1939 in art
Overview of the events of 1939 in art
Events from the year 1939 in art .
Events
c. February 1 – Manchester painter L. S. Lowry 's first solo London show, "Paintings of the Midlands" (sic. ), opens at the Lefevre Gallery .[ 1] In October, Lowry's mother dies without appreciating his growing success.
March 20 – The Berlin Fire Brigade is ordered to burn around 5000 works of graphic art considered by the ruling Nazi Party in Germany to be "degenerate art " and which have little market value.[ 2] [ 3]
April 24 – Royal Society of Marine Artists in the UK holds its firset meeting.[ 4]
May
June – Peggy Guggenheim closes her Guggenheim Jeune gallery at 30 Cork Street in London, abandons her plan for a modern art gallery in the city, and in August moves to Paris.[ 6]
June 30 – Degenerate Art auction held on behalf of the Nazi German authorities in Lucerne .[ 7]
July – English painters Kenneth Hall and his lover Basil Rakoczi of The White Stag group move from London to Ireland to avoid conscription .
August 23 –September 2 – Most paintings from the National Gallery in London are evacuated to Wales .[ 8]
August 25 – Ben Nicholson and Barbara Hepworth move from London to settle near St Ives, Cornwall , effectively establishing the St Ives School of abstract avant-garde artists. Soon afterwards they are joined there by Naum Gabo . In 1940 Henry Moore takes over Hepworth's London studio.[ 9]
September – Artworks from the Louvre and other French museums are evacuated to the Château de Chambord .
October 18 –November 18 – Exhibition "Contemporary Unknown American Painters" at the Museum of Modern Art (New York ) introduces Grandma Moses to the public.
November 6 – Mexican painters' Frida Kahlo and Diego Rivera 's brief divorce is finalized.
November 7 – The War Artists' Advisory Committee of the Ministry of Information (United Kingdom) is appointed, following a scheme put forward by Sir Kenneth Clark on August 29, first meeting on November 23 to decide which war artists it will employ.
November 15 – Picasso retrospective curated by Alfred H. Barr, Jr. and staged jointly by the Museum of Modern Art (New York) and the Art Institute of Chicago opens.
December 14 – A 'Scheme for recording changing aspects of Britain' which will employ British watercolour painters during World War II is put forward by Sir Kenneth Clark for support by the Pilgrim Trust .[ 10]
First of the Madeline books, illustrated by Ludwig Bemelmans .
Harvey Fite begins work on his environmental sculpture Opus 40 at Saugerties, New York .
Awards
Works
John Angel – Statue of Alexander Hamilton
Maurice Ascalon – The Scholar, The Laborer, and The Toiler of the Soil (beaten copper relief sculpture for Jewish Palestine Pavilion at 1939 New York World's Fair )
James Bateman – Haytime in the Cotswolds
Thomas Hart Benton – Persephone
Alexander Calder – Lobster Trap and Fish Tail (mobile )
Salvador Dalí
Paul Delvaux
Aaron Douglas – Power Plant, Harlem
James Earle Fraser – Equestrian Statue of Theodore Roosevelt
Jared French - Calvarymen Crossing a River (mural) at the Lewis F. Powell Courthouse annex in Richmond, Virginia [ 12]
Leo Friedlander – Pioneer Woman (sculpture)
Julio González – Monsieur Cactus (Cactus Man 1) (sculpture)
Edward Hopper
Frida Kahlo
Fernand Léger – Adam and Eve
David Low – Rendezvous (political cartoon )
Musa McKim – Spanish Hill and the Early Inhabitants of the Vicinity (mural at United States Post Office (Waverly, New York) )
Marino Marini – The Pilgrim (bronze)
Joan Miró – Constellations (series begun)
Anne Marie Carl-Nielsen – The Young Man playing Pan-pipes on a Wingless Pegasus (monument to the sculptor's husband, the composer Carl Nielsen (d. 1931), in Copenhagen )
José Clemente Orozco – "Hombre de fuego" (Man of Fire ) (fresco in Hospicio Cabañas , Guadalajara , Mexico , 1936–39)
Eric Ravilious – watercolours
Beachy Head
Train Landscape
Westbury Horse
Percy Shakespeare – Tropical Bird House, Dudley Zoo
Charles Sheeler – Power series (paintings)
Situ Qiao – Guqin
Elizabeth Wyn Wood – Welland-Crowland War Memorial (Welland , Ontario)
Carel Willink – Château en Espagne
Grant Wood
Xu Beihong – Put Down Your Whip
Births
February 16 – David Griffiths , Welsh portrait painter
February 21 – Gert Neuhaus , German mural artist
March 17 – Jim Gary , American sculptor (d. 2006 )
March 24 – Gérard Coste , French painter and diplomat
April 1 – Spider Martin , American photographer (d. 2003 )
April 8 – Trina Schart Hyman , American illustrator of children's books (d. 2004 )
April 25 – Patrick Lichfield , English photographer (d. 2005 )
April 27 – Erik Pevernagie , Belgian painter
June 26 – Barbara Chase-Riboud , American visual artist, bestselling novelist and award-winning poet
July 20 – Judy Chicago , born Judith Cohen, American feminist artist
July 27 – William Eggleston , American color photographer
September 6 – Brigid Berlin , American actress and artist, Warhol associate (d. 2020 )
September 30 - Anthony Green , British painter, member of the RA (d. 2023 )
October 2 – Heinz Zander , German painter and writer
October 5 – A. R. Penck , born Ralf Winkler, German artist and jazz drummer (d. 2017 )
October 12 – Carolee Schneemann , American visual artist (d. 2019 )
November 2 – Richard Serra , American sculptor
December 23 – Nancy Graves , American sculptor, painter and printmaker (d. 1996 )
unknown date
Deaths
February 16 – Phyllis Gardner , British graphic artist and dog breeder, beloved of Rupert Brooke (b. 1890 )[ 13]
April 11 – Willard Huntington Wright , American art critic and detective-story writer as S. S. Van Dine (b. 1888 )
April 19 – János Vaszary , Hungarian painter and graphic artist (b. 1867 )[ 14]
May 25 – Joseph Duveen, 1st Baron Duveen , English art dealer (b. 1869 )
June 3 – Sir Philip Sassoon, 3rd Baronet , English art collector (b. 1888 )[ 15]
June 17 – Jean Boucher , French sculptor (b. 1870 )
June 23 – Mark Gertler , English painter (b. 1891 ) (suicide by carbon monoxide poisoning )[ 16]
July 4 – Louis Wain , English artist (b. 1860 )[ 17]
July 21 – Ambroise Vollard , French art dealer (b. 1866 )
August 14 – Isaak Brodsky , Russian socialist realist painter (b. 1884 )
August 24 – Frederick Carl Frieseke , American Impressionist painter (b. 1874 )
August 29 – Jessica Dismorr , English Vorticist painter (b. 1885 ) (suicide by hanging )
September 6 – Arthur Rackham , English illustrator (b. 1867 )[ 18]
September 18
December 1 – Jorma Gallen-Kallela , Finnish painter (b. 1898 )[ 19]
December 3 – Princess Louise, Duchess of Argyll , member of the British Royal Family and sculptor (b. 1848 )
December 14 – Helene Kröller-Müller , German-born Dutch art collector (b. 1869 )[ 20]
December 18 – Ernest Lawson , Canadian-American painter, member of The Eight (b. 1873 )
December 25 – Margrethe Mather , American photographer and painter (b. 1886 )
December 27 – Rinaldo Cuneo , American painter (b. 1877 )[ 21]
date unknown – Jane Mary Dealy , English painter and illustrator (b. 1856 )
See also
References
^ "L. S. Lowry". Birmingham Mail . 11 February 1939. p. 10.
^ Grosshans, Henry (1983). Hitler and the Artists . New York: Holmes & Meyer. p. 113. ISBN 0-8419-0746-3 .
^ Hammerstingl, Werner (1998). "Entartete Kunst" . Olinda.com. Retrieved 2013-12-28 .
^ A Celebration of Marine Art: Fifty Years of the Royal Society of Marine Artists . Blandford. 1996. ISBN 9780713725643 .
^ "21 Facts About Salvador Dalí | Impressionist & Modern Art | Sotheby's" . Archived from the original on 2021-05-01. Retrieved 2020-11-11 .
^ Prose, Francine (2015). Peggy Guggenheim: the shock of the new . New Haven: Yale University Press. ISBN 978-0-300-20348-6 .
^ Pramstaller, Christopher (2014-11-06). "Als Hitler "entartete Kunst" verscherbeln ließ" . Die Zeit . Retrieved 2021-12-12 .
^ Bosman, Suzanne (2008). The National Gallery in Wartime . London: National Gallery Company. p. 25. ISBN 978-1-85709-424-4 .
^ Maclean, Caroline (2020). Circles and Squares: the lives and art of the Hampstead Modernists . London: Bloomsbury Publishing. ISBN 978-1-4088-8969-5 .
^ Saunders, Gill, ed. (2011). Recording Britain . London: V&A . ISBN 978-1-85177-661-0 .
^ "The Enigma of Hitler, 1939 by Salvador Dali" . Dalipaintings.com . Retrieved 13 November 2021 .
^ Davis, John; Greenhill, Jennifer A.; LaFountain, Jason D. (2015-01-23). A Companion to American Art . John Wiley & Sons. ISBN 978-1-118-54254-5 .
^ Robert McCrum (29 March 2015). "Secret memoir uncovers the real life and loves of doomed war poet Rupert Brooke" . The Guardian . Retrieved 1 April 2024 .
^ The Hungarian Quarterly . MTI. 2008. p. 94.
^ "Sir Philip Sassoon: Death in England" . The Argus . No. 28949. Melbourne. 5 June 1939. p. 9.
^ Mark Gertler: Biography of a Painter 1891-1939, John Woodeson, Sidgwick and Jackson, 1972, p. 411
^ Rodney Dale (1968). Louis Wain: the Man who Drew Cats . Kimber. p. 151. ISBN 978-0-7183-0141-5 .
^ Carpenter, Humphrey; Prichard, Mari (1984). "Rackham, Arthur (1867–1939)" . The Oxford Companion to Children's Literature . Oxford: Oxford University Press. p. 440 . ISBN 978-0-19-211582-9 .
^ Myöhänen, Raimo (9 July 2009). "Venäläinen desantti ampui Jorma Gallen-Kallelan" . puheenvuoro.uusisuomi.fi . Uusi Suomi. Retrieved 25 August 2020 .
^ "From a merchant family" . Kröller-Müller Museum. Retrieved 8 February 2020 .
^ "Cuneo, Landscape Artist, Succumbs". Los Angeles Times . December 28, 1939. p. 9.