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Jacob Landau
OLD MAN MAD ABOUT DRAWING
Works On Paper, 1934 - 1995
February 9. 1996 - April 20, 1996
Brandywine Workshop
Printed Image Gallery From the vantage point of his eighties, the Japanese printmaker
Hokusai once described himself as "an old man mad about drawing."
A century and a half later, the 78-year-old Jacob Landau finds this
image of age, passion, and creativity, a compelling self-description.
As he looks ahead to his eighties, savoring the prerogative of age,
Landau looks back across seven decades of being "mad about
drawing."
Jacob Landau started drawing at the age of three, working on pieces of shirt cardboard. He recalls that he tried to draw everything he saw. The visual world intrigued him and he soon found he had a natural ability for rendering, as he translated three dimensional objects into a language of lines. When he was 12, he began to study life drawing and etching at the Graphic Sketch Club (today the Samuel Fleisher Memorial). His mentor there was Earle Horter, who later honored his pupil with the gift of a treasured set of Goya's Capriccios.
The young artist took full advantage of Philadelphia as a source
of inspiration, roaming the city to sketch, for example, trees in
Fairmount Park and animals in the zoo. One of his favorite places
in the Park was the Centennial building, where a diorama of the
destruction of Pompeii imparted a vivid impression of a world doomed
by forces beyond human control. As a student at Overbrook High School,
the well-read teenager turned to illustration. In 1934, when he
was a high school junior, Landau won five prizes in the Scholastic
Magazine competition for illustrations of Kipling's Jungle
Book. The young artist found inspiration in such disparate
examples of creativity as Beethoven and the Mexican muralist Orozco.
He later made pilgrimages to Pomona, California and to Dartmouth
College to see examples of Jose Clemente Orozco's grandly scaled
public commissions.
Landau was a scholarship student at the Museum School of Industrial
Art (today the University of the Arts) from 1935 to '38. He studied
illustration with Henry Pitz, painting with Franklin Watkins, and
printmaking with Benton Spruance. Watkins's controversial painting,
Suicide in Costume, which was awarded First Prize at the
1931 Carnegie International exhibition in Pittsburgh, was a source
of inspiration for the young artist, who saw in it a model of artistic
integrity. Landau likes to recall Watkins's advice to his classes:
"You paint what you know. I want you to paint what you don't
know." The present exhibition, Old Man Mad About Drawing, Jacob Landau,
Works on Paper, 1934-95, documents the artist's abiding love
of drawing. To Landau, it is "the heart of the artistic endeavor,
the hand moving and reacting to the soul." The earliest drawing
included, an illustration for Kipling done when Landau was seventeen,
demonstrates the virtuoso skills that were at his command from the
onset. His youthful and ardent political views are visible in (Figure
1) Liberty Crucified 1937, done to fulfill an assignment
at the Museum School. As he grew to manhood during the Great Depression, Landau's passion
for social justice and his expanding awareness of life's inequities
led him, for example, to address the labor movement in several works.
The tempera studies for Strike, and the oil on paper maquette
for the no longer existing mural The Story of Labor, done
c.1940, reveal his fervor for the rights of workers. His prototypes
here were not the doctrinaire images of muscle-bound workers by
such overtly political artists as Hugo Gellert, but those of Robert
Gwathmey and Philip Evergood who were interested in the subject
of the working classes, but not in a stereotypical fashion. In the late thirties and early forties, New York was a crossroads
of leftist culture, bringing together artists who were passionate
about the labor movement and politics in general. Landau was one
of the founders of the Youth Workshop in 1939, which counted as
members puppeteers, musicians, actors, and such graphic artists
as Leonard Baskin and Antonio Frasconi. They were united by the
common goal of bringing art to the "people." Ever short
of funds, the Workshop would host monthly "rent parties,"
where such talented young people as Zero Mostel, Woody Guthrie,
Pete Seeger, Will Geer, Canada Lee, and Leadbelly would offer entertainment.
In 1946, many of the graphic artists who were members of the Youth Workshop formed a more specialized group called the New York Graphic Workshop, in which Landau also participated. One of the print portfolios they published, entitled "Negro" consisted of work by African American artists. Landau contributed one print and designed the cover for another collection of prints called "The People, Yes" which took its name from the Carl Sandbur g book. One of Landau's fellow activists from those days was the young African American artist Charles White. Landau recalls that once, when White was diagnosed with TB, he accompanied him for a recuperative stay at an isolated upstate cabin donated by Rockwell Kent. Landau was also active in the earlier Victory Workshop of the Artists
League of America, formed after the United States entered the Second
World War. The principal activity of this collective was the presentation
of a large art exhibition, Art, a Weapon for Total War,
which was hung at the New School for Social Research in the early
spring of 1943. A co-chair of the Workshop, Landau served as one
of the organizers of the show, which included such artists as Yasuo
Kuniyoshi, Robert Sloan, and Jean Carlu.
In 1943, Landau was drafted into the armed forces and spent two years overseas in the Mediterranean Theater. The subsequent GI. Bill was a boon to Landau, who furthered his academic education both at home and abroad. At New York's New School, he studied with such pbwerhouses as Erich Fromm, Rudolf Arnheim, and Eugene O'Neill Jr. At this time, he worked in a "cold water" studio on Tenth Street and supported himself by illustrating children's books, advertisements, and such comics as Captain America.
From 1949 to 1952, the artist, his wife, and young son lived in Paris, where he studied art at the Academies Julian and de la Grande Chaumiere. When the printmaker Leonard Baskin was an extended houseguest in their home in Paris, Landau was introduced to the medium of woodcut by the visitor. Baskin shared with Landau his great admiration for Grunewald's Isenheim Altarpiece, which the artist then traveled to Colmar to see. It became an abiding visual resource. During his time in Paris, Landau developed a close friendship with the composer Darius Milhaud and his family. Others in his Paris circle included the photographer Paul Strand, the poet Claude Roy, and the architect Paul Nelson. By the time Landau returned to the United States, his own artistic
vision had clarified. The artist described his principal stylistic
preoccupations at that stage as "romantic, figurative, eclectic,
[and] increasingly influenced by the northern European tradition
of drawing as the foundation of painting." His study of the
northern European tradition exposed him to expressions of the tragic
pain of human existence. From such heroes as Blake, Goya, and Durer,
the artist gleaned a passion for life, which reinforced his own
longstanding delight in delineating things of the real world. He
defined himself as "consciously anti-modernist," and chose
instead to identify with the movement for "romantic and spiritual
humanism."
Today the artist regrets that earlier in his career he described himself as a humanist. To Landau, the humanist hierarchy places people above nature. Moreover, humanists are optimists. He now has a keener sense of the futility of human endeavor. Yet, he is not a pessimist. He retains the hope that people will one day "wise up." Landau is fond of quoting Margaret Chase Smith, who when asked if she were an optimist or pessimist, identified herself as the former. When asked to describe the difference between the two, she replied, "The pessimist is usually better informed." Whether optimistic or not, Jacob Landau has remained committed
to the delineation of the human body. For Landau, the figure is
"capable of expressing everything that humans beings are and
hope to become. It is paradigmatic of the human condition -- all
things are contained in it, every emotion, trait, and fate can be
conveyed through the body." In 1945, he had met survivors of
the Buchenwald concentration camp. His depictions of both whole
and fragmented human forms reflect the lasting effect of this encounter. Reaching artistic maturity as an artist, Landau's vision of man's
struggle became less specifically political. (Figure 2) Sisyphus,
1961, his large charcoal drawing in the collection of the Philadelphia
Museum of Art, exemplifies the shift in his work that followed his
return to the United States after living abroad in the early fifties.
Sisyphus, the founder and king of Corinth, was avaricious and fraudulent
in his dealings. In the underworld he was condemned to eternal labor,
rolling a block of stone to the top of a steep hill. His burden
always plummeted back down again just before he reached the summit.
In Landau's rendering, there are many Sisyphuses. Two are weighted
down with human cargos, an elderly man and woman respectively. One
of these extends his arms in a cruciform position, an anguished
expression on his face.
The forty-four year old Landau had his first solo show in New York
at the Cober Gallery, from which The Museum of Modern Art (MoMA)
purchased a large watercolor, Cinna the Poet, 1959. He
was then included in MoMA's landmark juried show, "Recent Painting
USA: The Figure" in 1962. His was among the 74 chosen works
from nearly 9,500 entries. His former student, the young Sidney
Goodman was included, as were Larry Rivers, Lester Johnson, Ben
Kamahira, and Elaine de Kooning. Landau derived the ideas embodied in Cinna the Poet from a Mercury
Theater production of Shakespeare's Julius Caesar. Orson Welles
had dressed the legions in Nazi uniforms. In one scene, Marc Anthony
gave a speech that won over the crowd, who then set out to punish
the conspirator Cinna. When, by chance, the blood thirsty mob came
upon an unrelated man, Cinna the Poet, they murdered him anyway,
such was their rage for retribution. When theirvictim pleaded: "I'm
not Cinnathe Conspirator, I'm Cinna the Poet," they shouted
back, " Let's tear him to pieces for his bad verses."
Landau's central image of mindless brutality was a batwielding man
clad in hat and coat, surrounded by a red-tinged assembly of men
and women. By 1962, Abstract Expressionism had been the dominant mode of American
art for over a decade, and the existence of a major exhibition of
figurative art at the Museum of Modern Art was national news. Time
magazine ran a well-illustrated story on "the reappearing figure"
and included a reproduction of Landau's Cinna the Poet.
In the accompanying text, Landau's approach was contrasted with
that of artists who "use the figure as just another object
orform." Indeed, the writer noted, Landau "is brave enough
to admit being concerned with "the condition of man." As the decade of the sixties progressed, Landau grew disillusioned
with the grand heroic scale and content of his earlier art. Inspired
by the model of Bertolt Brecht's angry satire, he shifted his focus
to visual descriptions of man's "inhumanity, hypocrisy, and
loss of integrity." Landau explored an expressionist style,
and developed more spontaneous ways of working. (Figure 3) Armored
Man and Night People are two examples of this change.
The Man Who Laughs was triggered by a statement by Brecht
that "The man who laughs has not yet been told the terrible
news." This drawing was reproduced on the cover of the October
1969 Ramparts Magazine. Every one of the twelve images
in this unique issue was by Landau. A new interest in the surreal
is evident in many of them. As the Ramparts editor note
"[They] were not commissioned to illustrate specific articles.
Rather they are recent major statements by a literate and concerned
artist which parallel in a special way the contents of this magazine."
Another of Landau's works included was Burn Blood Brother,
manifestation of his solidarity with the growing struggle for Black
Liberation. In the seventies, Landau continued to use surrealist distortions
to express his ideas. He modified the more spontaneous processes
he had explored in the sixties. The new work struck a balance between
freedom and control. The New Jerusalem, a pencil drawing
of 1976, exemplifies this new style. Since the 1950s, Landau was involved with teaching art. He served
on the faculty of the Philadelphia College of Art from 1954 to 57,
and taught at Pratt Institute from 1957 to 1980. In 1975 he became
a faculty member of The Artist Teacher Institute, an intensive 10
day summer residency program sponsored by New Jersey State Council
on the Arts. For the past twenty years, he has worked on honing
and developing the interdisciplinary program of the Institute. Landau
regards his work here as a continuation of the ecumenical approach
to the arts that characterized his earlier involvement in the Youth
Workshop. During the eighties, the artist completed several major drawing
series. The serial format holds particular interest for Landau --
it allows him to slowly tell a story, and to deliver complex ideas
in sequential form. He has always been attracted to the bible as
a source of narrative. Biblical archetypes provide him with both
literal subject and covert content. One subject that had long fascinated
the artist was that of the Book of Revelation. Landau was sobered
and chilled by the fact that to certain reactionary thinkers, nuclear
war would not be viewed as a tragedy, but would be welcomed as a
sign from God to hasten the Second Coming. From 1986 to 88, Landau
embarked on his Revelation cycle of ten images, as a strong protest
against such orthodox interpretations. To backup his own conception,
he undertook extensive research to investigate alternative explications
of the Revelation. During this time, he worked on several other series. Identifying
with his namesake in the Jacob story, Landau executed a sixpart
cycle of drawings entitled (Figure 4) Climbing Jacob's Ladder
between 1987 and 1990. To Landau, Jacob was a witness, a man
transformed by his experience of wrestling with the angel. In the
artist's interpretation, the mysterious personage of the angel is
an aspect of Jacob himself. One of Landau's friends and neighbors in his town of Roosevelt,
New Jersey is the poet David Sten Herrstrom. After reading Herrstrom's
poem "Jonah's Disappearance," the artist .responded by
executing a suite of 12 drawings. These were not illustrations of
the text but a parallel effort inspired by the subject matter of
the poems and by the biblical text. Ultimately, Landau did 12 more
drawings about Jesus and Lazarus, who share with Jonah the experience
of having died and come back to life. A selection of 12 of Landau's
drawings was included in Herrstrom's 1992 book of poems entitled
Appearing By Daylight. One of the magical aspects of art is its ability to transform the
unique and the personal into universal expressions of human experience.
Landau's ongoing (Figure 5, 6) Frances Cycle is a case
in point. When his beloved wife Frances finally succumbed to Alzheimer's
disease in January 1995, she had been ill for over a decade. Those
afflicted characteristically lose their use of language. But before
speech is finally severed, the sufferer is able to communicate in
repeated phrases, distilled and intense pronouncements that may
be both cryptic and poignant. Landau kept track of Frances's special
sentences, and in 1993 began making drawings inspired by her words. To illustrate I Can't Understand My Own Self the artist
limited the images to two constricted and overlapping corridors
of space. In one, a woman sprawls out horizontally, seemingly asleep.
A vertical knot of three menacing and tormenting females seems to
rise up from between her own legs. In I Want to Go Home,
body fragments float up and away from a recumbent woman. Hands resembling
wings evoke medieval representations of exorcism, or that of a heaven-bound
soul taking leave of the body. Landau's compassion and empathy with
his wife's plight is evident throughout. Walter Kauffman, the philosopher of Existentialism, once describe
Landau's art as "unmistakably modern an at the sametime in
the tradition of Goya and Blake." Like the Roman god Janus,
who was depicted with two faces looking in opposite directions,
there is a duality to Jacob Landau. Glancing back, he is part of
a continuum with the old masters; peering ahead, he faces the uncertain
future as an artist with contemporary eye.
In January 1996, we are poised in the threshold of a new century. It seems pertinent again to invoke Janus. For the Romans, he was the god of good beginnings who presided over bridges, gates and portals. The month of January is named in his honor. Surveying this retrospective, Jacob Landau, can look back at his accomplishments, and as a man "mad about drawing," he can look ahead, knowing that there still so much work to be done.
Judith E. Stein, Ph.D.
January 5, 1996
EXHIBITION CHECKLIST
Shere Khan
Ink Drawing
8.5 x 11” - 1934 Husky
Scratchboard
8.5 x 12” - 1937
Liberty Crucified
Wash Drawing
9x10” - 1937
Strike (study)
Tempera
8x6.5 - 1938
Black & White
monoprint
16.5 x 21.5 - 1940 Rooms
India Ink
12x14” - 1940 The Story of Labor
(Mural study)
Oil on Paper
19.5 x 9.25” - 1941 Cinna the Poet
Watercolor, Pen & Ink, Pencil
27 x 40 1/8” - 1959
(Collection Museum of Modern Art, NY) Ecce Homo
Watercolor & Pastel
20x15” - 1960 The Swamp
Pastel
42 x 29” - 1960 Vision of Dry Bones
Pastel
42x29” - 1960 Burn Blood Brother
Watercolor
22x27.5 - 1960
(Collection Kathy Blumenthal) Excelsior
Charcoal
5x6’ - 1960
(Courtesy Snyder Fine Arts, NY) Sisyphus
Charcoal
5x6’ - 1961
(Collection Philadephia Museum of Art) The Man Who Laughs
Watercolor & Pastel
15.5x20.5” - 1962-1963 Night People
Watercolor
20x15” - 1964 Armored Man
Watercolor
16x21” - 1964 Relentless Fire
Watercolor
26x20.25”-1965 Black Hole
Collage
29x42” - 1976 The New Jerusalem
Pencil
29x42” - 1976 Deus Ex Machina
Watercolor
50x38” - 1985 Revelation Cycle
Pencil & Watercolor
10@ 22x30” - 1986-1988 Climbing Jacob’s Ladder Cycle
Pencil & Watercolor
6 @ 22x30” - 1987 Appearing by Daylight Cycle
Pencil
20 @ 7x10.5
4 @ 14x10.5
1989-1990 Satanic Wheels
Watercolor
44x30” - 1993 Frances Cycle
Pencil14 @ 15x22”
1993-1995 Exile is Their Reality
Watercolor
22x30” - 1995 SELECTED CHRONOLOGY
ONE-MAN EXHIBITIONS:
Galeries LeBar, Paris, 1952
The Art Alliance, Philadelphia, P& 1952
The Samuel S. Fleisher Gallery, Philadelphia, PA, 1959
Associated American Artists Gallery, NY, 1960
Zora Gallery, Los Angeles, CA, 1964
ACA Gallery, New York, NY, 1976
New Jersey State Museum, Trenton, NJ, 1981
Neuheisel Gallery, Saarbrucken, West Germany, 1985
Hagen Gallery, Offenburg, West Germany, 1985
Judah L. Magnes Museum, " The Prophetic Quest", Berkeley, CA, 1993
GROUP EXHIBITIONS: Boston Printmakers, Boston, De Cordova Museum, 1955, 1977,
1979
Xylon International, European traveling exhibition, 1960
3rd International Biennial Print Exhibition, Hangshow,
China, 1989
Recent Painting USA--The Figure, Moma, NY, 1968
Graphic USA, USIA Traveling Exhibition, Europe and USSR,
1983
Contemporary American Graphic Art, Corcoran Gallery, Washington,
DC, 1977
Homage to Lithography, Moma, NY, 1969
Human Concern/Personal Torment, Whitney Museum, NY 1970
Primera Bienale, Museo La Tertulia, Cali, Colombia
American-Brazilian Printmakers, Art Museum, Sao Paulo,
Brazil
Dreams and Nightmares, Hirshhom Museum, Washington, DC,
1984
COLLECTIONS: Bibliotheque Nationale, Paris
High Museum, Atlanta, GA
Joseph J. Hirshhom Museum, Washington, DC
Library of Congress, Washington, DC
LA County Museum, Los Angeles, CA
McNay Art Institute, San Antonio, TX
Metropolitan Museum, MOMA, NY
National Gallery, Washington, DC
National Museum of American Art, Washington, DC
New Jersey State Museum, Trenton, NJ
Stadtische Kunstsammlungen, Nuremburg, Germany
Whitney Museum, New York, NY
AWARDS:
Louis Comfort Tiffany Fellowship, 1962
Tamarind Fellowship, 1965
Guggenheim Fellowship, 1968
Childe Hassam Purchase, American Academy of Arts and Letters, 1973,1974
Ford Foundation Grant, 1972
Alumni Silver Star Award, Philadelphia College of Art, 1985
Governor's Award for Distinguished Contributions to the Arts in Education, 1988
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Catalogue Raisonne, New Jersey State Museum, 1983
Dreams and Nightmares - Utopian Visions in Modem Art, text
by Valerie J. Fletcher, Hirshhom Museum and the Smithsonian Institution,
Washington, DC, 1983
Who's Who
Who's Who in the Arts
Men of Achievement
Academician, National Academy of Design, NY
Professor Emeritus, Pratt Institute, NY
COMMISSIONS:
Congregation Kenneth Israel, Elkins Park, PA -"The Prophetic
Quest"
10 Stained Glass Window Panels
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