The Boston Accent: 140 Years of The Museum School

  • BOSTON, Massachusetts
  • /
  • May 25, 2017

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Iganz Marcel Gaugengigl. "Small Audience", c.1882. Oil on panel, 9 7/8 x 14 inches.

The School of the Museum of Fine Arts—or the Museum School, as it has been known throughout its many iterations—has been an influential component of Boston’s art scene since the school’s founding in 1876. Childs Gallery’s exhibition The Boston Accent: 140 Years of The Museum School brings together an exciting range of founder, faculty, and alumni art spanning the institution’s 140 year history and celebrating its significant influence on 19th, 20th and 21st century American art.

Boston has produced a number of distinctive art movements and the Museum School has played a prominent role in their development. The exhibition highlights three distinct movements and periods that have emerged from the Museum School’s teaching: The Boston School of the late 19th and early 20th centuries; Boston Expressionism under the tutelage of Karl Zerbe in the 1940s and 50s; and the latest generation of “Boston Contemporaries” arising from the long traditions of this great institution.

I'm not touching you, I'm not touching you, Paul Endres, Jr. "I'm not touching, I'm not touching you", 2017. Oil on panel, 30 x 24 inches.

The exhibition focuses on Museum School artists using the figure as their primary vehicle of expression and informed by the time-honored techniques of traditional art making. Rather than provide a linear outline of the school’s history, the exhibition is arranged salon-style. This arrangement conveys the broad range of output over the School’s 140 year history, while creating the opportunity for comparison and discovery through unique century-spanning juxtapositions. A 19th century painting by Ignaz Marcel Gaugengigl, Small Audience (circa 1882), hangs next to a contemporary photograph by Sean M. Johnson, Burial: Jason, 2017. The same underlying principles that animate Gaugengigl’s Colonial Revival painting also seem to pulse through Johnson’s surreal work of imagined tribal burials.

The Museum School was founded in 1876 when the Trustees of the Museum of Fine Arts reserved rooms for an art school in the basement of the Museum’s new Copley Square building. In the 19th century public museums played an important role in the education of artists; museum schools were established with the understanding that their collections provided instructional examples for the artists of the future. In 1877 classes officially commenced at The School of Drawing and Painting, a precursor to the School of the Museum of Fine Arts. While only eight students were enrolled in this inaugural class, by 1879 class enrollment had jumped to 160 students. In 1901 the school became officially affiliated with the Museum of Fine Arts, with the Museum board assuming responsibility of the school. In 1909 the Museum moved from Copley Square to its current location on Huntington Avenue, taking the Museum School along with it.

From its very founding the Museum School played an influential role in the trajectory of American art, beginning with the Boston School of painting in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. The Boston School’s leading artists, Edmund Tarbell, Frank Weston Benson, and William McGregor Paxton, all trained in Paris at the Academie Julian and later taught at the School of the Museum of Fine Arts, influencing a generation of future painters. Often characterized as American Impressionism, the Boston School is a regional style combining the loose brushwork of French Impressionism with a more conservative approach to figure painting and a respect for academic traditions. The Boston School artists’ interest in modern French art can be traced to William Morris Hunt, a well-known teacher, painter, and founding member of the Museum School, who encouraged prominent Bostonians to invest in the work of French artists such as Millet, Monet, and Renoir.

Karl Zerbe. "Angel and Rooster", 1948. Encaustic on board, 24 x 32 inches.

Boston School artists specialized in genteel portraits, picturesque landscapes, and domestic scenes of young women. They valued technical skill and classical beauty, while adopting Impressionism’s modern painterliness. Notable examples in the Childs Gallery exhibition include Nude with Draperies, circa 1910 by Beatrice Whitney Van Ness and a wonderful ink wash, Salmon Fishing Scene, 1916 by Frank Weston Benson.

From the late 1930s to 1950s the Museum School was home to yet another important movement, Boston Expressionism. Influenced by German Expressionism, Boston Expressionism is marked by emotional directness, dark humor, and social and spiritual themes. Many Boston Expressionists were first and second generation Jewish immigrants who had escaped persecution in Europe during the Second World War. At a time when the contemporary art world embraced abstraction, Boston Expressionists favored figurative compositions and expressive brushstrokes to communicate the evils, bewilderment, and angst of their times.

Many prominent Boston Expressionists were influential in art education as instructors at the School of the Museum of Fine Arts. One of the movement’s progenitors, Karl Zerbe, was a German emigrant whose work had been destroyed by the Nazis as “Degenerate Art”. Zerbe served as the Head of the Department of Painting at the School of the Museum of Fine Arts from 1937 to 1955, influencing a generation of painters whose work evolved from the Boston Expressionist philosophy. Ture Bengtz taught alongside Zerbe as the school’s Head of the Drawing and Graphic Arts Department, while David Aronson, Bernard Chaet, Arthur Polonsky, Jason Berger, Jack Kramer, and Anne Powers were all students of Zerbe.

Recent decades have seen an exciting array of new artists emerging from the Museum School. A number of these Boston Contemporaries continue to focus on the figure, creating contemporary art informed by traditional methods. Hannah Barret cuts apart and reassembles imagery to create androgynous figures bedecked in period costume. These inverted portraits play with gender norms through ambiguous combinations of physical features and traditional attire – often to absurd effect. Paul Endres Jr.’s paintings are the marriage of epic storytelling and formal subversion. His ongoing series, The American Burden, depicts a single sprawling narrative that begins just after a mysterious modern catastrophe: the physical materialization and collapse of history. The paintings exist as memorials to the pivotal events and figures of his fictional history, while offering a satirical take on our own. Additional contemporary artists include Sean M. Johnson, Sawool Kim, Emily Lombardo, and Laurel Sparks, among others.

The exhibition’s opening reception will be held at Childs Gallery on Thursday, May 25th, 6:00 and 8:00 PM. The public is welcome to attend.

Contact:
Stephanie Bond
Childs Gallery
6172661108
stephanie@childsgallery.com


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