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The Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts
The Morris Gallery Tom Judd
Hymn for a Landscape
January 20 through February 29, 1984
Of Mere Being
The palm at the end of the mind,
Beyond the last thought, rises
In the bronze decor,
A gold-feathered bird
Sings in the palm, without human meaning,
Without human feeling, a foreign song.
You know then that it is not the reason
That makes us happy or unhappy.
The bird sings. Its feathers shine.
The palm stands on the edge of space.
The wind moves slowly in the branches.
The bird's fire-fangled feathers dangle down.
-Wallace Stevens
Tom Judd's Hymn for a Landscape is only
partially about the land. Judd's large scale oil paintings frequently
combine images of exteriors and interiors, blending visions of the
present with views of the past. In commenting on what he termed
Judd's "extraterrestrial sense of being," critic Bernie
Quigley has called attention to the artist's boyhood experience
in Utah, when the Great Salt Lake receded several miles, leaving
wharves, docks, and dance halls stranded in a sea of sand.
Empty chairs, waiting drinks, beached boats, and outdated cars
all figure prominently in the offbeat scenarios of Judd's never-never
landscapes of passe chic. Beneath the pink and blue skies in Evening's
Doorway, paired curtains billow out from the borders of a picture
window, which frames not the land but a painting of it. A green
shag rug in the room before it has the color and texture of grass.
A floor lamp explodes light into the dusk-colored heavens as a gentleman
exits to the right.
Judd was just a child or not yet born during the time periods evoked
in his paintings. It is as if he has appropriated others' memories,
with no commitment to get it down straight. The palm tree at the
left in Listening to a Dream is indeed "at the end
of the mind, beyond the last thought," in Wallace Stevens'
words. Judd's work deepens in meaning when we allow ourselves to
lose sight of "the reason" and focus instead on "the
bird's fire-fangled feathers."
Judith Stein
Coordinator, Morris Gallery
Checklist Paintings
1. Listening to a Dream, 1983
Oil on canvas , Triptych, each panel 36" x 80"
2. A Little Bit of Midnight, 1983
Oil on canvas, 70" x 85"
3. Thinking it Was Dawn, 1983
Oil on canvas, 96" x 90"
4. Hymn for a Landscape, 1983
Oil on canvas, 90" x 80"
5. Evening's Doorway, 1983
Oil on canvas, 75" x 82"
6. Town Square, 1983
Oil on canvas, 60" x 72
Drawings
7. Don't Fence Me In, 1983
Cut-out paper, acrylic paint, pencil, pastel, on rag paper, 40"
x 60"
8. Stories of Nightfall, 1983
Pastel, pencil, spray paint on rag paper, 59" x 43"
9. Since We've Come This Far, 1983
Pastel, pencil on paper, 30" x 42"
Artist Biography
Judd's biography reads like a novel. He has described his early
life in the following way:
Jedediah M. Grant was my great-great-grandfather. He was the
first mayor of Salt Lake City. He died when he was forty of
exhaustion from his religious obsession. He left behind six
wives (he was a polygamist) with six sons, all under the age
of one. Heber J. Grant was born the day Jedediah died. He later became
the president of the Mormon church in 1917. Heber had three wives, ten
daughters, and no sons. My father was the oldest son of Heber's
daughter Mary. During his mission for the Mormon church to
New York City in 1936, my father discovered that, in his words,
"I didn't believe the Joseph Smith story. More important,
I discovered the world of ideas, the arts, words, libraries, museums,
and people, people, people."
My father and mother met in Panama during the war. She was
a stewardess, he a captain in the Army Air Corps. After the
war they were married and moved to Mt. Pleasant, a small desert
town in southern Utah. There they owned and published the town
newspaper, The Mt. Pleasant Pyramid. They lived over the drugstore
where my brother and sister were born. Unfortunately they
could not make a living off the Pyramid. The family moved to
Princeton, New Jersey, where my father took a more lucrative job
in advertising. I was born two years later in Trenton in 1952.
The family moved back to Salt Lake City in 1954.
The artist studied painting at the University of Utah but dropped
out to travel in Europe for six months. A chance meeting with Rafael
Ferrer in1972 spurred Judd to come to Philadelphia where he enrolled
at the Philadelphia College of Art, from which he graduated in 1975.
Solo Exhibitions
The Story of Egypt and Utah, The Eric Makler Gallery,
Philadelphia, 1980
Tom Judd, Paintings and Drawings, Salt Lake City Art Center,
Salt Lake City, UT, 1981
Tom Judd, New Work, The Eric Makler Gallery, Philadelphia,
1982
Group Exhibitions
Phillips Gallery, Salt Lake City, Utah, 1977
Cheltenham Art Center, Cheltenham, Pennsylvania, 1978
Unique Beginnings, The University of Maryland, Baltimore
County, 1979.
Tom Judd and Marilyn Holsing, The Eric Makler Gallery,
Philadelphia, 1979
Contemporary Drawing, Philadelphia, The Philadelphia Museum
of Art, 1979
Invitational: New York, Monique Knowlton Gallery, New York,
1981
Collections
The Philadelphia Museum of Art
William Hollman, New York
Prudential Insurance Company, New York
Diane Dunning and Associates, Philadelphia and New York
Bibliography
Jarmusch, Ann. "If Vermeer were alive today would
he be painting in Philadelphia?," Art News, March
1981, p. 157.
Katz, Jonathan G. "Making art from enigma," The Bulletin,
September 14, 1980, p. 8.
McFadden, Sarah. "Report from Philadelphia," Art in
America, May-June 1979, p. 29 and p. 31.
Quigley, Bernie. "Tom Judd," catalogue essay, Unique
Beginnings, The University of Maryland, Baltimore County, Library
Gallery, 1979.
Stein, Judith. "Portrait of Philadelphia," Portfolio,
Nov.-Dec. 1980, p. 104.
The Morris Gallery displays the work of outstanding contemporary artists with a connection to Philadelphia, determined by birth, schooling or residence. The exhibitions are chosen by a committee composed of area artists, museum personnel and collectors, and the curatorial staff of the Academy. Currently serving on the Morris Gallery Exhibition Committee are: Ofelia Garcia, Anne d'Harnoncourt, Jennie Q. Dietrich, Harold Jacobs, Janet Kardon, Jay Richardson Massey, Charles Mather III, John Moore, Jody Pinto, Mark Rosenthal, Acey Wolgin; and Academy staff Frank Goodyear, Kathy Foster, Linda Bantel, Betty Romanella and Judith Stein, Morris Gallery coordinator.
Copyright, The Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, 1983
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