
home
| art & architecture | books & cds | dance | destinations | film | opera
| television | theater | archives
. ..
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Before Elmer Bischoff's career and development as a
painter had gotten into gear, abstract expressionism--the New York School--had already
taken firm root. Encouraged by Peggy Guggenheim, Jackson Pollock and Robert Motherwell and
Hans Hoffman exhibited at Art of This Century Gallery in the mid-1940's. Pollock's
landmark show at Betty Parson's Gallery was in 1950. What united a diversity of expression
in the the New York School was nonrepresentational art that celebrated individuality,
spontaneity, and improvisation. Bischoff was to find his way to his own expression, a
break from the dominant New York themes.
The Oakland Museum has organized a major Bischoff retrospective,
curated by Susan Landauer who simultaneously publishes her fine study, Elmer
Bischoff: The Ethics of Paint. The exhibit traces Bischoff's development from his
earliest work, before the war, when he was exploring abstraction with a surrealist bent;
Picasso and Miro were strong influences. After he served in the Air Force he returned to
the Bay Area and in 1946 joined the faculty of the California School of Fine Arts. His
colleagues there included Richard
Diebenkorn and David Park; by the mid-1950's the three created a schism from totally
nonrepresentational abstract expressionism and reintroduced figurative elements in their
work--the genesis of the Bay Area Figurative movement.
While some of the earlier works are interesting, it is the figurative
paintings of the 1950's and 1960's in which Bischoff found his most effective and
successful expression. His figures are not "portraits;" rather they are somewhat
generalized, often with merely the suggestion of facial features. There's a moodiness to
these works, a sense of isolation; when there are two figures they don't seem connected.
But this isn't the darker angst of an Edward Hopper, though the association is
unavoidable; Bischoff expresses a gentler, if no less existential, alienation.
Bischoff's painterly technique is as much the subject of these
paintings as the figurative elements. He lays on the paint thickly, an often assertive
impasto that lends vigorous energy and movement, even to a scene of relative stillness.
such as in Two Bathers. (The brushwork and the use of color are legacies of the
expressionist aspect of the earlier work.) The figures here are distinct, and the
landscape is broadly defined, but with a sketchy, real/unreal quality. There's a palpable
tension between the representational and the abstract, between stillness and movement. And
it is all in counterpoint to the sensuous colors and dappling light that fill the canvas.
In the earlier, simpler, and elegantly graceful Woman with Orange
Umbrella, the brushstrokes complete the shape of the oval defined by the curve of the
umbrella and the woman's hat. The brighter orange of the umbrella is echoed in small
splashes of the color that help define the drape of the woman's dress. There's a vague
suggestion of flowers below in a few squiggles of darker color which ground the
composition. The big, neutral gray/green sky has no real depth, but is full of the
presence of brushstroke and subtle changes of color. Whether working in the splashier hues
of the Two Bathers or the subdued palette here, Bischoff is a masterful colorist.
Nowhere is that more immediately manifested than in the mural-sized 1967
Seascape. The sails of a boat are tossed in a dark blue sea, with the sky
(covering perhaps 80% of the canvas) a riot of reds and oranges, studded with clouds both
light and dark. In its overwhelming and turbulent dominance of sea and sky, rendering the
small boat vulnerable before the immensity of nature, it's a grandson of a Turner
seascape, albeit Turner on acid. The calm and cool of earlier work has given way to the
mysticism of German mythology and the Wagner operas which fascinated Bischoff at this
time.
By the end of the 1960's, it seems that the unique mode of expression
that Bischoff had worked for two decades no longer presented the challenges it once
had. After a fallow period, he reverted to completely abstract work, now using acrylics to
achieve a lighter effect. A number of these paintings are included in the exhibit and some
of them display Bischoff's best characteristics--spontaneity, energy, color. But they are
not particularly memorable, while any number of the figurative works will remain etched in
memory--superb paintings that could be none other than Bischoff's.
November 5, 2001 - Arthur Lazere