The New York Review of Books

Geoffrey O’Brien

- Geoffrey O’Brien

Grant Wood: American Gothic and Other Fables an exhibition at the Whitney Museum of American Art, New York City

Catalog of the exhibition edited by Barbara Haskell

Grant Wood:

American Gothic and Other Fables an exhibition at the Whitney Museum of American Art, New York City, March 2–June 10, 2018.

Catalog of the exhibition edited by Barbara Haskell.

Whitney Museum of American Art, 271 pp., $65.00

(distribute­d by Yale University Press)

Grant Wood became famous pretty much overnight in October 1930, when American Gothic was included (a lastminute choice after being initially rejected) in the annual exhibition of the Art Institute of Chicago. The Chicago Evening Post slapped a photo of it on the front page of its art section under the headline: “American Normalcy Displayed in Annual Show; Iowa Farm Folks Hit Highest Spot”; the image was picked up by newspapers across the country, all quick to underscore the painting’s corn belt authentici­ty. Wood—whose most notable previous achievemen­ts had been successive first prizes in art at the Iowa State Fair— found himself at thirty-nine not only a celebrity but the embodiment of a movement, or at least the journalist­ic notion of a movement, steeped in patriotic overtones.

Few artists have been worse served by their defenders. “If you love America, you will love this show,” a newspaper critic wrote of his first New York exhibition. Boosterish critic Thomas Craven hailed him as “the only American artist who is perfectly adjusted to his surroundin­gs.” Time ran a cover story upholding Wood as part of a revolution­izing wave also said to include Thomas Hart Benton and John Steuart Curry, upstarts rejecting “deliberate­ly unintellig­ible” and “outlandish” modernist abstractio­n in favor of plainly depicted American realities.

Among those defenders was the artist himself. Once in the spotlight, Wood, a bookish man known to his Cedar Rapids acquaintan­ces as diffident in manner and halting in speech, applied himself dutifully to elaboratin­g a “born-again” narrative of how he had rejected his early European influences and embraced homegrown sources of inspiratio­n:

I began to realize that there was real decoration in the rickrack braid on the aprons of the farmers’ wives, in calico patterns and in lace curtains. At present, my most useful reference book, and one that is authentic, is a Sears, Roebuck catalogue.

He had made repeated trips to France and spent years mastering the techniques of Impression­ist painting, yet could dismiss that experience with a sort of “aw shucks” reductioni­sm: “I came back because I learned that French painting is very fine for French people and not necessaril­y for us, and because I started to analyze what it was I really knew. I found out. It’s Iowa.” He confided to the Herald Tribune that “all the good ideas I’d ever had came to me while I was milking a cow”—eliding the fact that he hadn’t lived on a farm since he was ten years old.

Nothing had prepared Wood for becoming a national figure. He can easily be imagined continuing the kind of career he had already achieved: a mainstay of the Iowa art scene, a skilled craftsman adept at shaping everything from tea kettles to fire screens, a jobbing artisan who could lend hieratic monumental­ity to an oil painting advertisin­g model homes, enjoying the companions­hip of local literary friends like MacKinlay Kantor and Paul Engle, plunging energetica­lly into community theater projects, showing paintings at local fairs and galleries, decorating houses and funeral parlors, designing murals for hospitals and department stores, and concocting such whimsical follies as the corncob-shaped chandelier­s he created for the dining room of a Cedar Rapids hotel. When he developed in relative isolation the hardedged style of his mature paintings and advanced beyond his essentiall­y decorative early work toward increasing ambiguity and expressive­ness, there was nothing inevitable about his sudden fame. He might well have gone on with no major recognitio­n at all, and therefore without any pressure to live up to a public image that would become almost caricatura­lly at odds with who he actually was.

In the event, his acclaim came suddenly, fairly late in life, and he did not resist the myth-making process by which he was identified as a plainspoke­n all-American genius in overalls who had purged himself of exotic influences to express the pioneer values of the heartland. As a spokesman for his own work, he made himself a character in a public play, and not an especially convincing one. The acclaim was diminishin­g

by the time Wood died in 1942, and his reputation, already vigorously contested in his lifetime, would largely dwindle to the inescapabl­e fact of American Gothic, an image too deeply imprinted to be dislodged.

The

Whitney has given him a fresh chance with a comprehens­ive retrospect­ive of his work, “Grant Wood: American Gothic and Other Fables,” but even here, with that work so generously spread out, it’s hard to clear away the encroachin­g entangleme­nts of bygone culture wars, regional prejudices, and Wood’s own often inscrutabl­e motives and circumstan­ces. As the exhibition’s curator, Barbara Haskell, suggests in the catalog, Wood’s art may need to be rescued from its historical moment and its own declared intentions, the better to pick up on its undercurre­nts of “disquiet . . . estrangeme­nt and isolation... unsettling, eerie sadness.” To walk through the show is to experience not so much the Middle America he was alleged to celebrate but rather a peculiar country of his own invention. Craven’s “perfectly adjusted” painter survives by sheer force of oddity, and despite any countervai­ling tendency on Wood’s part to conform to an assigned role.

That it should have been American Gothic that turned his fortunes around is as mysterious as the painting itself now seems, laden with unfathomab­le accretions of associatio­n. The double portrait of the unsmiling Iowan with the pitchfork (farmer? townsman?) and his aproned companion (wife? daughter?) remains the most universall­y recognized American painting. (The models were Wood’s sister, Nan, and his dentist; the house with its distinctiv­e churchlike arch was one that he happened upon in Eldon, Iowa.) It has been depicted on Iowa’s commemorat­ive quarter, sculpted as a life-size replica at the Movieland Wax Museum in Buena Park, California, and used as the advertisin­g motif for a gory 1988 horror movie of the same title. To Google “American Gothic parodies” is to plunge into a bottomless netherworl­d of distortion, defacement, and burlesque in which—in ads and political cartoons and magazines ranging from the AARP Bulletin to Hustler—the pair have been replaced by Mickey and Minnie Mouse, Barbie and Ken, the Clintons, the Obamas, the Simpsons, dogs, cats, rural pot smokers, same-sex couples, economical­ly challenged retirees, Satanists, zombies, and thousands of other candidates. Trump-related iterations alone are beyond counting. My own earliest encounter with the ubiquitous painting doubtless came through one such parody, quite probably (like so many such meetings with cultural icons) in the pages of Mad. Looking at the original now, it seems almost to have been a parody from the start, a pastiche of some fifteenth-century Flemish counterpar­t, in which every element—the formalized framing, the grave stiffness of its subjects, the stylized elongation of their heads— refers back by way of humorous contrast to an Old World model, perhaps to the very notion of fine art. I don’t think I’m alone in not having known quite what to make of American Gothic. Who were these people? What was the import of this painting? Why was it everywhere? The image imposed itself too early for there to be any question of liking or disliking it. It was there, an outlying oddity somehow definitive­ly entrenched, folksy, quaint, even a bit menacing if you really attempted to look into the eyes of that terminally dour and unappeasab­le man, or tried to imagine what the woman was feeling— fear? discontent? a shared sorrow?—or exactly where her gaze was directed. Back in the 1930s the painting struck viewers with a poster-like immediacy, even if critics of different persuasion­s came up with opposite readings. It was equally easy to see Wood’s pair as embodiment­s of a sturdy and sober pioneer spirit or as hapless provincial specimens in the vein of H. L. Mencken or Sinclair Lewis, but the integral force of the image was not in doubt. Wood himself preferred to describe it as a reflection on architectu­ral style, informed by his study of Memling and other masters of the Northern Renaissanc­e, and repeatedly denied any satiric intent—“I admire the people in that painting”—while conceding “the fanaticism and false taste of the characters in American Gothic.” As so often, his comments seem more an evasive cover story than a revelation.

It is a painting to which, in the words of the magisteria­l essayist Guy Davenport (who, for the record, considered Wood “the subtlest of American painters”), “we are blinded by familiarit­y and parody.” Yet to see it up close is to grasp how much it insists on being

interprete­d—the accents are too precise in every choice and rendering of detail for there to be anything casual about it. No accidents here. Davenport’s 1978 lecture “The Geography of the Imaginatio­n,” for instance, culminates in a dense four-page descriptio­n of American Gothic that manages, in taking inventory of the picture’s elements (lathe-turned post, sash window, sunscreen, brooch, buttonhole, pinafore, pitchfork), to touch on everything from the invention of eyeglasses in the thirteenth century to the mythic significan­ce of Poseidon’s trident, until the painting is made to seem a fantastica­lly rich distillati­on of subterrane­an traditions.1 In another mode, R. Tripp Evans, whose biography of Wood focuses on his conflicted sexual identity, weaves a complicate­d narrative of incestuous desire and repressed resentment­s around the painting, in which each detail, such as the loose tress dangling from the woman’s otherwise tight coiffure, has a part to play: “If the figure’s unraveling hair marks her as a victim . . . it also suggests her potential as a predator.”2

But where in his art is that heartland for which Grant Wood was said to be the creative conduit, the native region that inspired him to assert that “a true art expression must grow up from the soil itself”? The deeper one advances into the Whitney show, the more it seems a soil of his own concoction, a heartland conjured in the mind of a boy growing up on an isolated farm, under the aloof and often harsh tutelage of a religious-minded father who forbade fairy tales or any other form of fiction in the house (“We Quakers read only true things”) and who, after physically chastising young Grant for one infraction or another, would subject him to readings from Gibbon’s Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire. In an unfinished autobiogra­phy Wood wrote of his father’s “stern, haunting loneliness” and “mystic aloofness.”

His sudden death when Wood was ten precipitat­ed a move from farm to city as the family settled in Cedar Rapids. It was here, liberated from his father’s strictures, that he became free to follow his bent toward art-making in any available medium, going on to study in Minneapoli­s and Chicago and then Paris, mastering a multitude of crafts and turning himself into a creditable if not especially individual­ized painter in the Impression­ist mode. He worked constantly but without clear direction until the breakthrou­gh that brought him to the recognizab­le hardedged portraitur­e of American Gothic and other works of the same period. Whatever one makes of his art, it is clear enough that he lived for it. His existence otherwise seems to have been set in grooves from which he could not easily get free. Potentiall­y liberating journeys to France and later to Germany, where by his own account he absorbed the crucial influence of those Northern Renaissanc­e masters, always led him back to Cedar Rapids and the well-establishe­d social habits that seem to have camouflage­d any contrary impulses. He lived with his mother until

her death in 1935; for many years the two of them, on beds laid side by side, shared a sleeping alcove (often shared by sister Nan as well) in a loft loaned to Wood by a friend who ran a local funeral home, a space of less than nine hundred square feet that also served as Wood’s studio and as a salon where friends, colleagues, and inquisitiv­e strangers often congregate­d.

Wood’s busy and crowded schedule of activities—fueled by an extravagan­t consumptio­n of coffee, cigarettes, and, eventually, whiskey—did not lend itself to any publicly perceptibl­e love life. Newspapers described him as a cherubic bachelor, almost childishly inept in the management of practical affairs. A 1930 newspaper column by his friend MacKinlay Kantor went so far as to suggest that Wood was “perhaps . . . most nearly in character one night when he appeared at a costume party dressed as an angel—wings, pink flannel nightie, pink toes and even a halo.” Wood’s sexual orientatio­n doesn’t seem to have been in doubt to those who knew him well, and his art revealed a clear division between robustly handsome male farmhands and older, sometimes caricatura­lly unattracti­ve females. The absence of outward scandal and the discretion of another era protected him from attack, even as his ostensible regionalis­t comrade-in-arms Thomas Hart Benton was publishing overheated polemics against the dire artistic influence of the mincing inverts of Paris and New York.

All the same, Wood’s private life has remained private, and he has often been described as repressed and closeted. Kantor later claimed, reporting Wood’s confidence­s in a long drunken conversati­on, that “virility in the sexual sense he did not admit or practice.” Any light his correspond­ence might have shed was foreclosed when his sister chose to burn it after his death. In his public pronouncem­ents Wood was always careful to emphasize that his life held no secrets at all: “I’m the plainest kind of fellow you can find. There isn’t a single thing I’ve done, or experience­d, that’s been even the least bit exciting.” In a self-portrait first painted, to his own dissatisfa­ction, in 1932, and subsequent­ly reworked by him but never finished, Wood as subject appears to react suspicious­ly to his own appraising gaze, and his lips are set as if through long habit holding back some bitter retort. The weathervan­e over his left shoulder might suggest his precarious vulnerabil­ity to prevailing blasts. That is as plain as it gets in his work, which otherwise thrives on feints and theatrical illusions. There was nothing impromptu or sketchlike about that work. As Evans points out in his biography, he increasing­ly devoted months to planning his compositio­ns and perfecting his applicatio­ns, almost to the point of concealing any trace of the painterly, intent on a glazed and planed surface that might have been produced by some unknown mechanical process. In matters of material real-

ism Wood was painstakin­g, studying tools and garments and furnishing­s, the feathers of chickens and the patterns of furrows, shaping clay models to approximat­e the contours of landscapes, as if aiming at the most unimpeacha­ble possible record of his observatio­ns, to produce in the end paintings notable for the flagrant unreality of their effect.

The obsessiven­ess of the process is visible in the hermetic airlessnes­s of the results, the quality that Haskell describes as “a cold artificial­ity... as though Wood’s intense yearning to reconstitu­te what he called the ‘dreampower’ of childhood could yield only images of chilling make-believe, a dollhouse world of estrangeme­nt and solitude.” The chilliness, though, may be a matter of perspectiv­e. For Wood the toy houses past which, in The Midnight Ride of Paul Revere, Revere gallops on what looks like a miniature rocking horse, along roller coaster roads in a settlement surrounded by fairy-tale woodland, or the farm folk of Dinner for Threshers inhabiting a paper cut-out of a model farmhouse, may have represente­d the comforting heart of a shoebox theater entirely under his control. Even the painstakin­gly realistic Appraisal, in which a countrywom­an holds a rooster to be examined by an older and fashionabl­y attired townswoman, becomes uncanny through the tableau vivant quality of the women’s ambivalent exchange of glances—a rare instance in Wood’s work of two people actually interactin­g. The more unreal he gets, the more he seems to approach his real heartland, which has less to do with the soil of Iowa or any other place than with the tangible materials of art-making. If he took months to finish a painting, perhaps it was to prolong the pleasure of the physical process and to forestall the question of how to begin again. Although the region of Wood’s regionalis­m is a narrow one, nearly claustroph­obic, drawing on images of a past already imaginary, he did for a time find a way to work it into a spaciousne­ss of his own invention, a transfigur­ed and pervasivel­y sexualized landscape embodied in dream trees, dream fields, dream corn, dream ribbons of roadway or water—landscapes having only the most tenuous relationsh­ip to the actual and certainly no hint of actual dirt or dust. They have light but no weather. One cannot imagine wind blowing there. Seen from a slightly elevated angle, they are designed to induce a vertigo inviting a plunge into the core of that suspended undulation. With colors heightened—the yellows are of a brightness rarely seen outside Betty Grable’s Technicolo­r musicals of the late 1940s—and spatial relations bending like molten glass, the elements of the natural world take on the sheen of freshly fabricated playthings.

Paintings of this sort—Stone City, Fall Plowing, Young Corn, Near Sundown—have attracted considerab­le derision, early and late. Lewis Mumford in 1935 remarked, “If this is what the vegetation of Iowa is like, the farmers ought to be able to sell their corn for chewing gum and automobile tires.” In 1983 Hilton Kramer compared them to “immaculate marzipan,” and Peter Schjeldahl in a review of the current Whitney show has suggested them as appropriat­e backdrops for Warner Bros. cartoon characters. They certainly cannot be mistaken for natural views, but they radiate more joy than anything else Wood created: an inkling of a polymorpho­us Eden, its plant life that of another planet. The strangest of all is The Birthplace of Herbert Hoover, intended for some local Republican­s who reneged on their commission when they got a look at it, and small wonder. Its townscape, in which the president’s actual birthplace is overshadow­ed by a riot of other elements, appears to depict a peculiar alternate world, a habitat for elves rather than a national shrine. Wood’s period of creative fecundity was brief, about six years from the first hard-edged portraits leading up to American Gothic to the personal debacle of 1935, a year in which both his life and his art-making began to hit obstacles: a disastrous and short-lived marriage, the death of his mother, a move to Iowa City that seems to have unsettled him by separating him from his habitual life, a much-heralded New York solo show that met with harsh criticism from writers as prestigiou­s as Lincoln Kirstein and Mumford, and, the following year, the beginning of a simmering feud with a colleague at the University of Iowa (where Wood had been teaching since 1934) that threatened to put a spotlight on his personal life. He painted less and less (the uncharacte­ristic Death on the Ridge Road, a distorted high-angle view of an impending highway crash, looks like an omen), drank more, and then underwent one more crisis when his limited-edition lithograph Sultry Night, depicting a frontally nude farmhand cooling off with a bucket of water from a horse trough, was deemed pornograph­ic by the US Postal Service. His defense of the work was that it was an image from childhood, and it has the effect of a covert glimpse from a distance, the unattainab­le object of the gaze unaware of being looked at. After the oil painting for which it was a sketch was rejected by a major exhibition, Wood, in what seems a sad and suicidal gesture, lopped off the nude figure, leaving a canvas depicting a water trough under a tree: a landscape of emptiness. He died of pancreatic cancer at fifty, just as the “regional school” of which he was a standard-bearer was beginning increasing­ly to be seen as a creation of publicity, tainted with jingoistic nationalis­m and even a whiff of fascist ideology. By 1949 Life was hailing Jackson Pollock as possibly America’s greatest painter, and Wood was becoming something less than a footnote. In a 1946 cartoon symbolical­ly mapping contempora­ry American art, Ad Reinhardt consigned Wood and his fellow regionalis­ts to the cemetery, while Clement Greenberg described him as “among the notable vulgarizer­s of our period.” I don’t think, though, that he can be made to disappear, wherever one chooses to situate him in the imaginary pecking orders of the dead. He hangs on the way his late lithograph Shrine Quartet hangs on: an image of the faces of four men each wearing the fez and tie of their fraternal order, casting long shadows against a backdrop of fake pyramids, the whole effect indelibly odd, at once grotesque and poignant, not quite yielding up any message beyond the precision of its own intent.

 ??  ?? Grant Wood: The Return from Bohemia, 1935
Grant Wood: The Return from Bohemia, 1935
 ??  ?? Grant Wood: Parson Weems’ Fable, 1939
Grant Wood: Parson Weems’ Fable, 1939
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