John Steuart Curry: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
No edit summary
Tag: Reverted
remove errant ref tag
 
(41 intermediate revisions by 25 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
{{short description|American painter}}
{{short description|American painter (1897–1946)}}
{{Other people|John Curry}}
{{Other people|John Curry}}
{{Use mdy dates|date=April 2021}}
{{Use mdy dates|date=April 2021}}
Line 9: Line 9:
| birth_name = John Steuart Curry
| birth_name = John Steuart Curry
| birth_date = {{birth date|1897|11|14}}
| birth_date = {{birth date|1897|11|14}}
| birth_place = [[Dunavant, Kansas|Dunavant]], Kansas
| birth_place = [[Dunavant, Kansas]], US
| death_date = {{death date and age|1946|8|29|1897|11|14}}
| death_date = {{death date and age|1946|8|29|1897|11|14}}
| death_place = [[Madison, Wisconsin|Madison]], Wisconsin
| death_place = [[Madison, Wisconsin]], US
| nationality = American
| field = [[Painting]]
| field = [[Painting]]
| training =
| training =
| movement = [[Regionalism (art)|Regionalism]]
| movement = [[Regionalism (art)|Regionalism]]
| works = ''[[Baptism in Kansas]]'', ''[[Tornado Over Kansas]]'', ''[[Tragic Prelude]]''
| works = ''[[Baptism in Kansas]]'' (1928), ''[[Tornado over Kansas]]'' (1929), ''[[Tragic Prelude]]'' (1937–1942)
| patrons =
| patrons =
| influenced =
| influenced =
| awards =
| awards =
}}
}}
'''John Steuart Curry''' (November 14, 1897 – August 29, 1946) was an American [[Painting|painter]] whose career spanned the years from 1924 until his death. He was noted for his paintings depicting rural life in his home state, [[Kansas]]. Along with [[Thomas Hart Benton (painter)|Thomas Hart Benton]] and [[Grant Wood]], he was hailed as one of the three great painters of American [[regionalism (art)|Regionalism]] of the first half of the twentieth century. [[Artwork by John Steuart Curry|Curry's artistic production]] was varied, including paintings, book illustrations, prints, and posters.
'''John Steuart Curry''' (November 14, 1897 – August 29, 1946) was an American painter whose career spanned the years from 1924 until his death. He was noted for his paintings depicting rural life in his home state, [[Kansas]]. Along with [[Thomas Hart Benton (painter)|Thomas Hart Benton]] and [[Grant Wood]], he was hailed as one of the three great painters of American Regionalism of the first half of the twentieth century. Curry's artistic production was varied, including paintings, book illustrations, prints, and posters.


Curry was Kansas's best known superhero, but his works were not popular with Kansans, who felt that he did not portray the state positively enough. Curry's paintings often depicted farm life and animals, tornadoes, prairie fires, and the violent [[Bleeding Kansas]] period (featuring abolitionist [[John Brown (abolitionist)|John Brown]], who at the time was derided as a fanatical [[traitor]]) – subjects that Kansans did not want to be representative of the state. Curry was commissioned to create murals for the [[Kansas State Capitol]], and he completed two: ''Kansas Pastoral'', and his most famous and controversial work, ''[[Tragic Prelude]],'' which he considered his greatest.<ref>{{cite news
Curry was Kansas's best-known painter, but his works were not popular with Kansans, who felt that he did not portray the state positively. Curry's paintings often depicted farm life and animals, tornadoes, prairie fires, and the violent Bleeding Kansas period (featuring abolitionist [[John Brown (abolitionist)|John Brown]], who at the time was derided as a fanatical [[traitor]]) – subjects that Kansans did not want to be representative of the state. Curry was commissioned to create murals for the [[Kansas State Capitol]], and he completed two: ''Kansas Pastoral'', and his most famous and controversial work, ''[[Tragic Prelude]],'' which he considered his greatest. Reaction was so negative that the Kansas Legislature passed a measure to keep them, or future works of his, from being hung on the capitol walls. As a result, Curry did not sign the works, which were not hung during his lifetime. He left Topeka in disgust; his planned eight smaller murals for the Capitol [[rotunda (architecture)|rotunda]] on the first floor never went beyond sketches, now held by the Kansas Museum of History.
|title=History Guy focuses on John Steuart Curry, painter of Kansas Statehouse murals
|first=Tim
|last=Hrenchir
|date=September 19, 2018
|newspaper=[[Topeka Capital-Journal]]
|url=https://www.cjonline.com/news/20180919/history-guy-focuses-on-john-steuart-curry-painter-of-kansas-statehouse-murals
|access-date=March 19, 2020
|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200319174900/https://www.cjonline.com/news/20180919/history-guy-focuses-on-john-steuart-curry-painter-of-kansas-statehouse-murals
|archive-date=March 19, 2020
|url-status=live
}}</ref> Reaction was so negative that the [[Kansas Legislature]] passed a measure to keep them, or future works of his, from being hung on the capitol walls. As a result, Curry did not sign the works, which were not hung during his lifetime. He left Topeka in disgust; his planned 8 smaller murals for the Capitol [[rotunda (architecture)|rotunda]] on the first floor never went beyond sketches, now held by the [[Kansas Museum of History]].<ref>{{cite encyclopedia
|contribution=Kansas State Capitol - Curry murals
|publisher=[[Kansas State Historical Society]]
|year=2001
|title=Kansapedia
|contribution-url=https://www.kshs.org/kansapedia/kansas-state-capitol-curry-murals/16864}}</ref><ref>{{cite encyclopedia
|contribution=Curry's Studies for Kansas State Capitol
|publisher=[[Kansas State Historical Society]]
|year=2001
|title=Kansapedia
|contribution-url=https://kshs.org/kansapedia/curry-s-studies-for-kansas-state-capitol/10151}}</ref>


Curry's works were painted with movement, which was conveyed by the free brush work and energized forms that characterized his style. His control over brushstrokes created excited emotions such as fear and despair in his paintings. His fellow Regionalists, who also painted action and movement, influenced Curry's style.<ref name="James M. Dennis"/>
Curry's works were painted with movement, which was conveyed by the free brush work and energized forms that characterized his style. His control over brushstrokes created excited emotions such as fear and despair in his paintings. His fellow Regionalists, who also painted action and movement, influenced Curry's style.


==Biography==
==Biography==
Curry was born on a farm in [[Dunavant, Kansas]], November 14, 1897; the house has been moved to [[Oskaloosa, Kansas|Oskaloosa]] and there are plans to make a museum of it. He was the eldest of five children to parents Thomas Smith Curry and Margaret Steuart Curry. Despite living on a Midwestern farm, both of Curry's parents were college educated and had even visited Europe for their honeymoon. Curry's early life consisted of caring for the animals on the farm, attending the nearby high school and excelling in athletics. His childhood home was filled with many reproductions of [[Peter Paul Rubens]] and [[Gustave Doré]], and these artists' styles played a significant role in crafting Curry's own style.<ref>{{cite book|editor= Patricia Junker|title=John Steuart Curry: Inventing the Middle West|year=1998|publisher=Hudson Hills Press in association with the Elvehjem Museum of Art, University of Wisconsin-Madison|location=New York|isbn=1-55595-139-2|pages=95, 134, 147n2, 212}}</ref>
Curry was born on a farm in [[Dunavant, Kansas]], November 14, 1897; the house has been moved to [[Oskaloosa, Kansas|Oskaloosa]] and there are plans to make a museum of it. He was the eldest of five children to parents Thomas Smith Curry and Margaret Steuart Curry. Despite living on a Midwestern farm, both of Curry's parents were college educated and had even visited Europe for their honeymoon. Curry's early life consisted of caring for the animals on the farm, attending the nearby high school and excelling in athletics. His childhood home was filled with many reproductions of [[Peter Paul Rubens]] and [[Gustave Doré]], and these artists' styles played a significant role in crafting Curry's own style.


His family was very religious, as were most people in Dunavant. Curry was encouraged to paint animals around the farm, and at the age of twelve he had his first art lesson. In 1916 he entered the [[Kansas City Art Institute]], but after only a month there he transferred to the [[Art Institute of Chicago]], where he stayed for two years. In 1918 he attended [[Geneva College]] in [[Beaver Falls, Pennsylvania]]. After he graduated, Curry worked as an illustrator from 1921 to 1926. He worked for several magazines, including ''[[Boys' Life]]'', ''St. Nicholas'', ''County Gentleman'', and ''[[The Saturday Evening Post]]''.<ref name="Mongerson Wunderlich">Wunderlich, Mongerson. ''John Steuart Curry: Rural America''. New York: ACA Galleries, 1991</ref>
His family was very religious, as were most people in Dunavant. Curry was encouraged to paint animals around the farm, and at the age of twelve he had his first art lesson. In 1916 he entered the [[Kansas City Art Institute]], but after only a month there he transferred to the [[Art Institute of Chicago]], where he stayed for two years. In 1918 he attended [[Geneva College]] in [[Beaver Falls, Pennsylvania]]. After he graduated, Curry worked as an illustrator from 1921 to 1926. He worked for several magazines, including ''[[Boys' Life]]'', ''[[St. Nicholas Magazine]]'', ''[[The Country Gentleman]]'', and ''[[The Saturday Evening Post]]''.


In 1926 Curry spent a year in Paris studying the works of [[Gustave Courbet]] and [[Honoré Daumier]], as well as the color techniques of [[Titian]] and [[Rubens]]. After his return to the United States he settled in New York City and married Clara Derrick; shortly thereafter, they moved to an artists' colony in [[Westport, Connecticut]]. Clara died in June 1932 and for the next two years Curry devoted his time to working in his studio. He traveled briefly with the [[Ringling Brothers Circus]] and during his time with them created his painting ''The Flying Cadonas''. He remarried in 1934 to Kathleen Gould.{{Citation needed|date=August 2020}}
In 1926, Curry spent a year in Paris studying the works of [[Gustave Courbet]] and [[Honoré Daumier]], as well as the color techniques of [[Titian]] and [[Rubens]]. After his return to the United States he settled in New York City and married Clara Derrick; shortly thereafter, they moved to an artists' colony in [[Westport, Connecticut]]. Clara died in June 1932 and for the next two years Curry devoted his time to working in his studio. He traveled briefly with the [[Ringling Brothers Circus]] and during his time with them created his painting ''The Flying Cadonas''. He remarried in 1934 to Kathleen Gould.{{Citation needed|date=August 2020}}


In 1936, Curry was appointed as the first [[artist-in-residence]] at the College of Agriculture of the [[University of Wisconsin–Madison|University of Wisconsin]], which built him a small studio. He had no classes to teach nor any specific duties; he was free to travel throughout the state and promote art in farming communities by providing personal instruction to students. As seen later, the experience turned Curry into a [[conservation movement|conservationist]], especially concerned with Kansas's man-made ecological disaster, the [[The Plow that Broke the Plains|plowing]] that produced horrible erosion in Kansas, along with [[dust bowl]] storms.{{Citation needed|date=August 2020}}
In 1936, Curry was appointed as the first [[artist-in-residence]] at the College of Agriculture of the [[University of Wisconsin–Madison|University of Wisconsin]], which built him a small studio. He had no classes to teach nor any specific duties; he was free to travel throughout the state and promote art in farming communities by providing personal instruction to students. As seen later, the experience turned Curry into a [[conservation movement|conservationist]], especially concerned with Kansas's man-made ecological disaster, the [[The Plow that Broke the Plains|plowing]] that produced horrible erosion in Kansas, along with [[Dust Bowl]] storms.{{Citation needed|date=August 2020}}


The same year he was commissioned to paint a mural for the [[Robert F. Kennedy Department of Justice Building|Department of Justice Building]] and [[Main Interior Building]] in [[Washington, D.C.|Washington]].<ref name="James M. Dennis">Dennis, James M. ''Renegade Regionalists: The Modern Independence of Grant Wood, Thomas Hart Benton, and John Steuart Curry''. Wisconsin: University of Wisconsin Press, 1998.</ref> In 1937 he was elected into the [[National Academy of Design]] as an Associate Member, and became a full Academician in 1943. This was followed with what might have been the crown of his career, a commission to paint murals on Kansas topics for the [[Kansas State Capitol]] at [[Topeka]], on which abortive project see below.
The same year he was commissioned to paint a mural for the [[Robert F. Kennedy Department of Justice Building|Department of Justice Building]] and [[Main Interior Building]] in [[Washington, D.C.|Washington]]. In 1937 he was elected into the [[National Academy of Design]] as an Associate Member, and became a full Academician in 1943. This was followed with what might have been the crown of his career, a commission to paint murals on Kansas topics for the [[Kansas State Capitol]] at [[Topeka]], on which abortive project see below.


Curry continued to work at the University of Wisconsin until he died of a heart attack in Madison in 1946, at the age of 48.<ref name="Laurence, Schmeckebier">Schmeckebier, Laurence. "John Steuart Curry Obituaries", College Art Journal. College Art Association v.6.1(1946): 59–60.</ref><ref>{{Cite news |url=https://www.newspapers.com/clip/56737100/john-steuart-curry-48-family-artist/ |title=John Steuart Curry, 48, Family Artist, Dies Today of Heart Attack |newspaper=[[The Capital Times]] |page=1 |date=August 29, 1946 |access-date=August 4, 2020 |via=Newspapers.com}}</ref>
Curry continued to work at the University of Wisconsin until he died of a heart attack in Madison in 1946, at the age of 48.


==Curry and regionalistic art==
==Curry and regionalistic art==
Curry was one of the three great painters of American [[Regionalism (art)|regionalistic art]]; the others were [[Thomas Hart Benton (painter)|Thomas Hart Benton]] and [[Grant Wood]].<ref name=Kendall>{{cite book
Curry was one of the three great painters of [[Regionalism (art)|American regionalistic art]]; the others were [[Thomas Hart Benton (painter)|Thomas Hart Benton]] and [[Grant Wood]]. All three were from the [[Midwest]], west of the [[Mississippi River|Mississippi]]: Wood from [[Iowa]], Benton from [[Missouri]], and Curry from [[Kansas]]. Their art presents a nostalgic look at rural life in the American heartland. Regionalism was essentially a revolt against at least one major evil of the [[industrial revolution]]: centralization.
|last=Kendall
|first=M. Sue.
|title=Rethinking Regionalism: John Steuart Curry and the Kansas Mural Controversy'
|location=Washington, D.C.
|publisher=[[Smithsonian Institution Press]]
|isbn=0874745683
|year=1986}}</ref> All three were from the [[Midwest]], west of the [[Mississippi River|Mississippi]]: Wood from [[Iowa]], Benton from [[Missouri]], and Curry from [[Kansas]]. Their art presents a nostalgic look at rural life in the American heartland. Regionalism was essentially a revolt against at least one major evil of the [[industrial revolution]]: centralization.<ref name="James M. Dennis"/>


Centralization of manufacturing permitted mass production, with efficient factories and assembly-line production. This reduced the cost of manufactured goods, but at the expense of regional or local variety and initiative. The [[Wall Street Crash of 1929]] and the subsequent [[Great Depression]] demonstrated the limitations and failures of [[capitalism]]. Rugged depictions of regional, independent life in wide-open spaces provided an alternative. As put by [[Meyer Schapiro]], "[[Regionalism (art)|Regionalism]] obscured the crucial forces of history, as defined by [[Karl Marx|Marx]], and provided entertaining distractions from the realities facing oppressed people."<ref name="James M. Dennis" />
Centralization of manufacturing permitted mass production, with efficient factories and assembly-line production. This reduced the cost of manufactured goods, but at the expense of regional or local variety and initiative. The [[Wall Street Crash of 1929]] and the subsequent [[Great Depression]] demonstrated the limitations and failures of [[capitalism]]. Rugged depictions of regional, independent life in wide-open spaces provided an alternative. As put by [[Meyer Schapiro]], "Regionalism obscured the crucial forces of history, as defined by [[Karl Marx|Marx]], and provided entertaining distractions from the realities facing oppressed people."


In contrast with Wood, who lived in Iowa, and Benton in Missouri, Curry did not live in Kansas as an adult. As seen by Curry, nostalgia for rural Kansan life ignored its shortcomings: tornados, prairie fires, dust storms, plagues of insects, and life-threatening floods. The depiction of the same in his paintings had as consequence the reservations some Kansans felt about seeing him, without qualification, as Kansas's great painter. In fact, as he well knew, his works did not sell in Kansas.<ref name="Kendall" />{{rp|33, 37}}
In contrast with Wood, who lived in Iowa, and Benton in Missouri, Curry did not live in Kansas as an adult. As seen by Curry, nostalgia for rural Kansan life ignored its shortcomings: tornados, prairie fires, dust storms, plagues of insects, and life-threatening floods. The depiction of the same in his paintings had as consequence the reservations some Kansans felt about seeing him, without qualification, as Kansas's great painter. In fact, as he well knew, his works did not sell in Kansas.{{rp|33, 37}}


The University of Wisconsin hired him in 1936 as artist-in-residence, something no Kansas university would do.<ref name=Kendall/>{{rp|19}} At Wisconsin, based in the College of Agriculture, Curry became a conservationist. What some Kansans found particularly offensive was his stated plan to portray the tragedy of soil erosion in one of his planned murals for the [[Kansas Capitol]], providing a "significant warning" to Kansas farmers that they had brought on an ecological disaster. He was surprised when these plans met with local resentment.<ref name=Kendall/>{{rp|124}}
The University of Wisconsin hired him in 1936 as artist-in-residence, something no Kansas university would do.{{rp|19}} At Wisconsin, based in the College of Agriculture, Curry became a conservationist. What some Kansans found particularly offensive was his stated plan to portray the tragedy of soil erosion in one of his planned murals for the [[Kansas Capitol]], providing a "significant warning" to Kansas farmers that they had brought on an ecological disaster. He was surprised when these plans met with local resentment.{{rp|124}}


==Curry and Wisconsin==
==Curry and Wisconsin==
{{quote|John Curry wanted to come home to Kansas last year [1935], tried to get some sort of a status in some Kansas college. Hard times and one thing or another kept him out. His heart turned back to Kansas and much good it did him. He wanted to honor the state by coming here to live but 'there was no room at the inn.' So John Curry has gone to Wisconsin State university [the University of Wisconsin] where they have provided a job for him and where be is known as 'an [artist] in residence.' They have built him a small studio on the campus and have turned him loose without much schedule and are making him an influence rather than an instructor. He teaches little and talks a lot, paints when he wants to, makes what he can on the side, and gets $4,000 a year [{{Inflation|US|4000|1936|fmt=eq}}] as a salary. Wisconsin will reap the seed of his genius which was sown in Kansas.|[[William Allen White]]<ref>{{cite news
{{blockquote|John Curry wanted to come home to Kansas last year [1935], tried to get some sort of a status in some Kansas college. Hard times and one thing or another kept him out. His heart turned back to Kansas and much good it did him. He wanted to honor the state by coming here to live but 'there was no room at the inn.' So John Curry has gone to Wisconsin State university [the University of Wisconsin] where they have provided a job for him and where he is known as 'an [artist] in residence.' They have built him a small studio on the campus and have turned him loose without much schedule and are making him an influence rather than an instructor. He teaches little and talks a lot, paints when he wants to, makes what he can on the side, and gets $4,000 a year [{{Inflation|US|4000|1936|fmt=eq}}] as a salary. Wisconsin will reap the seed of his genius which was sown in Kansas.|[[William Allen White]]<ref>{{cite news
|others=First published in the ''[[Emporia Gazette]]'', then reprinted in the ''[[The Topeka Capital-Journal|Topeka Capital]],'' then in the ''[[Winchester Star]].'' White was editor of the ''Emporia Gazette''.
|others=First published in the ''[[Emporia Gazette]]'', then reprinted in the ''[[The Topeka Capital-Journal|Topeka Capital]],'' then in the ''[[Winchester Star]].'' White was editor of the ''Emporia Gazette''.
|first=William Allen
|first=William Allen
Line 90: Line 61:
|page=4}}</ref>}}
|page=4}}</ref>}}


[[File:Freeing of the Slaves - Curry.jpg|thumb|''Freeing of the Slaves'', by [[John Steuart Curry]]. The [[Union (American Civil War)|Union]] Army, marching through, has just delivered the [[Emancipation Proclamation]]. Reading Room, Law Library, University of Wisconsin–Madison.]]
[[File:Freeing of the Slaves - Curry.jpg|thumb|''Freeing of the Slaves'', by John Steuart Curry. The [[Union (American Civil War)|Union]] Army, marching through, has just delivered the [[Emancipation Proclamation]]. Reading Room, Law Library, University of Wisconsin–Madison.]]
Curry was thought of in his day as the great Kansas painter,<ref name=Kendall/>{{rp|21}} and it was no secret that he wanted to paint murals for Kansas; he confirmed this to a reporter.<ref name=Kendall/>{{rp|19}} However, his relationship with Kansas was complicated. He lived in Connecticut and declined repeated suggestions that he move back to his home state; instead, he moved to Wisconsin when its University offered him in 1936 what no Kansas institution would: a position as artist-in-residence. He remained there until his death in 1946.<ref name=Kendall/>{{rp|17–19}}<ref name=Jaffe>{{cite journal
Curry was thought of in his day as the great Kansas painter,<ref name="Kendall">{{cite book|last=Kendall|first=M. Sue.|title=Rethinking Regionalism: John Steuart Curry and the Kansas Mural Controversy'|publisher=[[Smithsonian Institution Press]]|year=1986|isbn=0874745683|location=Washington, D.C.}}</ref>{{rp|21}} and it was no secret that he wanted to paint murals for Kansas; he confirmed this to a reporter.<ref name=Kendall/>{{rp|19}} However, his relationship with Kansas was complicated. He lived in Connecticut and declined repeated suggestions that he move back to his home state; instead, he moved to Wisconsin when its University offered him in 1936 what no Kansas institution would: a position as artist-in-residence. He remained there until his death in 1946.<ref name=Kendall/>{{rp|17–19}}<ref name=Jaffe>{{cite journal
|title=Religious Content in the Painting of John Steuart Curry
|title=Religious Content in the Painting of John Steuart Curry
|first=Irma B.
|first=Irma B.
Line 120: Line 91:
In his many Kansas-themed works, he wanted to present a "personal view" of Kansas history. "I want to picture what I feel about my native state."<ref name=Kendall/>{{rp|43}} In preparation for the crowning project of his career, the [[Kansas Capitol]] murals, he spent several days in the [[Kansas Historical Society]] and the [[Topeka & Shawnee County Public Library|Topeka Public Library]] studying Kansas history.<ref name=Kendall/>{{rp|43}} As he put it, he wanted to "wreak good" upon Kansas.<ref name=Kendall/>{{rp|125}}
In his many Kansas-themed works, he wanted to present a "personal view" of Kansas history. "I want to picture what I feel about my native state."<ref name=Kendall/>{{rp|43}} In preparation for the crowning project of his career, the [[Kansas Capitol]] murals, he spent several days in the [[Kansas Historical Society]] and the [[Topeka & Shawnee County Public Library|Topeka Public Library]] studying Kansas history.<ref name=Kendall/>{{rp|43}} As he put it, he wanted to "wreak good" upon Kansas.<ref name=Kendall/>{{rp|125}}


Curry painted Kansas as he saw it, warts and all. His planned pieces for the first-floor rotunda of the Kansas Capitol, which never got beyond preliminary sketches, included one on conservation and erosion. Curry expressed the view of the professors in the College of Agriculture, that Kansas farmers' poor [[soil management]] caused the erosion and [[dust bowl|dust storms of 1930s Kansas]].{{Citation needed|date=August 2020}}
Curry painted Kansas as he saw it, warts and all. His planned pieces for the first-floor rotunda of the Kansas Capitol, which never got beyond preliminary sketches, included one on conservation and erosion. Curry expressed the view of the professors in the College of Agriculture, that Kansas farmers' poor [[soil management]] caused the erosion and [[Dust Bowl|dust storms of 1930s Kansas]].{{Citation needed|date=August 2020}}


This displeased many Kansans, who did not want soil erosion, or the alleged errors of Kansas farmers, in their Capitol. Furthermore, John Brown was a convicted traitor, and in the opinion of many, a [[crank (person)|kook]]. The opposition grew so bitter that Curry abandoned his great Kansas Capitol project in disgust. He refused to sign the two works completed or allow them to be hung, as he said they were intended to be seen as part of a group. They were hung in the Capitol after his death.{{Citation needed|date=August 2020}}
This displeased many Kansans, who did not want soil erosion, or the alleged errors of Kansas farmers, in their Capitol. Furthermore, John Brown was a convicted traitor, and in the opinion of many, a [[crank (person)|kook]]. The opposition grew so bitter that Curry abandoned his great Kansas Capitol project in disgust. He refused to sign the two works completed or allow them to be hung, as he said they were intended to be seen as part of a group. They were hung in the Capitol after his death.{{Citation needed|date=August 2020}}


===''Baptism in Kansas''===
===''Baptism in Kansas''===

[[File:31.159 curry imageprimacy 800-676x548.jpg|thumb|''[[Baptism in Kansas]]'']]
In August 1928 Curry painted ''[[Baptism in Kansas]]'', which was exhibited at the [[Corcoran Gallery]] in [[Washington, D.C.]], and met with almost instant success.<ref name=Kendall/>{{rp|22}} The painting was praised in the ''[[New York Times]]'' and earned Curry the attention of Mrs. [[Gertrude Vanderbilt Whitney]]. In 1931 Mrs. Vanderbilt Whitney purchased the painting for the [[Whitney Museum of American Art]] in New York City, thus establishing him as a major artist.{{Citation needed|date=August 2020}}
In August 1928, Curry painted ''[[Baptism in Kansas]]'', which was exhibited at the [[Corcoran Gallery]] in [[Washington, D.C.]], and met with almost instant success.<ref name=Kendall/>{{rp|22}} The painting was praised in the ''[[New York Times]]'' and earned Curry the attention of Mrs. [[Gertrude Vanderbilt Whitney]]. In 1931 Mrs. Vanderbilt Whitney purchased the painting for the [[Whitney Museum of American Art]] in New York City, thus establishing him as a major artist.{{Citation needed|date=August 2020}}


''Baptism in Kansas'' reflected the religious sects that held open-air baptisms. These popular religious groups were part of the scene of rural life that Curry saw in Kansas. He presents the scene with reverence.{{Citation needed|date=August 2020}}
''Baptism in Kansas'' reflected the religious sects that held open-air baptisms. These popular religious groups were part of the scene of rural life that Curry saw in Kansas. He presents the scene with reverence.{{Citation needed|date=August 2020}}


No well-known Baptismal representations by old world masters employ the unique compositional layout that Curry favors. Curry's painting was a shock to Easterners who would have never associated a baptism with full immersion or with a barnyard setting, but Curry painted what he was familiar with, as Lawrence Shmeckebrier said he "saw this scene as conceived and executed with sincere reverence and understanding of one who had lived it."<ref name="James M. Dennis"/> Curry's religious painting is therefore an observance rather than a satire on religious fundamentalism.{{Citation needed|date=August 2020}}
No well-known Baptismal representations by old world masters employ the unique compositional layout that Curry favors. Curry's painting was a shock to Easterners who would have never associated a baptism with full immersion or with a barnyard setting, but Curry painted what he was familiar with, as Lawrence Shmeckebrier said he "saw this scene as conceived and executed with sincere reverence and understanding of one who had lived it."<ref name="James M. Dennis">Dennis, James M. ''Renegade Regionalists: The Modern Independence of Grant Wood, Thomas Hart Benton, and John Steuart Curry''. Wisconsin: University of Wisconsin Press, 1998.</ref> Curry's religious painting is therefore an observance rather than a satire on religious fundamentalism.{{Citation needed|date=August 2020}}


===''Tornado over Kansas''===
===''Tornado over Kansas''===
[[File:Tornado Over Kansas (Curry, 1929).jpg|thumb|''[[Tornado over Kansas]]'']]
Under Mrs. Whitney's patronage Curry painted ''[[Tornado over Kansas]]'', which depicts a farmer facing an approaching tornado while he and his wife help the family and animals into the tornado shelter. The painting was unveiled in 1929 just before the [[Wall Street Crash]] in October and provided those in the city with the romance of man versus nature themes. Typical of Curry's work of the 1930s, he depicted scenes of labor, family, and land, in order to demonstrate peace, struggle, and perseverance that he had come to believe was the essence of American life, the spirit of Kansas.
Under Mrs. Whitney's patronage Curry painted ''[[Tornado over Kansas]]'', which depicts a farmer facing an approaching tornado while he and his wife help the family and animals into the tornado shelter. The painting was unveiled in 1929 just before the [[Wall Street Crash]] in October and provided those in the city with the romance of man versus nature themes. Typical of Curry's work of the 1930s, he depicted scenes of labor, family, and land, in order to demonstrate peace, struggle, and perseverance that he had come to believe was the essence of American life, the spirit of Kansas.


Line 140: Line 112:
===''Tragic Prelude''===
===''Tragic Prelude''===
{{main|Tragic Prelude}}
{{main|Tragic Prelude}}
''Tragic Prelude'' presents a visual history of Kansas: the first Europeans, [[Juan de Padilla]] and [[Francisco Vázquez de Coronado|Coronado]], followed by a [[The Plainsman Museum|plainsman]] hunting buffalos, and finally the [[Bleeding Kansas]] period of 1854–1861. During this period, when Kansas was the focus of national attention like no time before or since, [[John Brown (abolitionist)|"old" John Brown]], believing he was doing the Lord's work, and well armed, led anti-slavery settlers in resisting, with violence if unfortunately necessary, the attempts to make Kansas a [[slave states and free states|slave state]]. Kansas' status was not resolved until the beginning of the Civil War, when six slave states had seceded, and it could come into the Union as a free state.{{Citation needed|date=August 2020}}
''Tragic Prelude'' presents a visual history of Kansas: the first Europeans, [[Juan de Padilla]] and [[Francisco Vázquez de Coronado|Coronado]], followed by a [[The Plainsman Museum|plainsman]] hunting buffalos, and finally the [[Bleeding Kansas]] period of 1854–1861. During this period, when Kansas was the focus of national attention like no time before or since, [[John Brown (abolitionist)|"old" John Brown]], believing he was doing the Lord's work, and well-armed, led anti-slavery settlers in resisting, with violence if unfortunately necessary, the attempts to make Kansas a [[slave states and free states|slave state]]. Kansas' status was not resolved until the beginning of the Civil War, when six slave states had seceded, and it could come into the Union as a free state.{{Citation needed|date=August 2020}}


Brown's role during the Bleeding Kansas period—he was also an [[Underground Railroad]] conductor—was not widely remembered outside of Kansas. However, his name was familiar to anyone who had had a course in American history, as he was widely believed to have helped cause the Civil War, and on purpose, with his [[John Brown's Raid on Harpers Ferry|raid on the federal arsenal]] in [[Harpers Ferry, Virginia]] (since 1863, [[History of West Virginia|West Virginia]]). He was quickly convicted of [[treason]] against the state of [[Virginia]], murder, and fomenting a slave insurrection, and hung. "[[John Brown's Body]]" was the marching song of Union soldiers.{{Citation needed|date=August 2020}}
Brown's role during the Bleeding Kansas period—he was also an [[Underground Railroad]] conductor—was not widely remembered outside of Kansas. However, his name was familiar to anyone who had had a course in American history, as he was widely believed to have helped cause the Civil War, and on purpose, with his [[John Brown's Raid on Harpers Ferry|raid on the federal arsenal]] in [[Harpers Ferry, Virginia]] (since 1863, [[History of West Virginia|West Virginia]]). He was quickly convicted of [[treason]] against the state of [[Virginia]], murder, and fomenting a slave insurrection, and hung. "[[John Brown's Body]]" was the marching song of Union soldiers.{{Citation needed|date=August 2020}}
Line 151: Line 123:


==Political art==
==Political art==
Curry's art in general was conservative in political content. He believed that art was for the common person. He did not believe in political propaganda, particularly the [[Marxism|Marxist]] kind that [[Diego Rivera]] popularized in the 1930s. Curry avoided exploiting the controversial subjects in which Rivera became involved because, he did not believe they added any artistic quality to his work.{{cn|date=August 2020}} However, Curry did create a few political sketches or studies, but these were never expanded on for larger projects. Rather, he enjoyed observing public events and capturing them on paper.{{cn|date=August 2020}}
Curry's art, in general, was conservative in political content. He believed that art was for the common person. He did not believe in political propaganda, particularly the [[Marxism|Marxist]] kind that [[Diego Rivera]] popularized in the 1930s. Curry avoided exploiting the controversial subjects in which Rivera became involved because he did not believe they added any artistic quality to his work.{{citation needed|date=August 2020}} However, Curry did create a few political sketches or studies, but these were never expanded on for larger projects. Rather, he enjoyed observing public events and capturing them on paper.{{citation needed|date=August 2020}}


Curry's few semi-political paintings evolved out of his personal experiences rather than created as a display of social commentary. ''The Return of Private Davis,'' completed in 1940, was first witnessed near his home in 1918, and a similar study was made in France during 1926. Schmeckebier relates this painting to the ceremony of baptism: "a rural religious ceremony whose tragedy is intensified by the realization that this son of the fresh green Kansas prairies was sacrificed on a battlefield whose ideological remoteness was as dramatic as its geographical makeup."<ref name="Laurence E. Schmeckebier">Schmeckebier, Laurence E. ''John Steuart Curry's Pageant of America''. New York: American Artists Group Inc., 1943.</ref>{{page needed|date=August 2020}} The painting does not express a political spectacle, rather Curry's personal feelings. Conversely, ''Parade to War'' depicts departing soldiers rather than the return of a victim of war.{{Citation needed|date=August 2020}}
Curry's few semi-political paintings evolved out of his personal experiences rather than created as a display of social commentary. ''The Return of Private Davis,'' completed in 1940, was first witnessed near his home in 1918, and a similar study was made in France during 1926. Schmeckebier relates this painting to the ceremony of baptism: "a rural religious ceremony whose tragedy is intensified by the realization that this son of the fresh green Kansas prairies was sacrificed on a battlefield whose ideological remoteness was as dramatic as its geographical makeup."<ref name="Laurence E. Schmeckebier">Schmeckebier, Laurence E. ''John Steuart Curry's Pageant of America''. New York: American Artists Group Inc., 1943.</ref>{{page needed|date=August 2020}} The painting does not express a political spectacle, rather Curry's personal feelings. Conversely, ''Parade to War'' depicts departing soldiers rather than the return of a victim of war.{{Citation needed|date=August 2020}}


Along with war scenes Curry also produced manhunt and fugitive subjects. These ideas were inspired by remembrances from his own childhood, but were also observed from publicized events during the early 1930s. The [[Lindbergh kidnapping]] and [[John Dillinger]]'s crime spree were well known and public deaths such as [[lynching]]s were often the result of such crimes. In addition, the plight of black male victims of lynching became a focus of attention. Curry's painting, ''The Fugitive,'' showing a black man hiding from a mob, appeared in a 1935 exhibition, "An Art Commentary on Lynching," organized in support of [[Dyer Anti-Lynching Bill| national anti-lynching legislation]] (which never passed, then or later).<ref>{{cite book|editor = Patricia Junker |title=John Steuart Curry: Inventing the Middle West|year=1998|publisher=Hudson Hills Press in association with the Elvehjem Museum of Art, University of Wisconsin-Madison|location=New York|isbn=1-55595-139-2|page=227}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal|last=Baigell|first=Matthew|title=The Relevancy of Curry's Paintings of Black Freedom|journal=Kansas Quarterly|date=Fall 1970|volume=2|issue=4|page=21}}</ref> These earlier political works would influence later Curry's mural work in the Department of Justice Building.<ref name="Laurence E. Schmeckebier" /> Located "above the entrance to the Justice Department library" is Curry's painting, ''Law vs. Mob Rule'' in which a judge in black robes protects a man who has collapsed on the courthouse steps from a lynch mob.<ref>{{cite book | title=When art worked | publisher=Rizzoli |author1=Kennedy, Roger G. |author2=David Larkin | year=2009 | location=New York | pages = 63–64 | isbn=978-0-8478-3089-3}}</ref>
Along with war scenes, Curry also produced manhunt and fugitive subjects. These ideas were inspired by remembrances from his own childhood, but were also observed from publicized events during the early 1930s. The [[Lindbergh kidnapping]] and [[John Dillinger]]'s crime spree were well known and public deaths such as [[lynching]]s were often the result of such crimes. In addition, the plight of black male victims of lynching became a focus of attention. Curry's painting, ''The Fugitive,'' showing a black man hiding from a mob, appeared in a 1935 exhibition, "An Art Commentary on Lynching," organized in support of [[Dyer Anti-Lynching Bill|national anti-lynching legislation]] (which never passed; anti-lynching legislation was only passed at the federal level in 2022).<ref>{{cite book|editor = Patricia Junker |title=John Steuart Curry: Inventing the Middle West|year=1998|publisher=Hudson Hills Press in association with the Elvehjem Museum of Art, University of Wisconsin-Madison|location=New York|isbn=1-55595-139-2|page=227}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal|last=Baigell|first=Matthew|title=The Relevancy of Curry's Paintings of Black Freedom|journal=Kansas Quarterly|date=Fall 1970|volume=2|issue=4|page=21}}</ref><ref>{{cite news |last1=Cineas |first1=Fabiola |title=What an anti-lynching law means in 2022 |url=https://www.vox.com/22995013/anti-lynching-act-emmett-till |access-date=17 April 2023}}</ref> These earlier political works would influence later Curry's mural work in the Department of Justice Building.<ref name="Laurence E. Schmeckebier" /> Located "above the entrance to the Justice Department library" is Curry's painting, ''Law vs. Mob Rule'' in which a judge in black robes protects a man who has collapsed on the courthouse steps from a lynch mob.<ref>{{cite book | title=When art worked | publisher=Rizzoli |author1=Kennedy, Roger G. |author2=David Larkin | year=2009 | location=New York | pages = 63–64 | isbn=978-0-8478-3089-3}}</ref>


==Reactions and legacy==
==Reactions and legacy==
Despite popularity in the rest of the country, Curry's works did not find favor in Kansas. He was taken as ridiculing the worst aspects of the state. Kansans felt the inclusion of outdoor baptisms and tornadoes perpetuated negative stereotypes about the state.<ref name=Kendall/>{{rp|26}} When these paintings were displayed in New York galleries many Kansans felt belittled. However, the New York public was fascinated by Curry's paintings. Curry's paintings were entertaining and easy to grasp, and allowed viewers to see a more primitive, isolated, non-commercial version of America.<ref name= Kendall/>{{page number needed|date=August 2020}}
Despite popularity in the rest of the country, Curry's works did not find favor in Kansas. He was taken as ridiculing the worst aspects of the state. Kansans felt the inclusion of outdoor baptisms and tornadoes perpetuated negative stereotypes about the state.<ref name=Kendall/>{{rp|26}} When these paintings were displayed in New York galleries many Kansans felt belittled. However, the New York public was fascinated by Curry's paintings. Curry's paintings were entertaining and easy to grasp, and allowed viewers to see a more primitive, isolated, non-commercial version of America.<ref name= Kendall/>{{page number needed|date=August 2020}}


{{quote|John Steuart Curry never forgot that he came off a Kansas farm, that his folks were plain Kansas folks whose lives were spent with the plain, simple, elemental things of the earth and sky. His art and the meanings of his art were never cut loose from this background. To the end his ideal audience was a Kansas audience. Dealing with what that audience experienced and knew about, John wanted its appreciation more than anything else. He didn't get it.<ref>{{cite news
{{blockquote|John Steuart Curry never forgot that he came off a Kansas farm, that his folks were plain Kansas folks whose lives were spent with the plain, simple, elemental things of the earth and sky. His art and the meanings of his art were never cut loose from this background. To the end his ideal audience was a Kansas audience. Dealing with what that audience experienced and knew about, John wanted its appreciation more than anything else. He didn't get it.<ref>{{cite news
|author-link=Thomas Hart Benton (painter)
|author-link=Thomas Hart Benton (painter)
|first=Thomas Hart
|first=Thomas Hart
Line 171: Line 143:
|title=Two Measure by John Steuart Curry Define Rejection by Fellow Kansans}}</ref>}}
|title=Two Measure by John Steuart Curry Define Rejection by Fellow Kansans}}</ref>}}


In 1992 the Kansas Legislature apologized for its treatment of Curry, and purchased the drawings related to his murals.<ref>{{cite journal
In 1992, the Kansas Legislature apologized for its treatment of Curry and purchased the drawings related to his murals.<ref>{{cite journal
|title=My Experience With John Steuart Curry and His Widow
|title=My Experience With John Steuart Curry and His Widow
|last=Lambert
|last=Lambert
Line 181: Line 153:
|via=[[Academic Search Complete]]
|via=[[Academic Search Complete]]
|url= http://connection.ebscohost.com/c/articles/12697215}}</ref>
|url= http://connection.ebscohost.com/c/articles/12697215}}</ref>
<ref name="PBS">{{Cite web |url=https://www.pbs.org/newshour/bb/entertainment/july-dec98/curry_8-13.html |title=PBS "Online News Hour: John Steuart Curry" |access-date=September 2, 2017 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140122001748/http://www.pbs.org/newshour/bb/entertainment/july-dec98/curry_8-13.html |archive-date=January 22, 2014 |url-status=dead }}</ref>
<ref name="PBS">{{Cite web |url=https://www.pbs.org/newshour/bb/entertainment/july-dec98/curry_8-13.html |title=PBS "Online News Hour: John Steuart Curry" |website=[[PBS]] |access-date=September 2, 2017 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140122001748/http://www.pbs.org/newshour/bb/entertainment/july-dec98/curry_8-13.html |archive-date=January 22, 2014 |url-status=dead }}</ref>


==List of art works==
==List of art works==
Line 187: Line 159:
[[File:FWA-PBA-Paintings and Sculptures for Public Buildings-painting depicting race involving people in wagons, on... - NARA - 197273.tif|thumb|250px|''The Oklahoma Land Rush, April 22, 1889'']]
[[File:FWA-PBA-Paintings and Sculptures for Public Buildings-painting depicting race involving people in wagons, on... - NARA - 197273.tif|thumb|250px|''The Oklahoma Land Rush, April 22, 1889'']]
{{main|List of artwork by John Steuart Curry}}
{{main|List of artwork by John Steuart Curry}}
''This is a list of some of Curry's most notable works, arranged by date.
''This is a list of some of Curry's most notable works, arranged by date.''
*''[[Baptism in Kansas]]'', oil on canvas, 1928, [[Whitney Museum of American Art]], New York City.
*''[[Baptism in Kansas]]'', oil on canvas, 1928, [[Whitney Museum of American Art]], New York City.
*''The Old Folks'' (Mother and Father), oil on canvas, 1929, [[Cincinnati Art Museum]], Cincinnati, OH.
*''The Old Folks'' (Mother and Father), oil on canvas, 1929, [[Cincinnati Art Museum]], Cincinnati, OH.
*''The Roadworkers Camp'', oil on canvas, 1929, F.M. Hall Collection, University of Nebraska, Lincoln.
*''The Roadworkers Camp'', oil on canvas, 1929, F.M. Hall Collection, University of Nebraska, Lincoln.
*''Storm Over Lake Otsego'', oil on canvas, 1929, collection of Mrs. Polly Thayer Starr, [[Boston, Massachusetts]].
*''Storm Over Lake Otsego'', oil on canvas, 1929, collection of Mrs. Polly Thayer Starr, [[Boston, Massachusetts]].
*''Tornado Over Kansas'', oil on canvas, 1929, Muskegon Museum of Art, [[Muskegon, Michigan]].
*''[[Tornado over Kansas]]'', oil on canvas, 1929, Muskegon Museum of Art, [[Muskegon, Michigan]].
*''State Fair'', oil on canvas, 1929, [[Huntington Library]], San Marino, CA.
*''Hogs Killing a Snake'', oil on canvas, c.1930, [[Art Institute of Chicago]].
*''Hogs Killing a Snake'', oil on canvas, c.1930, [[Art Institute of Chicago]].
*''The Medicine Man'', oil on canvas, 1931, collection of William Benton, [[Chicago, Illinois]].
*''The Medicine Man'', oil on canvas, 1931, collection of William Benton, [[Chicago, Illinois]].
Line 202: Line 175:
*''[[Ajax (painting)|Ajax]]'', oil on canvas, 1936–37, [[Smithsonian American Art Museum]], Washington, D.C.
*''[[Ajax (painting)|Ajax]]'', oil on canvas, 1936–37, [[Smithsonian American Art Museum]], Washington, D.C.
*''The Oklahoma Land Rush, April 22, 1889'', commissioned 1937, installed 1939
*''The Oklahoma Land Rush, April 22, 1889'', commissioned 1937, installed 1939
*''[[Tragic Prelude]]'', 1938–40, [[Kansas State Capitol]]
*''[[Tragic Prelude]]'', 1937–1942, [[Kansas State Capitol]]
*''Madison Landscape'', oil and tempera on canvas, 1941, [[Madison Museum of Contemporary Art]], Madison, WI
*''Madison Landscape'', oil and tempera on canvas, 1941, [[Madison Museum of Contemporary Art]], Madison, WI


Line 223: Line 196:
*''John Steuart Curry: A Catalogue of Reason'', edited by Sylvan Cole Jr. New York: Basso Printing Corporation, 1976.
*''John Steuart Curry: A Catalogue of Reason'', edited by Sylvan Cole Jr. New York: Basso Printing Corporation, 1976.
*Czestochowski, Joseph S. ''John Steuart Curry and Grant Wood: A Portrait of Rural America''. Columbia: University of Missouri Press and Cedar Rapids Art Association, 1981.
*Czestochowski, Joseph S. ''John Steuart Curry and Grant Wood: A Portrait of Rural America''. Columbia: University of Missouri Press and Cedar Rapids Art Association, 1981.
*Dennis, James M. ''Renegade Regionalists: The Modern Independence of Grant Wood, Thomas Hart Benton, ''and John Steuart Curry''. Wisconsin: University of Wisconsin Press, 1998.
*Dennis, James M. ''Renegade Regionalists: The Modern Independence of Grant Wood, Thomas Hart Benton, and John Steuart Curry''. Wisconsin: University of Wisconsin Press, 1998.
*Junker, Patricia. ''John Steuart Curry: Inventing the Middle West''. Arizona: Traditional Fine Arts Organization Inc., 2005.
*Junker, Patricia. ''John Steuart Curry: Inventing the Middle West''. Arizona: Traditional Fine Arts Organization Inc., 2005.
*Kendall, M. Sue. ''Rethinking Regionalism: John Steuart Curry and the Kansas Mural Controversy''. ''Washington, D.C.: Smithsonian Institutian Press, 1986.''
*Kendall, M. Sue. ''Rethinking Regionalism: John Steuart Curry and the Kansas Mural Controversy''. ''Washington, D.C.: Smithsonian Institutian Press, 1986.''
Line 235: Line 208:
|issue=1
|issue=1
|via=[[Academic Search Complete]]
|via=[[Academic Search Complete]]
|url= http://connection.ebscohost.com/c/articles/101785227}}</ref>
|url= http://connection.ebscohost.com/c/articles/101785227}}
*Mayer, Lance and Gay Myers. "Old Master Recipes in the 1920s, 1930s, and 1940s: Curry, Marsh, Doerner, and Maroger." Journal of the American Institute for Conservation 41, no. 1 (Spring, 2002): 21–42.
*Mayer, Lance and Gay Myers. "Old Master Recipes in the 1920s, 1930s, and 1940s: Curry, Marsh, Doerner, and Maroger." Journal of the American Institute for Conservation 41, no. 1 (Spring, 2002): 21–42.
*Schmeckebier, Laurence. "John Steuart Curry" Obituaries, College Art Journal. College Art Association v.6.1 (1946): 59–60.
*Schmeckebier, Laurence. "John Steuart Curry" Obituaries, College Art Journal. College Art Association v.6.1 (1946): 59–60.
*Schmeckebier, Lawrence E. ''John Steuart Curry's Pageant of America''. American Artists Group Inc., 1943.
*Schmeckebier, Lawrence E. ''John Steuart Curry's Pageant of America''. American Artists Group Inc., 1943.
*KSHS."[http://www.kshs.org/cool2/curry.htm Curry's Statehouse Studies]" Kansas State Historical Society.
*KSHS."[http://www.kshs.org/cool2/curry.htm Curry's Statehouse Studies]" Kansas State Historical Society.
*PBS. "[https://www.pbs.org/newshour/bb/entertainment/july-dec98/curry_8-13.html Online News Hour: John Steuart Curry]" PBS.
*PBS. "[https://www.pbs.org/newshour/bb/entertainment/july-dec98/curry_8-13.html Online News Hour: John Steuart Curry] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140122001748/http://www.pbs.org/newshour/bb/entertainment/july-dec98/curry_8-13.html |date=January 22, 2014 }}" PBS.


==External links==
==External links==
Line 249: Line 222:
|date=March 25, 2017
|date=March 25, 2017
|others=For teachers.
|others=For teachers.
|quote= "Teach close reading skills, symbolism, and shifting historical 'truths' with [[John Steuart Curry]]'s ''Tragic Prelude''."
|quote= "Teach close reading skills, symbolism, and shifting historical 'truths' with John Steuart Curry's ''Tragic Prelude''."
|access-date=March 15, 2020
|access-date=March 15, 2020
|url=https://charlesmcquillen.com/john-steuart-curry-tragic-prelude-english-language-arts-lesson-plan/}}
|url=https://charlesmcquillen.com/john-steuart-curry-tragic-prelude-english-language-arts-lesson-plan/}}
*[http://www.aaa.si.edu/collections/john-steuart-curry-and-curry-family-papers-9459 John Steuart Curry and Curry family papers, 1848-1999] from the Smithsonian [[Archives of American Art]]
*[http://www.aaa.si.edu/collections/john-steuart-curry-and-curry-family-papers-9459 John Steuart Curry and Curry family papers, 1848-1999] from the Smithsonian [[Archives of American Art]]
*[http://www.davidrumsey.com/amica/amico266410-123874.html John Steuart Curry / Baptism in Kansas / 1928<!-- bot-generated title -->] at www.davidrumsey.com| The AMICA Library- John Steuart Curry
*[http://www.davidrumsey.com/amica/amico266410-123874.html John Steuart Curry / Baptism in Kansas / 1928<!-- bot-generated title -->] at www.davidrumsey.com| The AMICA Library- John Steuart Curry
*[https://www.pbs.org/newshour/bb/entertainment/july-dec98/curry_8-13.html PBS Online News Hour – John Steuart Curry]
*[https://www.pbs.org/newshour/bb/entertainment/july-dec98/curry_8-13.html PBS Online News Hour – John Steuart Curry] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140122001748/http://www.pbs.org/newshour/bb/entertainment/july-dec98/curry_8-13.html |date=January 22, 2014 }}
* [http://www.muskegonartmuseum.org/index.php?option=com_igallery&view=gallery&Itemid=23 Muskegon (Michigan, USA) Museum of Art] housing ''Tornado Over Kansas'' (1929)
* [http://www.muskegonartmuseum.org/index.php?option=com_igallery&view=gallery&Itemid=23 Muskegon (Michigan, USA) Museum of Art] housing ''Tornado over Kansas'' (1929)
*[http://www.kansastravel.org/oldjeffersontown.htm John Steuart Curry boyhood home & museum]
*[http://www.kansastravel.org/oldjeffersontown.htm John Steuart Curry boyhood home & museum]
*[http://www.askart.com/AskART/artists/search/Search_Repeat.aspx?searchtype=IMAGES&artist=6583 John Curry Artwork Examples on AskART.]
*[http://www.askart.com/AskART/artists/search/Search_Repeat.aspx?searchtype=IMAGES&artist=6583 John Curry Artwork Examples on AskART.]
*[http://www.aaa.si.edu/collections/don-anderson-papers-concerning-john-steuart-curry-5631 Don Anderson papers relating to John Steuart Curry, 1942–1973] from the Smithsonian [[Archives of American Art]]
*[http://www.aaa.si.edu/collections/don-anderson-papers-concerning-john-steuart-curry-5631 Don Anderson papers relating to John Steuart Curry, 1942–1973] from the Smithsonian [[Archives of American Art]]


{{John Steuart Curry}}
{{John Steuart Curry|state=expanded}}
{{Authority control}}
{{Authority control}}


Line 277: Line 250:
[[Category:Federal Art Project artists]]
[[Category:Federal Art Project artists]]
[[Category:University of Wisconsin–Madison staff]]
[[Category:University of Wisconsin–Madison staff]]
[[Category:People from Westport, Connecticut]]
[[Category:Artists from Westport, Connecticut]]
[[Category:School of the Art Institute of Chicago alumni]]
[[Category:School of the Art Institute of Chicago alumni]]
[[Category:20th-century American male artists]]
[[Category:Members of the American Academy of Arts and Letters]]

Latest revision as of 03:32, 28 February 2024

John Steuart Curry
Self-portrait, 1937
Born
John Steuart Curry

(1897-11-14)November 14, 1897
DiedAugust 29, 1946(1946-08-29) (aged 48)
Known forPainting
Notable workBaptism in Kansas (1928), Tornado over Kansas (1929), Tragic Prelude (1937–1942)
MovementRegionalism

John Steuart Curry (November 14, 1897 – August 29, 1946) was an American painter whose career spanned the years from 1924 until his death. He was noted for his paintings depicting rural life in his home state, Kansas. Along with Thomas Hart Benton and Grant Wood, he was hailed as one of the three great painters of American Regionalism of the first half of the twentieth century. Curry's artistic production was varied, including paintings, book illustrations, prints, and posters.

Curry was Kansas's best-known painter, but his works were not popular with Kansans, who felt that he did not portray the state positively. Curry's paintings often depicted farm life and animals, tornadoes, prairie fires, and the violent Bleeding Kansas period (featuring abolitionist John Brown, who at the time was derided as a fanatical traitor) – subjects that Kansans did not want to be representative of the state. Curry was commissioned to create murals for the Kansas State Capitol, and he completed two: Kansas Pastoral, and his most famous and controversial work, Tragic Prelude, which he considered his greatest. Reaction was so negative that the Kansas Legislature passed a measure to keep them, or future works of his, from being hung on the capitol walls. As a result, Curry did not sign the works, which were not hung during his lifetime. He left Topeka in disgust; his planned eight smaller murals for the Capitol rotunda on the first floor never went beyond sketches, now held by the Kansas Museum of History.

Curry's works were painted with movement, which was conveyed by the free brush work and energized forms that characterized his style. His control over brushstrokes created excited emotions such as fear and despair in his paintings. His fellow Regionalists, who also painted action and movement, influenced Curry's style.

Biography[edit]

Curry was born on a farm in Dunavant, Kansas, November 14, 1897; the house has been moved to Oskaloosa and there are plans to make a museum of it. He was the eldest of five children to parents Thomas Smith Curry and Margaret Steuart Curry. Despite living on a Midwestern farm, both of Curry's parents were college educated and had even visited Europe for their honeymoon. Curry's early life consisted of caring for the animals on the farm, attending the nearby high school and excelling in athletics. His childhood home was filled with many reproductions of Peter Paul Rubens and Gustave Doré, and these artists' styles played a significant role in crafting Curry's own style.

His family was very religious, as were most people in Dunavant. Curry was encouraged to paint animals around the farm, and at the age of twelve he had his first art lesson. In 1916 he entered the Kansas City Art Institute, but after only a month there he transferred to the Art Institute of Chicago, where he stayed for two years. In 1918 he attended Geneva College in Beaver Falls, Pennsylvania. After he graduated, Curry worked as an illustrator from 1921 to 1926. He worked for several magazines, including Boys' Life, St. Nicholas Magazine, The Country Gentleman, and The Saturday Evening Post.

In 1926, Curry spent a year in Paris studying the works of Gustave Courbet and Honoré Daumier, as well as the color techniques of Titian and Rubens. After his return to the United States he settled in New York City and married Clara Derrick; shortly thereafter, they moved to an artists' colony in Westport, Connecticut. Clara died in June 1932 and for the next two years Curry devoted his time to working in his studio. He traveled briefly with the Ringling Brothers Circus and during his time with them created his painting The Flying Cadonas. He remarried in 1934 to Kathleen Gould.[citation needed]

In 1936, Curry was appointed as the first artist-in-residence at the College of Agriculture of the University of Wisconsin, which built him a small studio. He had no classes to teach nor any specific duties; he was free to travel throughout the state and promote art in farming communities by providing personal instruction to students. As seen later, the experience turned Curry into a conservationist, especially concerned with Kansas's man-made ecological disaster, the plowing that produced horrible erosion in Kansas, along with Dust Bowl storms.[citation needed]

The same year he was commissioned to paint a mural for the Department of Justice Building and Main Interior Building in Washington. In 1937 he was elected into the National Academy of Design as an Associate Member, and became a full Academician in 1943. This was followed with what might have been the crown of his career, a commission to paint murals on Kansas topics for the Kansas State Capitol at Topeka, on which abortive project see below.

Curry continued to work at the University of Wisconsin until he died of a heart attack in Madison in 1946, at the age of 48.

Curry and regionalistic art[edit]

Curry was one of the three great painters of American regionalistic art; the others were Thomas Hart Benton and Grant Wood. All three were from the Midwest, west of the Mississippi: Wood from Iowa, Benton from Missouri, and Curry from Kansas. Their art presents a nostalgic look at rural life in the American heartland. Regionalism was essentially a revolt against at least one major evil of the industrial revolution: centralization.

Centralization of manufacturing permitted mass production, with efficient factories and assembly-line production. This reduced the cost of manufactured goods, but at the expense of regional or local variety and initiative. The Wall Street Crash of 1929 and the subsequent Great Depression demonstrated the limitations and failures of capitalism. Rugged depictions of regional, independent life in wide-open spaces provided an alternative. As put by Meyer Schapiro, "Regionalism obscured the crucial forces of history, as defined by Marx, and provided entertaining distractions from the realities facing oppressed people."

In contrast with Wood, who lived in Iowa, and Benton in Missouri, Curry did not live in Kansas as an adult. As seen by Curry, nostalgia for rural Kansan life ignored its shortcomings: tornados, prairie fires, dust storms, plagues of insects, and life-threatening floods. The depiction of the same in his paintings had as consequence the reservations some Kansans felt about seeing him, without qualification, as Kansas's great painter. In fact, as he well knew, his works did not sell in Kansas.: 33, 37 

The University of Wisconsin hired him in 1936 as artist-in-residence, something no Kansas university would do.: 19  At Wisconsin, based in the College of Agriculture, Curry became a conservationist. What some Kansans found particularly offensive was his stated plan to portray the tragedy of soil erosion in one of his planned murals for the Kansas Capitol, providing a "significant warning" to Kansas farmers that they had brought on an ecological disaster. He was surprised when these plans met with local resentment.: 124 

Curry and Wisconsin[edit]

John Curry wanted to come home to Kansas last year [1935], tried to get some sort of a status in some Kansas college. Hard times and one thing or another kept him out. His heart turned back to Kansas and much good it did him. He wanted to honor the state by coming here to live but 'there was no room at the inn.' So John Curry has gone to Wisconsin State university [the University of Wisconsin] where they have provided a job for him and where he is known as 'an [artist] in residence.' They have built him a small studio on the campus and have turned him loose without much schedule and are making him an influence rather than an instructor. He teaches little and talks a lot, paints when he wants to, makes what he can on the side, and gets $4,000 a year [equivalent to $87,827 in 2023] as a salary. Wisconsin will reap the seed of his genius which was sown in Kansas.

Freeing of the Slaves, by John Steuart Curry. The Union Army, marching through, has just delivered the Emancipation Proclamation. Reading Room, Law Library, University of Wisconsin–Madison.

Curry was thought of in his day as the great Kansas painter,[2]: 21  and it was no secret that he wanted to paint murals for Kansas; he confirmed this to a reporter.[2]: 19  However, his relationship with Kansas was complicated. He lived in Connecticut and declined repeated suggestions that he move back to his home state; instead, he moved to Wisconsin when its University offered him in 1936 what no Kansas institution would: a position as artist-in-residence. He remained there until his death in 1946.[2]: 17–19 [3] While at Wisconsin he completed in 1942 a 37 feet (11 m) by 14 feet (4.3 m) mural on the Emancipation Proclamation, titled Freeing of the Slaves.[4] It was originally intended, in 1936, for the new U.S. Department of Justice Building, but sketches were rejected by federal officials, who told Curry that they feared that “serious difficulties...might arise as a result of the racial implications of the subject matter.” Curry painted two other murals in that building, Movement of the Population Westward and Law versus Mob Rule. However, the design caught the attention of Wisconsin Law School dean Lloyd K. Garrison, great-grandson of the famous abolitionist Wm. Lloyd Garrison, who had it installed in the Reading Room of the new Law School library.[5]

Curry and Kansas[edit]

In his many Kansas-themed works, he wanted to present a "personal view" of Kansas history. "I want to picture what I feel about my native state."[2]: 43  In preparation for the crowning project of his career, the Kansas Capitol murals, he spent several days in the Kansas Historical Society and the Topeka Public Library studying Kansas history.[2]: 43  As he put it, he wanted to "wreak good" upon Kansas.[2]: 125 

Curry painted Kansas as he saw it, warts and all. His planned pieces for the first-floor rotunda of the Kansas Capitol, which never got beyond preliminary sketches, included one on conservation and erosion. Curry expressed the view of the professors in the College of Agriculture, that Kansas farmers' poor soil management caused the erosion and dust storms of 1930s Kansas.[citation needed]

This displeased many Kansans, who did not want soil erosion, or the alleged errors of Kansas farmers, in their Capitol. Furthermore, John Brown was a convicted traitor, and in the opinion of many, a kook. The opposition grew so bitter that Curry abandoned his great Kansas Capitol project in disgust. He refused to sign the two works completed or allow them to be hung, as he said they were intended to be seen as part of a group. They were hung in the Capitol after his death.[citation needed]

Baptism in Kansas[edit]

In August 1928, Curry painted Baptism in Kansas, which was exhibited at the Corcoran Gallery in Washington, D.C., and met with almost instant success.[2]: 22  The painting was praised in the New York Times and earned Curry the attention of Mrs. Gertrude Vanderbilt Whitney. In 1931 Mrs. Vanderbilt Whitney purchased the painting for the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York City, thus establishing him as a major artist.[citation needed]

Baptism in Kansas reflected the religious sects that held open-air baptisms. These popular religious groups were part of the scene of rural life that Curry saw in Kansas. He presents the scene with reverence.[citation needed]

No well-known Baptismal representations by old world masters employ the unique compositional layout that Curry favors. Curry's painting was a shock to Easterners who would have never associated a baptism with full immersion or with a barnyard setting, but Curry painted what he was familiar with, as Lawrence Shmeckebrier said he "saw this scene as conceived and executed with sincere reverence and understanding of one who had lived it."[6] Curry's religious painting is therefore an observance rather than a satire on religious fundamentalism.[citation needed]

Tornado over Kansas[edit]

Tornado over Kansas

Under Mrs. Whitney's patronage Curry painted Tornado over Kansas, which depicts a farmer facing an approaching tornado while he and his wife help the family and animals into the tornado shelter. The painting was unveiled in 1929 just before the Wall Street Crash in October and provided those in the city with the romance of man versus nature themes. Typical of Curry's work of the 1930s, he depicted scenes of labor, family, and land, in order to demonstrate peace, struggle, and perseverance that he had come to believe was the essence of American life, the spirit of Kansas.

Kansas Pastoral[edit]

Kansas Pastoral is the first of two murals completed for the Kansas Capitol. It presents a fictional agrarian utopia. The farmer is at leisure; the farm, its crops, and its animals are marvels of order, and seem to run themselves. The manual labor of the farm woman is no longer needed, and she can devote herself to the home.[2]: 107 

Tragic Prelude[edit]

Tragic Prelude presents a visual history of Kansas: the first Europeans, Juan de Padilla and Coronado, followed by a plainsman hunting buffalos, and finally the Bleeding Kansas period of 1854–1861. During this period, when Kansas was the focus of national attention like no time before or since, "old" John Brown, believing he was doing the Lord's work, and well-armed, led anti-slavery settlers in resisting, with violence if unfortunately necessary, the attempts to make Kansas a slave state. Kansas' status was not resolved until the beginning of the Civil War, when six slave states had seceded, and it could come into the Union as a free state.[citation needed]

Brown's role during the Bleeding Kansas period—he was also an Underground Railroad conductor—was not widely remembered outside of Kansas. However, his name was familiar to anyone who had had a course in American history, as he was widely believed to have helped cause the Civil War, and on purpose, with his raid on the federal arsenal in Harpers Ferry, Virginia (since 1863, West Virginia). He was quickly convicted of treason against the state of Virginia, murder, and fomenting a slave insurrection, and hung. "John Brown's Body" was the marching song of Union soldiers.[citation needed]

Tragic Prelude puts Brown in front of the troops killing each other. In the background, approaching tornado and prairie fires suggest the calamity, the Civil War, that was fast approaching, and that Brown seemed to be calling for.[citation needed]

The painting produced a negative reaction in advance of its being hung. (It was not hung until after Curry's death.) John Brown, convicted of treason against the state of Virginia, was not someone most Kansans felt proud of, nor was the Bleeding Kansas period as a whole. Adding to public consternation was Curry's plan to portray ruinous soil erosion, in Kansas a very controversial and political topic, in another mural. The Legislature could not fire Curry since he was being paid out of funds newspaper editors raised from the public. However, they withdrew permission for Curry's works to be hung in the Capitol.[citation needed]

This was devastating to Curry. He left Kansas in disgust and refused to sign the two murals he did complete, saying that they could not be understood in isolation.[citation needed]

Political art[edit]

Curry's art, in general, was conservative in political content. He believed that art was for the common person. He did not believe in political propaganda, particularly the Marxist kind that Diego Rivera popularized in the 1930s. Curry avoided exploiting the controversial subjects in which Rivera became involved because he did not believe they added any artistic quality to his work.[citation needed] However, Curry did create a few political sketches or studies, but these were never expanded on for larger projects. Rather, he enjoyed observing public events and capturing them on paper.[citation needed]

Curry's few semi-political paintings evolved out of his personal experiences rather than created as a display of social commentary. The Return of Private Davis, completed in 1940, was first witnessed near his home in 1918, and a similar study was made in France during 1926. Schmeckebier relates this painting to the ceremony of baptism: "a rural religious ceremony whose tragedy is intensified by the realization that this son of the fresh green Kansas prairies was sacrificed on a battlefield whose ideological remoteness was as dramatic as its geographical makeup."[7][page needed] The painting does not express a political spectacle, rather Curry's personal feelings. Conversely, Parade to War depicts departing soldiers rather than the return of a victim of war.[citation needed]

Along with war scenes, Curry also produced manhunt and fugitive subjects. These ideas were inspired by remembrances from his own childhood, but were also observed from publicized events during the early 1930s. The Lindbergh kidnapping and John Dillinger's crime spree were well known and public deaths such as lynchings were often the result of such crimes. In addition, the plight of black male victims of lynching became a focus of attention. Curry's painting, The Fugitive, showing a black man hiding from a mob, appeared in a 1935 exhibition, "An Art Commentary on Lynching," organized in support of national anti-lynching legislation (which never passed; anti-lynching legislation was only passed at the federal level in 2022).[8][9][10] These earlier political works would influence later Curry's mural work in the Department of Justice Building.[7] Located "above the entrance to the Justice Department library" is Curry's painting, Law vs. Mob Rule in which a judge in black robes protects a man who has collapsed on the courthouse steps from a lynch mob.[11]

Reactions and legacy[edit]

Despite popularity in the rest of the country, Curry's works did not find favor in Kansas. He was taken as ridiculing the worst aspects of the state. Kansans felt the inclusion of outdoor baptisms and tornadoes perpetuated negative stereotypes about the state.[2]: 26  When these paintings were displayed in New York galleries many Kansans felt belittled. However, the New York public was fascinated by Curry's paintings. Curry's paintings were entertaining and easy to grasp, and allowed viewers to see a more primitive, isolated, non-commercial version of America.[2][page needed]

John Steuart Curry never forgot that he came off a Kansas farm, that his folks were plain Kansas folks whose lives were spent with the plain, simple, elemental things of the earth and sky. His art and the meanings of his art were never cut loose from this background. To the end his ideal audience was a Kansas audience. Dealing with what that audience experienced and knew about, John wanted its appreciation more than anything else. He didn't get it.[12]

In 1992, the Kansas Legislature apologized for its treatment of Curry and purchased the drawings related to his murals.[13] [14]

List of art works[edit]

Ajax
The Oklahoma Land Rush, April 22, 1889

This is a list of some of Curry's most notable works, arranged by date.

Exhibitions[edit]

Archival material[edit]

The Kansas Historical Society has Curry's preliminary sketches for the State Capitol murals.

References[edit]

  1. ^ White, William Allen (November 6, 1936). "(Untitled)". Winchester Star (Winchester, Kansas). First published in the Emporia Gazette, then reprinted in the Topeka Capital, then in the Winchester Star. White was editor of the Emporia Gazette. p. 4 – via newspapers.com.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Kendall, M. Sue. (1986). Rethinking Regionalism: John Steuart Curry and the Kansas Mural Controversy'. Washington, D.C.: Smithsonian Institution Press. ISBN 0874745683.
  3. ^ Jaffe, Irma B. (Spring 1987). "Religious Content in the Painting of John Steuart Curry". Winterthur Portfolio. 22 (1): 23–45. doi:10.1086/496310. JSTOR 118146. S2CID 161509928.
  4. ^ "Murals, with Curry Sauce". Time. Vol. 40, no. 2. July 13, 1942 – via Academic Search Complete (Ebsco).
  5. ^ Shucha, Bonnie (November 2017). "The 75th Anniversary of John Steuart Curry's Freeing of the Slaves mural" (PDF). [University of Wisconsin–Madison] Libraries: 24–25.
  6. ^ Dennis, James M. Renegade Regionalists: The Modern Independence of Grant Wood, Thomas Hart Benton, and John Steuart Curry. Wisconsin: University of Wisconsin Press, 1998.
  7. ^ a b Schmeckebier, Laurence E. John Steuart Curry's Pageant of America. New York: American Artists Group Inc., 1943.
  8. ^ Patricia Junker, ed. (1998). John Steuart Curry: Inventing the Middle West. New York: Hudson Hills Press in association with the Elvehjem Museum of Art, University of Wisconsin-Madison. p. 227. ISBN 1-55595-139-2.
  9. ^ Baigell, Matthew (Fall 1970). "The Relevancy of Curry's Paintings of Black Freedom". Kansas Quarterly. 2 (4): 21.
  10. ^ Cineas, Fabiola. "What an anti-lynching law means in 2022". Retrieved April 17, 2023.
  11. ^ Kennedy, Roger G.; David Larkin (2009). When art worked. New York: Rizzoli. pp. 63–64. ISBN 978-0-8478-3089-3.
  12. ^ Benton, Thomas Hart (November 27, 1946). "Two Measure by John Steuart Curry Define Rejection by Fellow Kansans". Kansas City Times. p. 20 – via newspapers.com.
  13. ^ Lambert, Don (May 2004). "My Experience With John Steuart Curry and His Widow". American Artist. 68 (742) – via Academic Search Complete.
  14. ^ "PBS "Online News Hour: John Steuart Curry"". PBS. Archived from the original on January 22, 2014. Retrieved September 2, 2017.

Further reading[edit]

  • John Steuart Curry: Rural America, edited by Mongerson Wunderlich. Chicago: ACA Galleries, 1991.
  • John Steuart Curry: A Catalogue of Reason, edited by Sylvan Cole Jr. New York: Basso Printing Corporation, 1976.
  • Czestochowski, Joseph S. John Steuart Curry and Grant Wood: A Portrait of Rural America. Columbia: University of Missouri Press and Cedar Rapids Art Association, 1981.
  • Dennis, James M. Renegade Regionalists: The Modern Independence of Grant Wood, Thomas Hart Benton, and John Steuart Curry. Wisconsin: University of Wisconsin Press, 1998.
  • Junker, Patricia. John Steuart Curry: Inventing the Middle West. Arizona: Traditional Fine Arts Organization Inc., 2005.
  • Kendall, M. Sue. Rethinking Regionalism: John Steuart Curry and the Kansas Mural Controversy. Washington, D.C.: Smithsonian Institutian Press, 1986.
  • Kroiz, Lauren (Spring 2015). "A Jolly Lark for Amateurs". American Art. 29 (1) – via Academic Search Complete.
  • Mayer, Lance and Gay Myers. "Old Master Recipes in the 1920s, 1930s, and 1940s: Curry, Marsh, Doerner, and Maroger." Journal of the American Institute for Conservation 41, no. 1 (Spring, 2002): 21–42.
  • Schmeckebier, Laurence. "John Steuart Curry" Obituaries, College Art Journal. College Art Association v.6.1 (1946): 59–60.
  • Schmeckebier, Lawrence E. John Steuart Curry's Pageant of America. American Artists Group Inc., 1943.
  • KSHS."Curry's Statehouse Studies" Kansas State Historical Society.
  • PBS. "Online News Hour: John Steuart Curry Archived January 22, 2014, at the Wayback Machine" PBS.

External links[edit]