Episode 1: James Rosen
Release date: June 4, 2011
MOCRA is fortunate to have over 100 works by the late artist James Rosen either in its collection or on long-term loan. His work has been included in many of MOCRA’s group exhibitions over the years and never fails to draw appreciative comments from visitors. In Fall 2010, MOCRA presented The Artist and the Capable Observer, a solo exhibition that included work from the 1950s to the present, offering viewers the opportunity to observe Rosen’s visual journey through paintings, watercolors, drawings, and prints.
In this wide-ranging conversation with MOCRA Director Terrence Dempsey, S.J., Rosen discusses his childhood in Detroit, his friendship with art critic Meyer Schapiro, the development of his distinctive oil/wax-oil emulsion painting technique, and his use of “veils” to camouflage his images.
Scroll down for a Listening Guide to this episode.
The Conversation
Audio Extra: The Artist as Swimmer
Related Exhibitions
James Rosen: The Artist and the Capable Observer
Credits
Producer: David Brinker
Recording Engineer and Editor: Fojammi (Daniel Stefacek)
Host: John Launius
Listening Guide: David Brinker
Featured Guest
James Rosen (1933–2023) had a distinguished career as an artist and lecturer. Educated at Cooper Union, Wayne State University, and Cranbrook Academy of Art, he taught at the University of Hawaii, the University of California - Berkeley, Augusta College, and the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts. He exhibited widely and his works are in collections including the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the Museum of Modern Art, the Whitney Museum, and the Ashmolean Museum. Influenced by artist Mark Rothko and art historian Meyer Schapiro, Rosen’s work demonstrates his keen understanding of art history, mastery of form, and ability to imbue canvases with mystery. He was represented by Gallery Paule Anglim, San Francisco, and the Leyton Gallery, St. John’s, Newfoundland.
Listening Guide
Jump to Listening Guide for Audio Extra: The Artist as Swimmer
03:40 | Rosen uses the Aristotelian term entelechy in relation to his practice of holding something back in creating his works, so that they are “completed by the observer.” Entelechy is “that which realizes or makes actual what is otherwise merely potential.” . | ||||||
06:40 |
Rosen was a frequent visitor to the as a child. (1847–1917), produced moody works with allegorical subjects, including (1892). (1883–1935) was known for his watercolors and oils, and moved in creative circles with artists such as Georgia O’Keeffe, Arthur Dove, and Marsden Hartley, and writers including William Carlos Williams, Gertrude Stein, Eugene O’Neill, and Wallace Stevens. Rosen saw Demuth’s painting (1927) in a traveling exhibition at the DIA. |
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08:20 |
Rosen studied at . (1910–1962) was a major figure in the movement in American painting. (1908–1991), taught at The Cooper Union for 42 years. He was friendly with Kline, Mark Rothko, Jackson Pollock, Raoul Hague, and Phillip Guston, and his students included Eva Hesse and Milton Glaser. (1780–1867) was a French Neoclassical painter whose output included about 450 exquisite portrait drawings. |
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10:55 | (1904–1996) was a major figure in twentieth-century art criticism. He took an interdisciplinary approach to the practice and focused on “style” (meaning an artwork’s formal qualities and visual characteristics) as a key to interpretation. | ||||||
14:20 |
Rosen’s emphasis on setting aside an “ample reserve” for the observer in a work of art draws on the Hellenistic Jewish scholar Philo and the Biblical book of Genesis. (20 BCE–50 CE), active in Alexandria, Egypt, attempted a synthesis of Jewish biblical exegesis and Hellenistic philosophy. Among his writings is a , who was sold into slavery by his brothers but later became the second-in-command to the Pharaoh of Egypt. Joseph achieved his position by interpreting a dream of the Pharaoh to mean grain should be set aside in reserve for a time of famine. also includes “On Flight and Finding.” Classical Greek sculptor (5th c. BCE) composed a treatise (or ”Kanon”) laying out a model for representing the human form in sculpture based on ratios and symmetries of individual parts to each other and to the whole. |
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16:20 |
Early Italian Renaissance painter (1266/7–1337) helped to reintroduce a sense of naturalism to Western European art. The is a massive altarpiece painted on panel, over 10 feet in height. It now resides in the Uffizi Gallery in Florence. Rosen’s 1982 homage to this work, titled Madonna Enthroned, is in the collection of the Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive at the University of California-Berkeley. A similar work mentioned by Fr. Dempsey, the Homage to Guido da Siena: La Maestà , was included in the MOCRA exhibit The Artist and the Capable Observer. A on the uncanny presence of the work even while crated.
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18:15 |
(1433–1499) was a humanist philosopher of the early Italian Renaissance, noted especially for his recovery of the works of Plato. (ca.204/5–270 CE) is considered to be the founder of , a school of philosophy that had a strong influence on Hellenic, Gnostic, Christian, Jewish, and Islamic thought in the centuries to come. The writings of Plotinus were organized after his death into a collection called the . Central to his thought is “the One” or “the Good,” a First Principle of reality that transcends all Being, containing no division, multiplicity or distinction. Everything else (created reality as we experience it) emanates from the One. Each emanation (and subsequent emanations from earlier ones) is an imperfect reflection of its source. |
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20:20 |
Leonard Bocour (1910–1993) founded Bocour Artist Colors in New York City in 1932 and became a paint supplier to many notable artists, including Mark Rothko, Jackson Pollock, Willem de Kooning, Helen Frankenthaler, Morris Louis, and Kenneth Noland. in the Smithsonian Archives of American Art. Rosen distinguishes between the cold wax/oil emulsion product Bocour provided to him (similar to the ) and the more typical practice, in which pigment is added to heated beeswax. is a property of liquids that allows them to mix completely and form a homogeneous solution. An is a mixture of two or more normally immiscible (unblendable) liquids. is an artists’ community located on a 400-acre estate in Saratoga Springs, New York, that offers offers residencies to professional creative artists. (1913–1967) was an American painter who explored a number of styles but is perhaps best known for his square Black canvases from the last decade of his life. (1912–1962) was an American abstract painter. (1877–1946) was an Italian-born, American Futurist painter, best known for depicting industrial America. |
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23:00 | The Camouflaging Society of Sonoma County published a slim volume in 1971 titled, The qualities of camouflaging: that relation of man’s workmanship to his perception of the world. This being an account of the experiences of the Sonoma County Camouflaging Society including a historie-geographie and field notes. . | ||||||
25:40 |
(1844–1889), a Jesuit priest, was among the most innovative poets of the nineteenth century, with his metrical development called "sprung rhythm" and striking use of language and imagery. Rosen refers to Hopkin's concept of , which relates to the individual essence and uniqueness of every physical thing. Hopkins in turn drew on the thought of medieval theologian and philosopher (ca.1265–1308), who coined the term to denote "the discrete qualities, properties or characteristics of a thing which make it a particular thing." |
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26:40 | Fr. Dempsey is referring to the uncanny way in which the Madonna’s eye seems to capture the gaze of the viewer. See 16:20, above. | ||||||
27:20 |
The thirteenth-century is famed as one of the best-preserved examples of French High Gothic architecture. As Rosen notes, it is particularly famed for its stained glass windows. |
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29:50 |
Don Emblen (1918–2009) was a poet and teacher. He was honored as Sonoma County’s first poet laureate. . |
Listening Guide for Audio Extra: The Artist as Swimmer
01:00 |
Matthias Grünewald’s is among the best-known depictions of the crucifixion, and certainly among the grisliest. In Rosen’s 1974 Homage to Grünewald: The Isenheim Altarpiece, the details of the suffering are veiled and the body, while still conveying a sense of torturous pain, dissolves like wisps of incensing rising in sacrifice. This detail shows the upraised arm of Christ described by Rosen. The oil-wax/oil emulsion technique used by Rosen often leaves little visible evidence of his brushstrokes. |