A
Few Reviews.....

BY MARC AWODEY
Having His Day
(published 02.23.05 SEVEN DAYS)
ARTWORK: "In Chelsea New York" by Lucien
Day
"We are not alone in attempting to resuscitate
meaning," artist Lucien Day wrote back in 1970. That
line, lifted from a promotional piece for the Green Mountain
Gallery he founded in New York City, no doubt referred to
the realistic approach exhibited by Day and his fellow gallery
artists. In the face of Abstract Expressionism, Pop Art and
numerous other 20th-century movements that paralleled Day's
65-year career in art, he never wavered from his exacting
approach.
At the SoHo gallery he directed from 1968 to 1979,
Day provided "a lively forum and intellectual center
for contemporary painters with realist tendencies," says
Mickey Myers, executive director of the Helen Day Art Center.
That Stowe gallery is currently honoring him with a retrospective
of his enchanting and occasionally brilliant work, produced
in Vermont and New York City between 1950 and 1998.
A Connecticut native born in 1916, Day graduated
from Yale in 1939 -- he was the "Class Poet" --
then studied painting at the Cran-brook Academy of Art in
Michigan. Through visits to An American Place -- the New York
gallery operated by photographer Alfred Stieglitz from 1929
to 1946 -- he became familiar with such influential artists
as John Marin, Georgia O'Keeffe, Marsden Hartley and Charles
Demuth.
After serving in the Army during World War II, on
the Pentagon's China Desk, Day made a home in Craftsbury,
and began a long dual existence in small-town Vermont and
New York City. His first substantial exhibition was at the
Fleming Museum in 1949.
Among Day's earliest pieces in the current HDAC exhibit
are watercolor depictions of two Vermont towns, Hardwick and
Albany, from the early 1950s. In contrast to fellow Vermont
artist Francis Colburn -- only nine years his senior -- Day
was clearly influenced by modernists of the Stieglitz Circle
rather than social realism. Day's 1965 oil "Tamaracks"
has open, lacy brushwork akin to that in Marin's landscapes
of the Adirondacks. But more importantly, the painting exemplifies
a "search for form" that is pervasive in Day's works.
It's as if he approached each picture plane without the slightest
preconceived idea.
Day's views of New York architecture are similarly
unbiased, as seen in the vertical watercolor diptych "Trade
Center Towers Under Construction" from 1972 and 1987's
"Carnegie Hall."
During the 1970s and 1980s, Day experimented with
shaped canvasses and original approaches to perspective. "Early
Snow" is a watercolor mounted on wood; its seemingly
organic curvature adds dimensionality to the wintry landscape.
Two oils in the show have two paneled, flat surfaces that
meet at acute angles, creating "folded" effects
and jarring perspective. Day features Vermont and New York
City, respectively, in the pieces "Fall" and "Folded
Third Avenue." Though he was enamored of city and country,
however, Day did not try to portray both environments simultaneously
in his artwork. An artist of two worlds, his views of Vermont's
Northeast Kingdom and the Big Apple are equally fresh.
In addition to land- and cityscapes, the HDAC retrospective
includes many portraits in watercolor and oil. "In Chelsea
New York" is the blurred portrait of a woman breast-feeding
her baby, wearing a somewhat anxious expression. A large-scale
painting entitled "Aloneness" has three figures
walking without seeming to engage each other; surrounded by
the pale negative space of sandy ground and washed-blue sky,
they seem to float. Day's approach to painting humans is complex;
his figurative works are less descriptive likenesses than
poetic sketches searching for inner details.
Enhancing the retrospective are works by some of
Day's colleagues from the defunct Green Mountain Gallery --
Rudy Burckhardt, Lois Dodd, Margaret Grimes and Marjorie Kramer
-- as well as pieces by Fairfield Porter, Rackstraw Downes,
Alex Katz and Sam Thurston. Their works illustrate common
aesthetic sensibilities. Vermonter Thurston's "Pot with
Blue Trees" is a rectangular vessel with brushwork that
shares Day's painterly veracity; a bowl attributed to Margaret
Grimes has a spatial curvature akin to Day's watercolor-on-shaped-wood,
"Early Snow."
Since 1992, the Vermont Arts Council has been granting
annual "lifetime achievement in the arts" awards
to the state's most accomplished cultural figures. Eighty-eight-year-old
Lucien Day, who still lives in Craftsbury, should be the next
recipient.
January 21, 2005 TIMES ARGUS
By Anne Galloway Times Argus Staff
At a time when the art world was mesmerized by the mind-bending
Abstract Expressionist paintings of Jackson Pollock, Mark
Rothko and Willem de Kooning, a young Vermont transplant embarked
on a contrarian-style artistic career.
Lucien Day, 88, is a serious artist with all the
right intellectual connections, who wasn't swayed by any of
the popular art movements of his lifetime. He began painting
expressionistic interpretations of landscapes, people and
cityscapes in the 1940s and '50s. As the Pop Art movement
gripped the nation in the 1960s and '70s, Day opened a gallery
in New York City to showcase works by other American realists,
and he continued his own investigation of objectified perspective
in his realistic depictions of the World Trade Center towers,
portraits of family and friends and interpretative paintings
of woodland scenes from his home in Craftsbury. As installations
and post-modernism took hold in the 1980s and 90s, his work
became even more his exacting, as he pursued a scientific
approach to replicating what the eye sees.
And though Day himself is, in spite of his popularity
with collectors (he's sold more than 80 percent of his work),
a relative unknown, he associated with compatriots in the
American realism movement who did become famous, namely Fairfield
Porter, Alex Katz, Rudy Burkhardt and Rackstraw Downes.
The Helen Day Art Center tracks the trajectory of
Day's 65-year career in a retrospective of his work. The exhibit
is presented chronologically and includes memorabilia and
family portraits. The Helen Day show also includes a smattering
of works by Porter, Katz, Burkhardt and Downes. These thoughtful
touches help the viewer understand Day's evolution as an artist,
from his days at Yale and Cranbrook Academy, and the context
in which he saw his own work.
Day's paintings reflect his dual existence as a New
York City gallery owner and northern Vermont hermit. For decades,
Day divided his time between the Big Apple and the town of
Craftsbury. The more than 20 paintings at the Helen Day are
almost evenly split between these rural and urban "scapes."
But no matter where Day was at any given time, he brought
to bear his poetic sensibility on what his friend, artist
Sam Thurston, dubbed the "non-heroic everyday,"
that is to say, sights an average person would walk by without
a second glance: a scrubby woodland thicket, a row of bland
office buildings, a lone pine tree, construction sites.
It's this sort of ordinary subject matter that Day
made his own through the use of large exuberant brushstrokes
and unique perspectives, subtle depiction of forms and, in
his watercolors, the patient revelation of white space.
In Day's paintings, buildings lean this way and that
(sometimes forward and backward), facial features come to
light through the blank whiteness of the paper and a few big
swabs of color outline a hillside.
"Lucian Day: A Retrospective" starts with
works from the 1950s and takes the viewer on a journey through
the '70s, 80s and 90s. Interspersed throughout are insightful
pieces by Day's friends and colleagues: a portrait of Day
by Lois Dodd rendered in fluorescent orange, yellow, gray
and brown, two shorts by avant garde filmmaker Burkhardt,
a Porter townscape and a panoramic painting of a scrap steel
dump by Downes.
In his early landscape, "Green Hillside with
Snow," Day makes the viewer feel as though the viewer
is at once above this dark fir thicket and inside it. The
painting is dazzlingly detailed and yet unfussy. It gives
you the feeling you're getting an impossible, bird's eye view
of a secret nesting spot.
His vertical watercolor diptych, "Trade Towers
Center Under Construction" from 1972, is a dizzying portrait
of the partially completed skyscrapers. The two sections of
the structures are painted at slightly different angles so
that the top half appears to be tipping backward. Day gets
it all in here: the façade of a Beaux Arts structure
in the foreground, the bird-like construction cranes at on
the top floor.
Day gives the same care to his more than a dozen
portraits of family and friends. In a series of untitled watercolors
of young girls, the faces are made up of large, energetic
brush strokes and important features are merely alluded to
through subtle use of white space. He lets the viewer fill
in the blanks, and the effect is marvelous.
In his later years, Day became obsessed with creating
paintings that objectified perspective, rather than flattening
it into one continuous whole. He wanted to show how the eye
and the mind break up an image into component parts. The eye
sees a skyscraper, for example, from at least two different
perspectives – straight on and then from a neck-craning
angle. Day, in a break from tradition, started presenting
his cityscapes and landscapes on sinuous curves and in "folds"
to replicate the experience of seeing. He adhered his paintings
to a plywood curve, or painted diptychs on wooden panels that
he would then mount together at conjoining angles.
In "Folded Third Avenue," for example,
Day's fairly conventional oil painting of a city block, the
verticality of the image is broken up into two parts, and
the sections are joined together at the center, so that the
painting's top and bottom edges point out at the viewer in
a V-shape. The perspective is as strange and new as looking
at a skyscraper for the first time: There is a momentary sense
of nauseating vertigo.
And that is perhaps Day's legacy. While Day shows
us subjects that couldn't be more ordinary, he forces us to
see them as if for the first time.
ARTnews by Lawrence
Campbell
...His urban tower pictures are tours
de force. In them he undertakes something most painters
would have avoided the depiction of a skyscraper from top
to bottom ina a single view. in life this is only possible
by an uncouscious floux of several distinct images. Day's
solution has been to modify the shape of the upper part of
the painting itself, so that it, rather than the image literally
shoots into perspective. The results are remarkable: the visual
splendor and scale of New York are transported into the gallery-
the sparkling lights, the shadowy interiors, the frozen brillienace
- making it into a kind of modern Venice on the Hudson.
artsmagazine
by Laura Sue Schwartz
New York is vertical
space, a vertical place-which may be obvious to the pint of
being forgotten by those who live here, or overwhelming to
the point of being dismissed by thouse who visit. Space is
not wide, but stacked;movement flows around, but vision is
drawn upwards. To "see" the city is to get above
it, to absorb itsvertical panorama and learn and relation
to "u". Lucien Day has painted New York with regard
to this very element of vision. His paintings go up like the
New Yorrk landscape...painted with an atmospheric lightness
that prevails over a potential to be imposing...
Art New Engand
Lucien Day Point of View
by Hearne Pardee
Aug/Sept 2000
Some artists approach
the world by rooting themselves in a place. One thinks of
Georgia O'Keeffe in New Mexico or John Maring in Maine, places
that provided them self-definition and stability. In the same
way, Lucien Day has centered himself in Vermont. Although
he has lived in New York and started a gallery there, he did
so on his own terms, grounded in the perspective of his rural
community and its New England values.
Point of view, in the strong sense
of being rooted somewhere, is also of central concern to Day's
art and essential to its particular sort of objectivity. Objects
before they are paintings, his watercolors mounted on curved
surfaces combine the verticality and delicate calligraphy
of Chinese hangings scrolls with a Western concern for visual
truth. Day likes to compare him self to a scientist in his
preoccupation with sight, but perhaps it's more appropriate
to place him in the tradition of New England philosophers
like Emerson and Thoreau, who sought a common foundation for
science and art through direct contact with nature.
Day was raised in Hartford, Connecticut,
where independents like Wallace Stevens and Charles Ives supported
their artistic careers, and his New England upbringing included
prep school at Choate and a BA from Yale. At Choate, he recalls
a visit form Gertrude Stein, "who talked most of one
afternoon to the whole school, all boys. She wore bedroom
slippers, we were mesmerized." But school included no
specific training in art, and Day considers time spent tinkering
with model boats and airplanes his apprenticeship for painting.
Day also remembers his father, an
art enthusiast, taking him to a show of John Marin's work
at Alfred Stieglitz's American Place Gallery. There, he was
introduced both to Marin's paintings of mountains and to Stieglitz
himself: "The old man grew a lot of hair out of his ears,
and he treated me elegantly. " This larger-than-life
encounter implanted in Day a lifelong involvement with Marin's
work, inspiring an interest in watercolor and in lofty mountains
and buildings. Stieglitz, too, no doubt inspired Day in his
ambition to establish a gallery.
After an effort at law school, some
study of painting at Cranbrook Academy, and a stint in the
army, Day settled in 1946 in ...Vermont. In the 1950's he
began to make prolonged visits to New York, through which
he established a dialogue in painting between the mountainous
landscape of Vermont and the cityscape of Manhattan. He recalls
these early years as "lonely and terrifying." He
did, however, show his watercolors at the Passedoit Gallery
on 57th Street, and, perhaps more importantly, establish a
close relationship with painter and critic Fairfield Porter.
Porter, in turn introduced him to Rudy Burkhardt, Edwin Denby,
and Alex Katz, other artists whose interest in realism ran
against the prevailing abstract expressionist tide.
It was Day's pursuit of this community
of artists that eventually led to the founding of the Green
Mountain Gallery in 1968: At its original West Village location,
Day exhibited a group of artists that resembled Stieglitz's
in its diversity, including painters like realist Lois Dodd
and abstractionist Ed Dugmore. Their works favored
local subjects, treated with inventive,
vernacular styles, responsive both to intimacy of place and
to vastness of scale. Day approached New York much as he did
Craftsbury (Vermont), not as part of the international art
market, but as a potential community for those with common
interests. On these terms the gallery succeeded, although
it never made money, and it became a co-op, the Blue Mountain
Gallery, in 1980.
In its matter-of-factness, Day's
work follows very much its own course. It reflects most strongly
the generous influence of Porter, who encouraged free thinking
and making connections between science and art. It steers
clear of both tightly rendered realism and expressionist brushwork,
even that of some of the Stieglitz group to whom Day seems
close. For example, Day's large painting of 1961, Looking
Down From Jay Peak, with its accumulation of small touches
of color, resembles Marsden Hartley's treatment is more physical.
John Marin's brushstrokes, too, are broader and more exuberant.
Day's painterly calligraphy is more akin to handwriting. Closely
attentive, it doesn't point to itself, but provides and informal
connective tissue for his images; it's where his lofty spaces
meet the earth. Day's work, it's of the clear, objective kind,
more in line with Martin Johnson Heade than with Thomas Cole.
His delight in painting comes through the play of light over
surfaces, like the glass and steel of the World Trade Center.
Day once remarked that the tromp3-l'oeil effects
of Harnett were disturbing to him because they made him mistrust
reality. When he began to work from slides, therefore, it
was not with any interest in photo-realism but because slides
enabled him to make ambivalence, concerned over losing direct
contact with the richness of his subject. After discussions
with Fairfield Porter, however, he concluded that no sacrifice
was of his own pleasure in drawing from direct observation.
His willingness to accept this loss of objectifying his vision,
he accepts the fact that he himself should move out of the
way.
The camera helps distance him, to keep him at one remove
form sensual contact with nature. His stance is aloof. Day
attributes to Marin's influence his discovery that mountains
could be heads, hips, or breasts-that sensuousness could be
safely projected into those vast, distant forms. Hartley,
a lonely figure, also writes of a union of intimacy with remoteness
in a poem about finding mother-love in the granite of his
native state. The harshness of his paintings reflects this
struggle imposed by puritanical inhibitions. But Day doesn't
attempt to merge with his subjects. His own mother died when,
and he records an early memory of struggling with the elderly
aunt who raised him, who was trying to force him to eat. His
aloofness in painting seems consistent with this effort to
establish control by abstaining, by finding sustenance in
in the abstractions of science. Some loosening of this stance
is evident in Day's recent works in oil, where an expressionist
spirit seems to have surfaced with a more relaxed enjoyment
of paint itself.
In the 1970's, though, Day progressively focused on the
process of vision, to the exclusion of self-expression. He
wanted his paintings to become something like cameras in themselves,
mechanisms for displaying the world to the viewer. To this
end he developed his first paintings on curves, composed of
two views of the same vertical motif, set one above the other
to create and extended visual field-"to give a new space
for the subject," as he puts it. To record the full height
of a group of trees, for example, he took two slides, one
at ground level, the second with he camber tilted upwards.
He observed that the distortion of the tilted view could be
resolved if it was angled forward in relation to the lower
one, and that the illusion of straightness was enhanced if
the surface were curved. The boxes on which his watercolors
are mounted thus create a continuos transition from ground
level into the upper "stories" of trees or skyscrapers.
Day creates not a window onto nature but a special sort of
viewing, apparatus for these extremely vertical subjects.
Day's earliest boxes were six-feet tall and stood on the
floor; only gradually did he come to compress their format
and create boxes mounted on the wall. In these days of digital
technology, animation, and virtual reality, his efforts to
improve the spatial illusions of painting seem quaint; their
commonsense practicality recalls the simplicity of his New
England lifestyle, rooted in nineteenth-century positivism.
Ironically, though, his pursuit of an enlarged space leads
not to our magical absorption into his paintings, into landscape
as a spectacle, but to our awareness of them as strange, ungainly
objects.
By calling attention to their own three-dimensional form
these handmade contraptions parallel the efforts of Day's
more well-known contemporaries in the 1960's, such as as Donald
Judd, to establish paintings as objects. Like Judd's "specific
objects," Day's boxes are resolutely grounded in the
condition of things. In a wonder photograph, one Day's large
boxes with a New York watercolor has been set in a wintry
Vermont landscape. Its scale and stance suggest a human presence-one
can't help but see in it an image of Day himself. Like a stubborn
individual, it relates to the Vermont environment but remains
resistant, irreducible to it. The buildings echo the verticals
of the trees, like columns of a cathedral, as though to make
a place for the city in this natural context. It points hopefully
to some human resolution of the perennial conflict of nature
with technology.
Burlington VERMONT TIMES
Mickey Myers: a career exploring the richest forms of human
expression
By Dan Wolfe March 2, 2005
Exerp quote:
.....You take for example the exhibit we’ve having
right now – a retrospective of the work of Lucien Day,
an American Realist who lives in Craftsbury, and who for 50
years was, and still in some ways is, among the pivotal characters
in American art – just down the road in Craftsbury!
It was one thing, inviting Lucien to exhibit at HDAC. It was
quite another when all these artists – these famous
New York artists - started appearing out of the woodwork to
pay homage to him. They wanted to be a part of his retrospective
because of his importance in their lives..... Mickey Myers
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