WEST PALM BEACH, FLA.- The Norton Museum of Art is presenting the first exhibition in more than 75 years of the sculpture of Gertrude Vanderbilt Whitney (1875-1942), artist, philanthropist, and founder of the Whitney Museum of American Art. Although Whitneys sculpture is little known today, she had a significant career as an artist, receiving major commissions and exhibiting throughout the United States and Europe. Gertrude Vanderbilt Whitney: Sculpture is organized by Dr. Ellen E. Roberts, the Nortons Harold and Anne Berkley Smith Curator of American Art, and runs January 25 through April 29, 2018. It includes approximately 45 sculptures and drawings, many of which are rarely seen works from private collections.
This exhibition showcases the remarkable variety of Whitneys work from her earliest classical sculptures to her more symbolic public monuments, from her bleakly Realist depictions of the tragedy of World War I to her late Art Deco work.
Exhibition curator Ellen Roberts explains that, Whitneys sculpting fed her desire to help other American artists, but her art is important not only for the impetus it gave her philanthropy, but also for the works themselves. Whitney created striking and popular public art in her lifetime, and her incisive depictions of her family, friends, and scenes from World War I are still captivating today.
The installation moves chronologically through Whitneys career, and includes photographs of Whitneys monuments in the United States, France, and Spain; her nurses uniform from World War I; and depictions of the artist and her sculpture by contemporaries such as painters Robert Henri and Guy Pène du Bois, sculptor Jo Davidson, and graphic artist L. Gauthier. Seen alongside her art, these materials help to illustrate Whitneys artistic ambitions and her achievement of them.
Heir to the massive fortune made by her family in shipping and railroads, Gertrude Vanderbilt was one of the wealthiest women of her age. Yet almost immediately after her marriage to Harry Payne Whitney in 1896, she realized that the life of a society hostess and mother would not satisfy her. She turned to sculpture for professional and emotional fulfillment and a way to define herself apart from her money, said Roberts.
Whitney rose to prominence as a public sculptor in the 1910s, when she created such monuments as the Titanic Memorial in Washington, D.C. The show includes preparatory sketches and a model of this popular work. While she used idealized forms in such monuments to make them more universally relevant, she also employed a starker Realism to create perceptive portraits of her family, friends, and acquaintances. She depicted members of the working class including African Americans and the unemployed in a more nuanced way than was typical, creating sculptures that are comparable to the Realist paintings she favored by artists such as Robert Henri, George Bellows, and Edward Hopper.
Whitney served as a nurse in France during World War I and later created a series of poignant sculptural sketches of the figures she had seen on the front. These became the basis for a number of war memorial designs such as her panels for Thomas Hastingss 1918 Victory Arch in Madison Square and her Washington Heights and Inwood Memorial (19211922), both in New York. Unlike most of her contemporaries, Whitney depicted the grim reality of war in these monuments rather than its glorified ideal. The exhibition includes casts of these works, as well as her A.E.F. Memorial commemorating the location in Saint-Nazaire, France, where American troops landed in 1917, and Monument to the Discovery Faith memorializing the site in Huelva, Spain, where Christopher Columbus set sail to discover the New World. These latter two works made her international reputation in the 1920s. Monument to the Discovery Faith demonstrates Whitneys experimentation later in her career with the streamlined, stylized mode of contemporary Art Deco.
Whitneys wealth allowed her to have her designs in clay made into more permanent bronze and stone versions, and her many connections brought her commissions. Yet her social position also meant that many of her contemporaries assumed she was merely a dilettante. She was further hampered by her gender, since work by women artists in this period was not appreciated for its true complexity and strength.
Despite these challenges, Whitney succeeded in redefining herself so that she was identified first as a sculptor, Roberts said. Since her death, however, her role as an art patron has superseded her work as an artist, and her wealth has continued to suggest that she could not have been serious about her art. In the high modernist view of art as progressing toward abstraction, there is little room for Whitneys sculpture, which remained grounded in the visible world. Yet a century after she worked, the compelling nature of her art and her contemporaries admiration for it make it time for a reassessment.
Gertrude Vanderbilt Whitney: Sculpture is accompanied by a 120-page, fully illustrated catalogue with text by Roberts and a chronology by Norton Museum Associate Curator of Education for Public Programs Erica Ando.