42. JACQUES LIPCHITZ Homme Assis à la Clarinette II
Cubism was the most important art movement in the last Century and art historians now agree that Jacques Lipchitz was the first Cubist sculptor.1
Lipchitzs sculptures have always been very highly regarded and the incisively perceptive Pablo Picasso was one of their earliest admirers. The art worlds more astute connoisseurs and discerning collectors have recently reappraised Lipchitzs role in Cubism and interest in his work has skyrocketed. This is most recently exemplified in the US$2,165,000 (AU$2,937,000) price paid for Lipchitzs 86.0 cm bronze sculpture Marin la Guitar (Sailor with a Guitar), one of an edition of seven, at Sothebys in New York on 4 November 2014.
In many important ways Lipchitz was the 'sculptors sculptor'. He lived a remarkably dedicated life and was responsible for disseminating the refined three-dimensional beauty of Cubism wider and further afield than any other sculptor of his time. His was a long, highly productive and distinctive artistic path it was also a personal and creative journey that, it must be noted, was traumatically interrupted by the unmitigated tragedies of two World Wars.
Jacques Lipchitz was especially prominent in that particular group of highly creative Northern and Central Europeans in the first decade of the Twentieth Century whose members, though born and schooled in various foreign cities, came to see Paris as a cultural magnet.2 These gifted individuals, drawn by the effervescent artistic ferment of Pre-WWI Paris, flooded what was then the worlds most cultivated and envied city and came looking for stimulation, inspiration and enculturation.
At the time, the word Cubism was on everyones lips. The word 'Cubism' was invented by the Parisian critic Louis Vauxcelles (1870-1945) as a label for the outrageously chic French avant-garde art movement developed in early 1907. Cubism, properly understood, was a radical departure from traditional artistic depiction its influences upon painting, sculpture and literature were momentous.
Without putting too fine a point on it Cubism formulated new artistic ways to define and delineate pictorial form and, given its subsequent universal adoption and the distancing effects of time, it difficult now to attune oneself with, let alone adequately appreciate, the bracing aesthetic challenges that it originally presented.3
Put simply, Cubism was an art of form and content and not of meaning and metaphor - it was a 'thing' rather than a thing represented; it was a new creation rather than a re-creation; a production rather than a reproduction and it was always conceived rather than copied.
The colours, the shortbread biscuit-like tones, the sheer splay of rhomboidal patterns, the visual play of linear jazz-like heady rhythms and the fugue of delicately repeated dissected forms all gave Cubist paintings a beguiling aesthetic insistence. Likewise, the new visual language of three-dimensional form promoted by Cubist sculpture the language so eloquently handled by Lipchitz - was heard all over. As far as the art of sculpture goes, it was the sculptor Lipchitz, not the painter Picasso, who invariably was Cubisms international standard-bearer.4
This standard was unfurled and waved even as far afield as Melbourne. Lipchitzs work was recognised, lionised and locally promulgated for its aesthetic significance by both Teitsutis Zikarus (1922-1991) and Vincas Jomantas (1922-2001), two of RMIT Art Schools finest and most influential lecturers during the late Sixties. The new language of Cubism had a striking grammar of form that changed much of contemporary sculpture globally. The subsequent effects were impressive, lasting and almost inescapable. So much so that, even as late as 1987, the notable Australian sculptor Ron Robertson-Swann, the undeserving victim of Melbournes lamentable 'Yellow Peril' saga, was moved to write an acknowledgment of Lipchitzs achievements
in sculpture.5
Jacob Chaim Lipchitz was born as a Litvak on Saturday 22 August 1891 in Druskininkai, the famous spa town on the Neman River in Southern Lithuania, fifty-two kilometres from the Polish border. He died at the age of eighty-two on Italys idyllic Isle of Capri on Saturday 26 May 1973 and his body was flown to be buried on Har HaMenuchot (Mount of Rest) in Jerusalem.
Lipchitzs artistic interests first flourished at a commercial secondary school in Biaystok in Poland coincidently, also the original home of many fine Australians of Jewish descent. Thereafter, the young Lipchitz determined to travel to Paris in 1909, much to the initial exasperation of his building contractor father. He studied at notable art institutes in Paris: the cole des Beaux-Arts (Delacroix; Degas; Gricault; Maillol; Moreau and Renoir were former students) and the Acadmie Julian (famous for Bonnard; Matisse; Lger and Derain) and attended additional evening classes at the Acadmie Colarossi with his friend Amedeo Modigliani who painted a wedding portrait of Lipchitz and his wife Berthe (ne Kitrosser), which is now in the Art Institute of Chicago.
Lipchitzs standout talent ensured that he quickly gained respect and thereafter became more than fully embraced by the inner circle of the Cubists and their many patrons: the artists Pablo Picasso, George Braque and Juan Gris; the composer Igor Stravinsky; the writers Gertrude Stein and Apollinaire; the poet and filmmaker Jean Cocteau, the fashion designer Coco Chanel (whose portrait he painted); the collector Madame de Maudrot and the outrageous art patron Vicomte de Noailles.
Such rarefied social company was leavened by his very close friendships with the artists Chaim Soutine, Juan Gris and Modigliani. Lipchitz mounted his first solo exhibition at Pariss Galerie de lEffort Moderne in 1920 and held a further fifty-eight exhibitions during his lifetime.6 He won the coveted Gold Medal at The Worlds Fair in Paris in 1936 and the French State granted him the highly prestigious Chevalier de la Lgion dhonneur award in 1946.
To date, after his death in 1973, as many as fifty retrospective exhibitions of his sculptures have been held in various international cities. His works are held in the collections of 105 major international institutions the most significant being: The Jewish Museum, The Israel Museum, Guggenheim Collection, MOMA New York, Metropolitan Museum of Art, Stedelijk Museum, Philadelphia Museum, The Albert Barnes Foundation, Hirshhorn Museum, the Albright-Knox Museum, Yale University and Princeton University.7
Lipchitzs large marble sculpture Homme assis la Clarinette II (Seated Man with Clarinet II) is a rare one-off sculpture that has an interesting history one that was forced and conditioned by the events of WWI. Paris was in imminent danger of German bombing late in WWI and materials for the making of sculpture were impossible to obtain. Given the circumstances, Lipchitz feared for his life and that of his newly wed wife Berthe. In mid 1918, the couple hurriedly joined the Cubist artist Juan Gris and his wife Josette and escaped Paris for the French countryside. He settled mainly in the Indre-et-Loire (formerly Touraine) village of Beaulieu l Loches in Central France, 218 kilometres from Paris, and sat out the remainder of the War. There, in 1919, he drew up a series of approximately eight known works that were subsequently modeled in plaster, some of which were based upon human figures with musical instruments.
One of these is the present work Homme assis la Clarinette II (Seated Man with Clarinet II). There was something about the angular shapes of musical instruments that enabled Lipchitz, like Picasso, to emphasize the visual play of planar forms that seem so characteristic of all Cubist compositions. After the War, his eight or so early sculptures were placed in storage and some fifty-two years later, during the early 1970s, he revisited these WWI works and, as he had always intended, completed them mainly in bronze and a few in marble, most probably from Pietrasanta near Carrara in Italy where he often spent his summers.
It is important to note that the resultant sculptures, including Homme assis la Clarinette II (Seated Man with Clarinet II), are not editions, revisions or re-fabrications. They should correctly be considered and accepted as unique mature completions that owe their existence to a revisiting experience, somewhat in the manner of an Old Master, a music composer, poet or writer returning to complete an earlier unfinished work.
Lipchitzs compelling domestic-sized marble sculpture Homme assis la Clarinette II (Seated Man with Clarinet II) embodies early Cubist principles and formal qualities in ways that reflect the aesthetic advances of the halcyon days of Pre-War Paris. Like all good Cubist art works it presents as an amalgamation of alternating views and caught glimpses. Its carefully chiseled forms, based vaguely upon the enlarged profile of a human figure, encapsulate a member of a music band holding a clarinet, whose form is integrated, as one, into the body of the musician. The polished marble work has the boldly chiseled visual impact of an impressive monument and its totemic overtones, especially in its angular head, shoulder and torso sections, may be seen as clear influences upon the later 1950s sculptures of the great English sculptor Henry Moore (1898-1986) the only sculptor ever to turn down a knighthood for his art. Lipchitz may be seen in Moore, as Gustav Klimt may be seen in Friedensreich Hundertwasser and Picasso in Albert Tucker. The materiality, aesthetic force and compositional finesse of Lipchitzs sculptures were readily noticed and, upon reflection, one often senses that many later sculptors have bathed in Lipchitzs light. Lipchitzs influence is under-examined and hence tends to be under-rated: beside Henry Moore, Lipchitzs compositional elements may be found in the works of Henri Gaudier-Brzeska, Carl Miles, Henri Laurens, Alexander Archipenko, Brojn Horth, Otto Gutfreund and Julio Gonzlez.
All this aside, the essential significance of Lipchitzs compelling domestic-sized marble sculpture Homme assis la Clarinette II (Seated Man with Clarinet II) of 1919/1971 lies not only in its undoubted inherent aesthetic qualities but also in the undeniable charm of its artistic return one that revisits and completes the original ideas and energy of the twenty eight year-old with the mature mind and hands of an eighty year-old. Thus considered, the sculpture was a full fifty-two years in
the making.
All in all, Jacques Lipchitzs rare Cubist sculpture Homme assis la Clarinette II (Seated Man with Clarinet II) has a remarkable history and an equally remarkable reach and aesthetic compass.
Footnotes
1. A number of sculptors have claimed to be the first Cubist sculptor, but it is now generally considered that their works are of proto-Cubist, Vorticist, Rayonist or Futurist form. The issues are taken up more fully and resolved in: Fineberg, J. D.; Green C.; Lipchitz, J.; OBrien, D., Putz, C.; De Torres, C.; Mendelson, J.; Helfenstein, J., Lipchitz and the Avant-Garde: From Paris to New York, Krannert Art Museum, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign, 2002 and especially in Putz, C., Jacques Lipchitz, The First Cubist Sculptor, Lund Humphries, Burlington, 2002 (passim).
2. Little has been written about the significant impact of this large group that includes the following individuals: Louise Breslau; Karl Buehr; Josef apek; Aaron Gorson; Zygmunt Landau; Julias Pincas; Artur Szyk; Aloys Wach; Eugeniusz ak; Bernard Zehrfuss.
3. The best research and explanations of Cubism are contained in the following scholarly publications: Breunig, Le Roy, C. Apollinaire on Art: Documents of 20th Century Art, Viking Press, New York, 1972; Barr, A., H., Cubism and Abstract Art, Museum of Modern Art, New York, 1936; Golding, J., Cubism, Boston, 1968; Judkins, W. O., Towards a Reinterpretation of Cubism, Art Bulletin, New York, December, 1948; Kahnweiler, D., The Rise of Cubism, Wittenborn, New York, 1949; Rosenblum, R., Cubism and Twentieth Century Art, Abrams, New York, 1960; Cooper, D., The Cubist Epoch, Phaidon in association with the Los Angeles County Museum of Art & the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, 1970; Richardson, J., A Life of Picasso 1907-1917: The Painter of Modern Life, Random House, New York, 1995.
4. It is worth noting in this context that Picasso never taught, had students or travelled very far - he visited England once for a short time and, unlike Lipchitz, never went to America. Some of the points being made are fully developed and substantiated in the following scholarly publications: Fineberg, J. D.; Green C.; Lipchitz, J.; OBrien, D., Putz, C.; De Torres, C.; Mendelson, J.; Helfenstein, J., Lipchitz and the Avant-Garde: From Paris to New York, Krannert Art Museum, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign, 2002; Sweeney, J., J., Five American Sculptors: Alexander Calder, John B. Flanagan, Gaston Lachaise, Elie Nadelman and Jacques Lipchitz, Ayer Co. Publishing, New York, 1969; Wilkinson, A., G. Paris and London: Modigliani, Lipchitz, Epstein, and Gaudier-Brzeska - Primitivism in 20th Century Art: Affinity of the Tribal and the Modern, vol. II, The Museum of Modern Art, New York, 1984
5. Robertson-Swann, R., Jacques Lipchitz: Musical Instruments, Art and Australia, vol. 25, no. 2, June 1, 1987, pp. 220-221. The protracted two-year Yellow Peril saga developed around the hotly debated removal of Robertson-Swanns large painted steel sculpture entitled Vault from Melbournes City Square in Swanston Street on 12 July 1981. The sculpture, selected by Professor Patrick McCaughey and the architectural firm Denton Corker Marshall, was relocated to a dejected corner of Batman Park near the Yarra River where it languished for the next twenty-one years. In 2002, the work was moved to a better site next to the Australian Centre of Contemporary Art (ACCA) in Melbournes Southbank,
where it has happily sat to the present day.
6. Lipchitz held solo exhibitions in the following cities: New York, Biarritz, Bilbao, Pamplona, London, Barcelona, Paris, Philadelphia, Jerusalem, Valencia, Leeds, Marienburg, Madrid, Memphis, Tokyo, Vienna and Zurich.
7. Lipchitz and his works are the subjects of ninety-eight publications in English alone. He has been the recipient of the following awards: First Prize, Acadmie Julian, Paris, France, 1909; Gold Medal, The Worlds Fair, Paris, France, 1936; Chevalier de la Lgion dhonneur, French Republic, Paris, France, 1946; George D. Widener Memorial Gold Medal Award, Pennsylvania Academy of Arts, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States of America, 1952; Brandeis Creative Arts Award for Notable Achievement in the Arts, Brandeis University, Waltham, Massachusetts, United States of America, 1958; Honorary Doctor of Laws, The Jewish Theological Seminary, New York, USA, 1965; Award for Cultural Achievement, Boston University, Boston, Massachusetts, USA, 1965; Gold Medal, The Academy of Arts and Letters, New York, USA, 1966; Medal of Achievement, The American Institute of Architects , New York, USA, 1969; Award of Merit,
The Einstein Medical Center of Yeshiva University, New York, USA, 1969
Literature
Antliff, M.; Leighten, P., (eds): A Cubism Reader-Documents and Criticism,
1906-1914, University of Chicago Press, Chicago, 2008
Fineberg, J. D.; Green C.; Lipchitz, J.; OBrien, D., Putz, C.; De Torres, C.; Mendelson, J.; Helfenstein, J., Lipchitz and the Avant-Garde: From Paris to New York, Krannert Art Museum, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign, 2002
Haftmann, W.; Hammacher, A., M.; Herding, K.; Merkel, J., Jacques Lipchitz. Sculpturen und Zeichnungen 1911-1969, Neue Nationalgalerie, Berlin, 1970
Lipchitz, L., Sketches in Bronze, Pall Mall, New York, 1969
Lipchitz, L., Jacques Lipchitz at Eighty, Sculptures and Drawings 1911-1971. Anniversary Exhibition on the Occasion of the Artists 80th Birthday. August-September, The Israel Museum, Jerusalem, The Israel Museum, Jerusalem, 1971
Marlborough Gallery, Lipchitz The Cubist Period 1913-1930, Marlborough-Gerson Gallery, London, 1968
Marlborough Gallery, Jacques Lipchitz (1891-1973): Sculptures and Drawings from the Cubist Epoch, Marlborough Gallery Inc., London, 1977
Palu i Fabre, J., Picasso Cubism (1907-1917), Knemann, Ediciones Polgrafa, Barcelona, 1990
Putz, C., Jacques Lipchitz, The First Cubist Sculptor, Lund Humphries, Burlington, 2002
Swann, R., R. Jacques Lipchitz: Musical Instruments, Art and Australia, vol. 25, no. 2, June 1, 1987
Sweeney, J., J., Five American Sculptors: Alexander Calder, John B. Flanagan, Gaston Lachaise, Elie Nadelman and Jacques Lipchitz, Ayer Co. Publishing, New York, 1969
Taylor, M., R., Lipchitz and Philadelphia, Philadelphia Museum of Art, Pennsylvania, 2006
Wilkinson, A., G. Paris and London: Modigliani, Lipchitz, Epstein, and Gaudier-Brzeska - Primitivism in 20th Century Art: Affinity of the Tribal and the Modern, vol II, The Museum of Modern Art, New York, 1984
Wilkinson, A. G., The Sculpture of Jacques Lipchitz, A Catalogue Raisonn, Volume I, The Paris Years, Thames and Hudson, New York, 1996
Associate Professor Ken Wach
Dip. Art; T.T.T.C.; Fellowship RMIT; MA; PhD.
Former Principal Research Fellow and Head,
School of Creative Arts
The University of Melbourne