Friday, June 24, 2022

Janet Sobel, Ukrainian-American Pioneer of Abstract Expressionism

Milky Way series 
"Contrary to established myth . . . Jackson Pollock's 'signature' style [his so-called 'drip paintings'] wasn't his invention at all, but the brainchild of another artist, one whose extraordinary story confounds and invigorates our understanding of one of the most celebrated contours in recent cultural history. Put simply, modern art has a problem. Her name is Janet Sobel."

I saw this painting that I liked (to the left) and thought it was a Jackson Pollock. Wrong.

It was posted on the Female Artist in History site and the artist was Janet Sobel. Really? I noted that Sobel was Ukrainian-American, which interested me right away, and that she was a friend of John Dewey, one of my favorite early 20th-century educational reformers. I had discovered Dewey when taking an Intellectual History class with Professor Bill Taylor at the University of Wisconsin-Madison.

Now I'm discovering the story of a woman artist hidden from public view named Janet Sobel (1893-1968), who, it turns out, is really the forerunner of Abstract Expressionism. It was she who influenced Jackson Pollock, Mark Rothko, and Willem de Kooning. Not the other way around.

Burning Bush
This we know now. Post-World War II male artists, always recognized as the founders and major purveyors of Surrealism, Abstract Expressionism, and other cultural trends, made it a point to belittle and ignore women artists of their time, pushing them quite deliberately to the margins. Just women dappling, nothing more.

Art critic Clement Greenburg in the mid-1940s and 1950s described Sobel's work as "primitive," denigrated her work as that of a "housewife," while praising Pollock's paintings as "innovative and masculine to the core." Yes, "masculine to the core." He, along with other critics, puffed Wyoming-born Pollock up as a kind of Marlboro Man conquering his paintings like a Wyoming cowhand, free from tradition, a Wild West art warrior.

It was a myth. It was t

he height of patriarchy in the American art scene.

We are still uncovering the brilliant women artists who worked in the shadows of these male artists. Janet Sobel is one of them.

Sobel, "Milky Way" series

Sobel, "Hiroshima"
She was born Jennie Lechovsky in a small Jewish village in eastern Ukraine, near what is now Dnipro in Lugansk oblast and under Russian obliteration bombing. Her mother and three siblings escaped to the US after her father was killed in a vicious anti-Semitic pogram. They arrived in New York City in 1908. Sobel was fifteen years old. A few years later, she married Max Sobel, an engraver and goldsmith, and raised five children. The Russian-Jewish enclave in Brooklyn provided a safe haven for a young mother who had escaped anti-Semitism in this World War II era.  

Sobel didn't begin painting until her mid-40s, apparently when her son Sol gave up art and gave all his painting materials to her. She began by experimenting with canvases laid out on the floor, using a style that came to be called "drip painting" and "all-over painting," in which no surface is left bare or untouched.(Note 4 below) 

It was, for Sobel, a housewife, mother, and grandmother, a moment of self-expression. You can feel a sense of freedom in her work. Talent unbound. 

It was this moment in her life, inhabiting the meaning of living in a democracy, that led to her meeting John Dewey, who championed her work. He wrote about her in a catalogue for the Puma Gallery in New York in 1944. She was just getting started.  "Her work is extraordinarily free from...self-consciousness and pretense. One can believe that to an unusual degree her forms and colors well up from a subconsciousness that is richly stored with sensitive impressions received directly from nature, impressions which have been reorganized in figures in which color and form are happily wed." (Note 1)

Her forms and colors also welled up from her experiences under Russian pograms, as well as the economic difficulties her family experienced during the Great Depression, when food was often scarce.  

Untitled

New York Times photo
Sobel enjoyed a brief spurt of public recognition in the late 1940s, then disappeared from view, and viewings of her art, when her husband moved the family from Brooklyn to Plainsfield, NJ for business reasons. Away from the vibrant New York art scene, she seemed to become lost into the role of suburban wife and mother, the very women Betty Friedan wrote about in The Feminine Mystique in 1963. Apparently there was some talk that she had developed an allergy to something in paint, but her more modern granddaughter asserted that it was more an allergy to Suburbia than paint. 

The rise of what Friedan called the Feminine Mystique, prescribing a narrow role for women in the private arena of hearth and home, while men dominated the public arena, left it's mark. Sobel was one of its victims, I think, although she never talked about it..

How could a piece of art so powerful
become so hidden?

Her art fell into that black hole of neglect that swallowed up lots of female artist then and  over time.  After 1946, no gallery showed her art during her lifetime. I found that sad. Because she kept painting into her old age. 

"A supremely gifted artist, whose work spans folk tradition, surrealism, and abstract expressionism," wrote art critic Victoria Linchong in a May 2022 article, "Sobel deserves wider recognition for revolutionizing 20th century art during a a meteoritic career that was cut short by the patriarchy of her time." (Note 9)

The good new is that Sobel's oeuvre has been recently rediscovered, recaptured and brought to light.
Museums like MOMA and well-known art galleries like Gary Snyder Fine Art in NYC have begun  exhibiting and selling the works of women artists so the world knows they existed. Sobel is among them. She is found again.  She had left behind "hundreds of paintings," telling us that she continued painting into her obscurity. Some of these paintings are now included in major exhibits, most recently Women in Abstraction, a 1921 exhibit that traveled from the Pompidou Center in Paris to the Guggenheim in Bilbao. And galleries are selling her work. It's about time. Wouldn't it be lovely to grace a wall with one of her paintings, one that influenced Abstract Expressionism and left a legacy of creativity and beauty. 


Sources/Notes: 

1.  https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Janet_Sobel

2.  https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Dewey, 1859 – 1952,  American philosopher, educational reformer, a founder of "pragmaticism," a public intellectual. The overriding theme of Dewey's works was his deep belief in democracy. Although he is best known for his publications about education, he also wrote about aesthetics, social theory, and art. The latter brought him in touch with Janet Sobel, who shared his beliefs in democracy and an educated citizenry. 

3.  https://www.dailyartmagazine.com/janet-sobel-forgotten-female-artist/ Excerpt from Making Space: Women Artists and Postwar Abstraction, 2017, MOMA. "Sobel’s artistic technique became later known as "drip painting“ when it was adopted by Jackson Pollock. Sobel’s artwork from 1945 entitled Milky Way is a prime example of the artist’s “drip technique." Pollack knew Sobel's work, and he adopted it for himself. While art critics dismissed and belittled her work, arts patron Peggy Guggenheim noticed Sobel’s work and decided to include it in her gallery, The Art of this Century, in 1945"  Jackson Pollock, himself, visited this gallery and ultimately admitted that Sobel’s work “had made an impression on him." Unfortunately for Sobel, her work was overshadowed by her male counterparts in an Abstract Expressionist movement that was male-dominated. Thus did time forget her as the true creator of the “drip painting” technique for which Jackson Pollock became so well-known.

4.  https://www.bbc.com/culture/article/20220307-janet-sobel-the-woman-written-out-of-history, by Kelly Grovier, March 2022. It's about time that Sobel is being recognized for her contribution to art history. 






Note: Trying to access some of these links doesn't work, they are "hidden," but I'm including them in case I want to use them for future reference.  

Friday, June 3, 2022

Ukraine Violated: My Village is Occupied by Russia

 

The stunning Dnieper River, a major European waterway, 
the Ukrainian Mississippi. The bridges over Kyiv. Anton Petrus/Getty image.

On the 100th day of Putin's vicious war crimes campaign and genocide in Ukraine:

At a summer camp for kids from all over
the Lugansk region. Where are they now?

Дорогая Фрэн, Мы в подвале...Русские преследуют людей. стучится в двери. Я думаю, что могу быть в списке за свою активность. Я плачу, когда вижу, что наш флаг опущен. Мы боимся каждого звука, каждого шума, каждого шага, каждого голоса. Как долго мы сможем продержаться? Я не знаю. From a dear friend in the Donbas

Dear Fran, We're in the basement...The Russians are after the people, knocking on doors. I think I might be on a list for being active. I cry when I see our flag down. We are afraid of every sound, every noise, every step, every voice. How long can we hold on? I don't know.

The village where I served with the Peace Corp in the Donbas is now occupied by the Russians. The town I know and love, where I lived for two years, is suffering, overwhelmed by a war the world didn't think possible in our time. 

My friends write that Russian soldiers are stalking them, scaring them, arresting them. Some are "disappearing," исчезновение.  They are horrified at the thought they are being tortured, or sent to gulags in Russia, along with thousands of other Ukrainians. They fear young girls are being brutalized and trafficked. They live under constant stress. Russian military leaders occupying towns and villages have lists, they say, and  they fear they may be on them.

A lovely window on a 
home in my village.
Putin's war crimes campaign to obliterate Ukraine from the face of the earth is a 21st-century genocide that we thought, we prayed, would never happen again. 

The people of the town where I served have been resisting Russian incursions  since 2014, when Putin invaded Crimea and the Donbas, Lugansk and Donetsk oblasts, and nothing was done to stop it. Now they too are being "temporarily occupied," as the Ukrainians say. But I'm terrified of the outcome. Meanwhile, the residents, my Ukrainian family and beloved friends, are living under unbearable fear and anxiety. 

It's what happens when a vicious dictator, using the Hitler/Stalin war and purge playbook, plus the Georgia and Syria total mass destruction play book, invades a foreign country and gets away with it.    

Inessa Morozova, born 1981 in Kherson,
southern Ukraine, now under relentless
RU attacks & unspeakable war crimes.
 

Putin is destroying everything in sight, intentionally bombing civilian targets without mercy, relentlessly. Death and destruction for the purpose of death and destruction. Putin's depravity on full display.  No military targets, just civilian targets. Not just once, but over and over. Mariupol writ large. 

At this writing it's Severodonetsk that's being savaged, the Lugansk oblast city where I did my banking and where I loved walking the streets around the Chemical Palace, the bus station, the markets.  I would buy Luba flowers, like the large white calla lilies Frieda Kahlo and Georgia O'Keeffe painted. I'd also buy Roshen chocolates and good cognac, though I knew she regifted them. 

Severodonetsk is now obliterated. The whole city, gone. Since Putin's war crimes campaign began on February 24, 2022, all battles have come at a heavy price to civilian lives, infrastructure, hopes and dreams. Ukraine is being bombed to death into Putin's Mariupol, his Bucha, his Kherson.  He is claiming victory over the wasteland he's created. 

Putin's using every weapon in his arsenal: heavy artillery, long-range and ballistic missiles, illegal cluster bombs and hypersonic bombs, weapons of mass destruction, aimed indiscriminately at the places where people live, work, go to school, go to church, go to a hospital, celebrate their cultural heritage, walk and bike about their neighborhoods.

It's a form of murder. It's a Syrian style of Russian warfare, "to wipe everything off the face of the earth and then 'conquer' the ruins. A city of over 100,000 residents is now in rubble." (EuroMaidan PR and RPCV Harlen Rife, who is following the war closely, reporting). 

Ukraine's request for longer-range rocket systems is in part driven by the need to prevent this destruction through counter-battery fire.
Severodonetsk in Lugansk oblast
no more. 90% of the city destroyed.
 Biden is promising this aid. Will it arrive soon enough? Russia now occupies 20% of the country, according to President Zelensky. It's overwhelming.

The war won't stop until Putin is stopped.  

Ukrainian artist Iryna Kolesnikova,
lives and works in Odessa

An emotional John Kirby, Pentagon spokesperson and retired Navy admiral, put it honestly and forthrightly at a recent press conference, when he admitted how hard it is to absorb the tragedy of Putin's lethal invasion:

Odessa, by Roman Chudnovsky, born 1965 in Kyiv.

"It’s hard to look at what Putin's doing in Ukraine, what his forces are doing in Ukraine, and think that any ethical, moral individual could justify that. It’s difficult to look at some of the images and imagine that any well-thinking, serious, mature leader would do that....So I can’t talk to his psychology, but I think we can all speak to his depravity. It’s hard to square [Putin’s], let’s just call it what it is, his BS, that this is about Nazism....about protecting Russians in Ukraine...about defending Russian national interests, when none of them — none of them — were threatened by Ukraine,” Kirby added, while lightly pounding his fist on the podium./"It’s hard to square that rhetoric by what he’s actually doing inside Ukraine to innocent people: shot in the back of the head; hands tied behind their backs; women, pregnant women being killed; hospitals being bombed. I mean, it’s just unconscionable,” he said. “It’s just beyond me. (crisis.org/en/rosiyany-provodyat-masshtabnu-filtratsiyu-gromadyan-ukrayiny)


Save Odessa.
The Opera House by Roman Chudnovsky
.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lysychansk

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2022/may/20/russia-ukraine-war-severodonetsk-zelenskiy-says-donbas-hell

https://kyivindependent.com/national/russia-destroys-ukraines-historic-heritage-steals-rare-collections-from-museums/.  This also pains me, Russia's deliberate bombing of cultural and historic museums, theaters, Houses of Culture, collections and artifacts. Putin aims to destroy Ukrianian heritage and identity. 

Harlan Rife Reports: "The Ukrainians continue to request longer range precision rocket systems like HIMARS and MLRS. They want to disrupt Russian logistics and prevent advances like we are seeing in the Donbas. They want to push Russian artillery back so they cannot level whole towns as they have at Rubizhne, Popasna, and now Severodonetsk. They want to support their own infantry in liberating occupied territory. At present, they are outgunned. / Chris Miller explains, "With artillery superiority, Russian forces are pounding Ukrainian troops and pulverizing everything else in their way with massive barrages around the clock in an effort to surround and capture strategic cities in the East of Ukraine, colloquially known as the Donbas. He quoted Serhiy Haidai, the head of the Luhansk regional military government who said, “They are carpet-bombing us. The cities they attack are simply being erased from the face of the earth."

Don't get out the popcorn yet: The Wheels of Justice Grind Slowly

"Delay, Delay, Delay: From pre-trial motions to negotiations over security, the master of legal stalling has many tactics in his arsena...