CATALOGUE OF AN EXHIBITION OF PAINTINGS WATER COLORS AND ETCHINGS BY ANNE GOLDTHWAITE WITH AN INTRODUCTION BY MARTIN BIRNBAUM BERLIN PHOTOGRAPHIC COMPANY 305 MADISON AVENUE NEW YORK CITY 1915 T ANNE GOLDTHWAITE SEI.I rORl RAH CATALOGUE OF AN EXHIBITION OF PAINTINGS WATER COLORS AND ETCHINGS BY ANNE GOLDTHWAITE WITH AN INTRODUCTION BY MARTIN BIRNBAUM OCTOBER 23 NOVEMBER I 3 I915 BERLIN PHOTOGRAPHIC COMPANY 305 MADISON AVENUE NEW YORK CITY Digitized by the Internet Archive in 2015 https://archive.org/details/catalogueofexhibOObirn ANNE GOLDTHWAITE NOT long ago there appeared in one of our daily papers, an article claiming that if America is to produce something vital and original in Music, the composer would be a product of the South. It was peculiarly interesting, because just at that time, an < admirer of Anne Goldthwaite was making a ' parallel claim for the South with reference to Painting. Here was a modest young woman, ? the descendant of the old slave-owning cava- liers of Alabama, whose work excited the enthusiasm of conservatives and progressives ^ in Paris and New York. She was extremely X fortunate in her training, for at the very out- V set of her career, when she came to New "^^^ York more than fifteen years ago, she became ; the pupil of that rigid disciplinarian and -V inspiring teacher Walter Shirlaw. He was a man who emphasiz^ed the difference between painters and artists, who never allowed his students to be led astray by false lights, and never gave encouragement to sham talents. In those days, however, it was mistakenly 3 regarded as almost essential to an artist's success, to breathe the atmosphere of Pans or some other European art centre, and accord- ingly after a few years experimenting, we find her in 1Q07 drifting about in the FrcnchCapital from one teacher to another. None of them, however, took the place of Shirlaw of whom Miss Goldthwaite still speaks with reverent enthusiasm, and she found no one to help her, until she became one of the organizers of the Academie Modcrnc. At that time, Cezanne was still living, Gauguin, fresh from Tahiti, was making his first great sensation, Impres- sionism was dethroned, "Lcs Fauves" made their triumphant appearance, the Autumn Salon was just beginning to be firmly estab- lished, and the young aspirants heard count- less theories and preachments, so strange, novel and exciting, that confusion was natural and inevitable. Accordingly, a small group of artists, of whom Miss Goldthwaite was one, agreed to meet at 86 Notre Dame dcs Champs for the purpose of trying to solve their ditii- culties. David Rosen, that solid painter of Brittany and her fishermen, now sojourning in this country, became their guiding spirit, and they asked Charles Guerin the President of the painters section of the Autumn Salon, 4 to come in at regular intervals and critici2;e their efforts. Guerin is the traditional type of the big sturdy Frenchman, so fond of Paris that he leaves the city only for a vacation of one day each year, and then he goes no further than Versailles. He is recogniz^ed as one of the most brilliant men in a group which in- cludes the delicate pastellist Roussel, the painter of interesting interiors Vuillard, and the poetical interpreter of race courses, Pierre Bonnard. Guerin is proud of being a pupil of that exotic genuis Gustave Moreau, and he has also been influenced by the spirits of the 1 8th Century. Ce2;anne, however, is his great exemplar and he preached Ce2;anne's principles to the Academic Moderne, which grew in popularity by reason of the sound- ness of his instruction. It would be well for the opponents of modernity to ponder over the fact that Guerin never taught anything inconsistent with the teachings of Walter Shirlaw. Guerin's friends and confreres, the talented painters Pierre Laprade, Jules Fland- rin, Albert Marquet and Othon Friesz; — all of whom may be remembered by visitors to the Armory Exhibition — stepped in from time to time, and aired their views. Rapport de volume, rapport de valeur, rapport de couleur. 5 were the refrain of their teachings. Their messages differed widely in value and may have bewildered some of the students, but Guerin's artistic doctrines were unquestion- ably true and healthy. Each Summer the circle would leave Paris and repair to the Ile-aux- Moines, Cassis in the Midi, or to Fontaney- aux-Roses, to work and strive without inter- ruption. They held an exhibition each Spring, and practically all their work would later be shown as a group at the Autumn Salon, where they would be showing now, had not the Great War scattered them to the corners of the earth. Guerin went to the trenches and Miss Goldthwaite remained in America. Even before her return, however. Miss Goldthwaite's etchings had found their way into the Congressional Library and other pub- lic collections, and she was spoken of as a remarkable portrait painter. The justice of the praise bestowed on her will be apparent to every visitor to her exhibition. These are no mere flattering photographs, or trembling essays, but vivid impressions of character. They reveal a vision clear and true, a method free from the slightest affectation, a vigor of touch and a vehement handling, rarely asso- ciated with a woman's art. We cannot help 6 but feel that these rugged virile portraits owe something, even though indirectly, to Van Gogh. When she paints the landscapes of her native state, the same convincing power becomes manifest. In her beautiful green sunlit harmonies, the luxuriant foliage and trees covered with hanging moss are treated in a highly original manner, and evoke the very spirit of the South. In everything she does, this versatile artist achieves that rare thing we call style, and she bears the same relationship to Cezianne that Berthe Morisot does to Manet and his circle. One will never again think of Alabama with its glittering bayous, black market women, and great cotton bales, without recalling her paint- ings, and Miss Goldthwaite has done equally fine things in Southern France. Contrast them with the more delicate watercolors, or such a little gem as the " Nosegay," and you reali2;e that you are in the presence of a genuine artist for whom it is safe to predict an interesting future. If Meier-Graefe should ever revise his "Modern Art'' he ought certainly to devote a dignified chapter to Anne Goldthwaite, by the side of the most gifted men. MARTIN BIRNBAUM 7 CATALOGUE OIL PAINTINGS 1 His Eminence, James Cardinal Gibbons 2 The Late Monsignor Robert Hugh Benson 3 The Vicar of St. Agnes (Dr. Bellinger) 4 The Artist's Brother 5 William J. Guard 6 Dick 7 Fraiilein von Knapitsch 8 Miss Katherine Dreier 9 Perdido Bay 10 In Alabama 11 The Bayou 12 Cotton Bales 13 The Balcony 14 August 15 The Nosegay 16 Self-Portrait 8 17 Aunt Molly s Back^Yard 1 8 On the Banks of the Loing 19 Ile-aux-Moines 20 Luxembourg Gardens 21 Interior 22 Savannah 23 Harold Bauer 24 Miss S — 25 Les Voyageurs 26 Miss Lucy WATER COLOR PAINTINGS 27 The Fountain (Mobile) 28 In Alabama 29 Grace's House 30 En Champagne 31 In the Pyrenees 32 The Fishing Hole 33 Aunt Molly's Back- Yard 34 Ile-aux-Moines 35 The Market Woman 36 The Red Hammock 37 On the Sands 9 38 Versailles 39 The Beach (Ile-aux-Moines) 40 The Church at Ascain 41 The Parrot 42 A Wedding in Tenth Street 43 The Jungle 44 The Promenade. Ascain 45 The Luxembourg Gardens 46 Grace's Lake 47 In Mobile 48 A Village Street 49 Dans la Court de Y Academic Moderne 50 A Church in Champagne 51 Tenth Street 52 New England 53 The Bouquet 54 Cotton Bales 55 Apple Orchard 10 ETCHINGS 56 Moment Musical (Schubert) I 57 Moment Musical (Schubert) II 58 Moment Musical (Schubert) III 59 Nijinsky 60 Kneeling Dancer 61 Petite Marche Militaire 62 Le Petit Coq 63 Dancer with a Veil I 64 Dancer with a Veil II 65 Dancer with a Veil III 66 Egyptian Dancer I 67 Egyptian Dancer II 68 Spring 69 October in France 70 The Letter 71 Miss Gladys Baldwin 72 The Cock Fight 73 The Bal BuUier 74 Hill-side. Ile-aux-Moines II 75 Alabama 76 New York Harbor 77 Between the Acts 78 The Road to Fontainebleau 79 A Wedding in Tenth Street 80 Gates of the Luxembourg 81 Pont Neuf 82 The Ballet 83 Spanish Dancer 84 The Beach. Ile-aux-Moines 85 The Road to Grez 86 The Fig Tree 87 Study Head 88 Church Yard in Brittany 89 Mother and Child 90 At Montmartre 91 Condors 92 Seated Dancer 93 Portrait Study 94 Study Head 12 EXHIBITIONS OF THE BERLIN PHOTOGRAPHIC COMPANY 305 Madison Avenue Berlin New York City London 1911-1915 AUBREY BEARDSLEY ALFRED STEVENS ALBERT STERNER ERNEST HASKELL CHARLES CONDER WILL ROTHENSTEIN ARTHUR FREEDLANDER MAURICE STERNE GERMAN GRAPHIC ART NEW YORK SOCIETY OF ETCHERS CHARLES RICKETTS AND CHARLES SHANNON HERBERT CROWLEY JULES PASCIN I9I5-I916 ANNE GOLDTHWAITE PAUL MANSHIP STEPHEN HAWEIS EMIL ORLIK NEW WORKS BY BAKST LEON BAKST PAN PRESS HOKUSAI ROBERT BLUM MAHONRI YOUNG PAMELA C. SMITH HERMAN STRUCK HAMILTON E. FIELD MARCUS BEHMER MUHAMMADAN ART GRAPHIC ART IN AUSTRIA- HUNGARY AND BOHEMIA MAX BEERBOHM EDNA B. HOPKINS EDITH W. BURROUGHS