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MONEY, POWER and MODERN ART
Part III: The year of contradictions
By
Henry C K
Liu
PART 1: Ruthless Empire Builders
PART 2: A Monetary Coup d'etat
The year
the US Federal Reserve System came into existence, 1913, was also the
year the Armory Show in New York introduced modern art to the United
States. American painter Arthur B Davies (1862-1928) was the principal
organizer of the Armory Show, which revolutionized American art by
introducing Modernism to the viewing public. In 1911, Davies and
others, concerned that their increasingly modern works were becoming
unacceptable to the conservative mainstream National Academy of Design
in New York, formed the Association of American Painters and Sculptors.
They planned to launch a large independent show devoted to contemporary
works. Davies, with fellow artist Walt Kuhn and critic Walter Pach,
were determined that the exhibition should include the European
avant-garde as well as the American independents. The result of their
efforts was the International Exhibition of Modern Art, better known as
the Armory Show, which opened in New York on February 12, 1913, in the
69th Regiment Armory at 25th Street and Lexington Avenue, in the midst
of frenzy maneuvering by the money trust to bring about the birth of a
central bank.
With
about 1,600 works, the show transformed New York's and perhaps
America's attitude toward modern art from apathy to excited contention.
Most critics at the time found the works "insane" and "degenerate". The
New York Times warned that the show could "disrupt, degrade, if not
destroy not only art but literature and society as well". A Chicago
newspaper "light-heartedly" suggested that visitors to the show "smoke
two pipefuls of 'hop' and sniff cocaine". However, it aroused the
curiosity if not interest of the public, 70,000 of whom came to see it
in New York, Chicago and Boston.
By the
time the Armory Show was being organized, Davies and Lillie P Bliss had
become good friends. Six weeks before the show opened, and probably at
the suggestion of Davies, Bliss purchased a painting and a pastel by
Edgar Degas and an oil by Jean Renoir from the New York branch of the
Durand-Ruel Galleries. All three works would be exhibited in the Armory
Show. The Degas painting, Jockeys on Horseback Before
Distant Hills, formerly
called Racecourse, a small oil of 1884 for which
Bliss paid US$20,000, was the work the Museum of Modern Art would
eventually exchange to acquire Pablo Picasso's Les Demoiselles d'Avignon.
Born
Lizzie Plummer Bliss in Fall River, Massachusetts, on April 11, 1864,
she used the name Lizzie only when signing checks and her will and was
known to her friends as Lillie. She was the younger of two daughters
and the second of four children of Cornelius Newton Bliss (1833-1911)
of Fall River and Mary Plummer Bliss (1836-1923) of Boston. Her father,
a successful textile merchant, moved the family to a six-story house at
29 East 37th Street in the Murray Hill section of New York when Lillie
was two. The Blisses were comfortably affluent and politically
influential. However, despite their prominence, the family lived
outside the public eye, as Boston Brahmins tended to do. Cornelius
Bliss was one of a coterie of Republican leaders who were in the
forefront of party affairs for over a generation. He was treasurer of
the Republican National Committee from 1892 to 1908, served as chairman
of the New York State Republican Party, represented New York at
Republican conventions, and refused offers to run for governor and
mayor of New York on several occasions. He was interior secretary in
president William McKinley's first cabinet, serving from 1897 to 1899,
but rejected an offer to be McKinley's vice-presidential running mate
in 1900 and supported Theodore Roosevelt, who became president when
McKinley was assassinated by an anarchist. During the time that her
father worked in Washington, Lillie often acted as his hostess at his
infrequent but lavish parties.
In New
York, Lillie regularly attended concerts, went to the theater and
frequented art galleries. Throughout her youth the emphasis at home was
on music, and her love of music, both classical and contemporary, led
her to support young pianists and opera singers and to help found the
Juilliard Music Foundation (now the Juilliard School). When she
believed in someone's career or talent she supported them unequivocally
and often anonymously. An avid reader, she was fluent in French and an
accomplished pianist.
One of
Lillie's early connections with the visual arts was probably related to
her father's membership in the Union League Club, which still functions
today as a prestigious conservative club, of which Mr Bliss was
president from 1902 to 1906. It organized exhibitions of works by
living artists, lent by members, artists and galleries such as
Durand-Ruel and Knoedler; for example, in 1891, 34 works by Claude
Monet were shown. These shows were publicly advertised, open to all and
well attended.
However,
it was her friendship with Dr Christian Archibald Herter (1865-1910)
that bridged the gap between music and art for Lillie. She and Herter
shared a serious interest in music; he was as accomplished a cellist as
she was a pianist, but additionally, Herter was educated and interested
in art, having been brought up in an art-conscious home. Herter, a
physician and distinguished biochemist, was credited with helping to
establish the study of biochemistry as a separate discipline in the
United States. Through his friendship with John D Rockefeller Jr,
Herter in 1901 became a charter member of the board of directors of the
Rockefeller Institute for Medical Research (now Rockefeller University)
in New York. Lillie's closeness to the Herter family resulted in her
meeting Abby Aldrich Rockefeller. Adele Herter, Christian Archibald's
sister-in-law, was a painter and friend of Abby's, whose portrait she
painted during the summer of 1907. In March 1911, Abby Rockefeller and
Adele Herter were two of seven women who signed the certificate of
incorporation for the Women's Cosmopolitan Club in New York, and in
1911-12 Lillie was listed as a member. In 1929, Abby and Lillie were
among the founders of the Museum of Modern Art in New York.
Lillie's
life changed dramatically when she met Davies. Over the next two
decades she became his faithful and principal patron and confidante.
Davies was a romantic artist who was widely admired during his lifetime
for his symbolic pictures of female nudes in idyllic landscapes. He was
handsome, charismatic, articulate and persuasive, and he seems to have
especially appealed to women. Through his travels abroad from 1893, he
knew about contemporary artistic trends in Europe. He was a galvanizing
force in New York, and his advice was sought by dealers, collectors and
artists. He was also a confident collector in his own right: from a
Cezanne exhibition held at Alfred Stieglitz' gallery in 1911, he bought
the only picture that was sold.
By 1916,
Lillie began to see and buy with the eye of a connoisseur. Her
increasing self-confidence as a collector is evident in her purchase of
bold works by Paul Cezanne, the artist she especially admired. At the
time of her death, she owned 26 of his works, many of them now
considered pivotal to an understanding of his oeuvre. In January 1916,
she acquired eight of the 17 watercolors in the Montross Gallery's
Cezanne exhibition, in addition to an oil painting, Bottle of Liqueur, previously known as Fruit and Wine (circa 1890). The works in this
show, which attracted the favorable attention of artists, were selected
by French critic Felix Feneon. Among the watercolors on view, Lillie
bought the magnificent House
Among Trees (circa
1900) and Foliage (1895). Lillie was unconcerned
that the reviews were less than sympathetic during the time it was on
display since reviews, positive or negative, did not influence her
purchases.
Lillie's
enthusiasm for Cezanne's work never wavered. Between 1920 and 1926, she
purchased six more of his paintings through Marius de Zayas, a Mexican
artist turned dealer who had learned the art business as a protege of
Stieglitz: the large and important Bather (circa 1885); Pines and Rocks (circa 1896-1900); Still Life with Ginger Jar,
Sugar Bowl, and Oranges (1902-06); Dominique Aubert, the Artist's
Uncle, formerly called Man in a Blue Cap (Uncle Dominic) (circa 1866); and two small
gems, Pears and Knife (1877-78) and Carafe, Milk Can, Bowl and
Orange, formerly called
The
Water Can (1879-80).
Two
notable Cezannes in Lillie's collection were purchased at the 1922
auction of privately owned modern paintings at New York's Plaza Hotel.
Many of the bids were disappointing, and owners had to buy back a
number of the offerings. Lillie paid $21,000 for Still Life with Apples (1895-98), the highest price
paid at the sale. It was her most expensive purchase to date, and
Lillie was adventurous to buy it, since it was considered to be
unfinished. This painting was one of her favorite works, and is today a
major work of the Museum of Modern Art. She also purchased Cezanne's Portrait of Madame Cezanne (1883-85). Both were originally
owned by Ambroise Vollard, an eminent French art dealer, publisher and
entrepreneur, and had been lent anonymously to the 1921 Metropolitan
Museum exhibition. Both have impeccable provenances; Lillie bought what
she loved but was mindful of the good taste of respected prior owners.
In 1921,
John Quinn and Bliss were among the collectors who urged Bryson
Burroughs, the curator of paintings at the Metropolitan Museum of Art,
to organize a loan exhibition of Impressionist and Post-Impressionist
art, which opened to the public in September. The protests were
scathing, and the fury, of the press and of a self-appointed Committee
of Citizens and Supporters of the museum, was widely reported in New
York. Quinn lent 26 works to the show, and Lillie, anonymously, lent
12, including five Cezannes. The show was criticized as "dangerous",
and Quinn was accused of masterminding the exhibition. In response to
the uproar, Quinn denounced these criticisms as the Ku Klux
Klan-inspired ravings of ignorant "lunatics". The Quinn collection made
such a profound impression on the young Alfred H Barr Jr when he saw it
at the memorial exhibition in January 1926 that, during his tenure at
the Museum of Modern Art, where he would become the founding director
in 1929, he sought to acquire important Quinn pictures when they became
available. Bliss also acquired works by other artists of Cezanne's
generation. Some time before 1926, she bought Paul Gauguin's The Moon and the Earth (Hino Te Fatou, 1893). This painting was so
reviled by critics of the 1921 Metropolitan Museum show that it was
illustrated in The World as typical of the "vile, Bolshevist" work
included.
Arthur B
Davies died suddenly in Italy on October 23, 1928. Commemorative
exhibitions were held during the next two years in several venues, and
Lillie Bliss lent generously to all of them. In April 1929, Davies'
collection was sold at auction, Lillie Bliss and Abby Aldrich
Rockefeller being among the buyers, and Abby had a Davies show in her
new private gallery in her house. Abby had known Davies for only a few
years, but she credited him with encouraging her to acquire modern art,
from 1924 on. Davies' death, and the sale of his collections not long
after the dispersal of the Quinn collection, combined with the
steadfast reluctance of the Metropolitan Museum regularly to show and
support late-19th- and 20th-century art, made the time ripe seriously
to consider establishing an institution dedicated to exhibiting modern
art in New York.
At the
end of May 1929, Abby invited Lillie, their mutual friend Mary Quinn
Sullivan (no relation to John Quinn) and A Conger Goodyear to her home
to discuss founding a museum for modern art in New York. Mary Sullivan
was an art teacher, dealer and collector. Goodyear was a collector of
modern art and a former board member at the Albright Gallery in
Buffalo, New York; he agreed to head the venture and became chairman.
His presence at the meeting was apparently due to Walt Kuhn, who, in a
letter of July 9, 1929, to his wife, Vera, took credit for the fact
that Goodyear was made chairman of this exploratory committee. Lillie,
the leading collector among them, became vice president; Abby, the
truly wealthy one, was appointed treasurer. A short time later three
more persons were asked to join them: Paul J Sachs, an eminent art
history professor at Harvard and scion of the investment firm Goldman,
Sachs, also a collector and an acquaintance of Abby; Frank
Crowninshield, a publisher and friend of Lillie; and Mrs W Murray
Crane, a friend of both women. As a group, they had the knowledge,
resources, dedication, status and efficiency that would result in the
museum's opening to the public five months later.
Ill with
cancer, Lillie visited the museum's Toulouse-Lautrec/Redon exhibition
on the day it closed, March 2, 1931. The then 29-year-old Alfred Barr,
the defining director of the Modern, and Bliss saw each other often
during the short time they were acquainted, and they had much in
common. Like her, he deeply loved music; they went to the movies and
attended concerts together. Lillie must have greatly respected Barr's
brilliance and enthusiasm; after all, she planned to leave her
collection in his charge. Unfortunately, however, their relationship
would never mature, as did that of Barr and Abby Rockefeller, on March
12, 1931, Lillie died. Lillie Bliss could not afford to support the
museum financially in the same way as Abby Rockefeller. However, in
bequeathing her collection to the museum three months before its first
anniversary, she had quietly and secretly decided what form her support
would take. Her will stipulated that the Museum of Modern Art would
have to raise an endowment to make her gift a reality.
Specifically,
the will stated that the works cited in her bequest would become "the
absolute property" of the museum once it had been established "to the
full and complete satisfaction" of the trustees of her estate that the
museum was "sufficiently endowed ... on a firm financial basis and in
the hands of a competent board". She also stipulated that two of her
Cezannes - Still Life
with Ginger Jar, Sugar Bowl, and Oranges and Still Life with Apples - and her The Laundress (Honore
Daumier) could never be sold or otherwise disposed of, and that if the
Modern did not want them, they "would become the property of the
Metropolitan Museum of Art". The Cezannes remain at the Modern and the
Daumier went to the Met in 1947.
Two
months after her death, the 12th exhibition held by the Museum of
Modern Art, from May 13 to October 6, 1931, was a "Memorial Exhibition:
The Collection of the Late Miss Lizzie P Bliss, Vice President of the
Museum". Works by 24 artists were selected, and a small catalogue was
issued. By the time the show closed, 32,144 people bad seen it. The
public opening was preceded by a memorial service held in the galleries
and attended by 300 guests.
In March
1934, the trustees met the financial terms of the Bliss will, her
bequest was accessioned and a Museum of Modern Art with a permanent
collection became a reality. In order for the museum to secure the
bequest, the estate required that the museum raise $1 million. However,
because of the difficulty of raising funds during the Depression, this
initial sum was reduced to $600,000. The money came from several
sources: Abby Aldrich Rockefeller, $200,000 (given to her by her
husband for this purpose); the Carnegie Foundation, $100,000; the other
trustees, $200,000; and an anonymous donor, $100,000. The anonymous
donor was Abby's son, Nelson A Rockefeller, who would later become very
active in the museum. He made the donation because he wanted his mother
to know that someone in the family besides herself was deeply
supportive of the new museum. He told his mother of his gift two months
later.
Two years
after the museum had moved to its new quarters, a limestone townhouse
at 11 West 53rd Street, the Bliss bequest was shown in its entirety.
From May 14 to September 12, 1934, the exhibition was seen by 30,445
people.
The
Lillie P Bliss bequest ensured that the museum had a foundation upon
which to build its future. Her action reflected her confidence in her
friends to secure the endowment and in Alfred Barr to make her dream
come true. Her courage and intelligence are reflected in the paintings
she left to the public. The most important works in her collection are
the French paintings and drawings from the latter part of the 19th
century by artists whose present fame has overcome the neglect or
derision they often endured during their lifetimes: Cezanne, Degas,
Gauguin, Odilon Redon, Georges Seurat and Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec.
Mabel
Dodge also helped organize the 1913 Armory Show, which introduced
Picasso, Henri Matisse, Cubism and Dada to the American scene. The rich
hostess and journalist ran her salon at 23 Fifth Avenue, where
left-wing intellectuals and activists met. This included John Reed;
Louise Bryant; investigative reporter Lincoln Steffens (The Shame of the Cities, 1904); poet Max Eastman, editor
of The Masses; artist John Sloan; Walter Lippmann, who as an
influential columnist would oppose the Korean and Vietnam Wars as well
as McCarthyism; Margaret Sanger; Bill Haywood; and Emma Goldman. Three
months after the armory Show, Dodge was among those who supported 1,200
striking textile workers from Paterson, New Jersey, who staged a
pageant in New York's Madison Square Garden to dramatize their demands.
Paterson was known as the Silk City of America. More than one-third of
its 73,000 workers held jobs in silk factories where high-speed
automatic looms were introduced at the beginning of the 20th century.
In 1911 silk manufacturers in Paterson decided that workers, who had
previously run two looms, were now required to operate four
simultaneously. Workers complained that this would cause unemployment
and consequently would bring down wages.
On
January 27, 1913, 800 employees of the Doherty Silk Mill went on strike
when four members of the workers' committee were fired for trying to
organize a meeting with the company's management to discuss the
four-loom system. Within a week, all silk workers were on strike and
the 300 mills in the town were forced to close. During the dispute more
than 3,000 pickets were arrested, most of them receiving a 10-day
sentence in local jails. Two workers were killed by private detectives
hired by the mill workers. These men were arrested but were never
brought to trial. However, the strike fund was unable to raise enough
money and, in July 1913, the workers were starved into submission.
Bill
Haywood of the American Socialist Party and Elizabeth Gurley Flynn, a
founding member of the American Civil Liberties Union who was active in
the campaign against the conviction of Nicola Sacco and Bartolomeo
Vanzetti, arrived in Paterson and took over the running of the strike
for the Industrial Workers of the Work (IWW). John Reed, a well-known
socialist journalist, arrived in the town to report the strike. He was
soon arrested and imprisoned in Paterson County Jail. Other left-wing
journalists such as Walter Lippmann and Mabel Dodge arrived to show
solidarity with Reed and to support the demand that reporters should be
free to report industrial disputes. After World War I, Dodge married
Tony Lujan, a native American, and established an artist colony in
Taos, New Mexico. In 1922, D H Lawrence stayed at Taos, where he wrote The Plumed Serpent (1926). The main character in
his short story "The Woman Who Rode Away" was based on Dodge.
Martin
Green, a writer attuned to cultural juxtapositions, links the Armory
Show and the Paterson Strike Pageant with the argument that modern art
and revolutionary politics share a spiritual, transcendental goal.
Green detailed the scene inside the salon of Mabel Dodge, who was
ensconced in respectability yet actively subverted it, as Abby Aldrich
Rockefeller did in a more obtuse manner. He also reported vividly the
scene at Wobblies union halls where people of any race or nationality
were welcome and workers' poems were composed on the spot.
Reed, who
wrote Ten Days That
Shook the World, and
who was the only American to be buried inside the Kremlin, wrote: "All
I know is that my happiness is built on the misery of others ... and
that fact poisons me, disturbs my serenity, makes me write propaganda
when I would rather play." He put down his beloved Louise Bryant
(1885-1936) for writing a glowing review about the Armory Show while
the world was on the edge of war and the possibility of changing the
world was imminent. Reed had this deep sense of social responsibility
to inform and radicalize readers and he was irritated with Bryant for
her lack of interest in, passion for, and commitment to the ideals of
the workers' movement, for being interested in stale bourgeois ideas
about nothing and which would do nothing.
Green
argues that these two events were the last manifestations of pre-World
War I radicalism. They were linked by some of the same personalities:
John Reed, Louise Bryant, Emma Goldman, Isadora Duncan, Marcel Duchamp,
Gertrude Stein, and more. There was a touch of the aristocratic salon
in the opulent antique furniture and the sumptuous buffets. Yet Dodge's
passion was not cultivated conversation but free speech, the left-wing
political cause of the moment that was also the left-wing cultural
cause. Because the censorship laws of the time were tied up with the
repression of radicalism in both politics and art, the battle for bold,
honest, forthright truth-telling allied soapbox rabble rousers to
birth-control advocates to modern artists. Walter Lippmann came from
the Olympian precincts of The New Republic to partake of the free-speech
evenings, and so did anarchist leader Emma Goldman, birth-control
activist Margaret Sanger, and French painter Jean Crotti (newly arrived
from a Europe being ravaged by World War I and, like many fellow
Parisian expatriates, besotted with the energy of Manhattan).
In 1913,
a leftist radicalism burst forth with revolution in art and revolt by
labor. Simultaneously, a rightist radicalism quietly took form through
a monetary coup d'etat, the establishment of a central bank. It was a
year of deep contradictions.
NEXT: Modern art and Socialism
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