do not disappoint. They are genuinely funny ones that I can understand. Then there are the whimsical drawings scattered like confetti through the pages. These show hands emerging from striped sleeves in various connections with daisy-ish posies.

Having enjoyed selected reviews from the menu on offer—art, podcasts, dance, music, movies and restaurants (no theater, yet)—I passed over Hilton Als’s critique on Ken Burns and Kim Novick’s televised “Hemingway” and went directly to Adam Gopnik’s “Reassessing Helen Frankenthaler.” Gopnik has been one of my always favorite go-tos, ever since I first became acquainted with his book about taking an assignment in Paris and moving his family there. Malcolm Gladwell raved: “Adam Gopnik is a dazzling talent—hilarious, winning, and deft—but the surprise of “Paris to the Moon” is its quiet, moral intelligence. This book begins as journalism and ends up as literature.” I have been reading Gopnik ever since I picked up his “Paris!”

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In this New Yorker, Gopnik gives a major shout out to the new biographical work by Alexander Nemerov titled “Fierce Poise:  Helen Frankenthaler and 1950s New York.” Gopnik’s writing is as excellent I always expect—astute, stylish, informative, inspiring. As he looks through Nemerov’s eyes he affords us new insights into this “woman before her time” whose beautiful color field, soak-stain process paintings, like her landmark piece “Mountains and Sea” (1952), evoked sniping criticisms from her female contemporaries in the art world.

Gopnik highlights some of Nemerov’s numerous passages that describe Frankenthaler’s early penchant for art making—like when as a child she loved to take  her mother’s red nail polish and “spill it into the sink just to see the patterns it made,” or how she loved drawing a chalk line for blocks and blocks, all the way from the Metropolitan Museum of Art to her home on Park Avenue where she lived with her family. Frankenthaler was the third daughter and prettiest of a New York State Supreme Court Justice and her imposing mother who herself was an unfulfilled artist.

Frankenthaler grew up as quite privileged, attending prestigious private schools in NYC, first Brearley and then Dalton, where atmospheres of “earnest progressivism” prevailed. Afterwards she studied art and graduated from Bennington, a woman’s college where “the study and practice of modern painting was a part of the college’s intensity, not an escape from it.” Bennington “gave a “slightly unreal, or premature, sense of women’s possibilities in the world.”

 Frankenthaler made the most of her possibilities. After graduating she returned to the city, rented a downtown studio and “set out to become a painter.” She launched into living the life of a real artist including unapologetic romantic liaisons with men such as the legendary critic Clement Greenberg followed by her eventual power-couple-marriage to and divorce from Robert Motherwell, “an older Abstract Expressionist of unimpeachable integrity” known for his “Arthur Miller-like aura of dignity and authority” until he fell into the grasp of alcoholism.

Frankenthaler went on to paint late into her life (1928-2011). With admiration Gopnik, reviewing Nemerov’s biography concludes, “From today’s perspective, the most striking thing about Frankenthaler’s career is how much all the things that were said to belittle her, sometimes by other women, now seem to point toward her art’s larger soul.” Yes! Like the couple on the New Yorker’s cover, Helen Frankenthaler, learned to swing high as sure as the pendulum of art history has swung back to admiration for her color field paintings.

The green door of artCentral’s hospitality will continue to swing open for the Philip Ledbetter: PAINT in MOTION Exhibition at Hyde House through May 15!

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