SAN ANTONIO, TX.- On October 27, the
San Antonio Museum of Art opened Becoming John Marin: Modernist at Work, exploring the artistic transformation of American modernist John Marin. Reuniting many of Marins sketches and drawings with his etchings, paintings, and watercolors, the exhibition demonstrates how his style and approach evolved across different media and throughout his career. Becoming John Marin features approximately 80 works from the 290-work collection of the Arkansas Arts Center in Little Rock, donated by the artists daughter-in-law, Norma Marin, in 2013 and recently conserved.
Along with the Arkansas Arts Center collection, the exhibition is augmented by examples of Marins drawings, watercolors, engravings, and oil paintings drawn from the distinguished private collection of San Antonio philanthropist and businessman Charles Butt.
Marin is known for his abstract landscapes and watercolors, but most people dont know that drawing was central to his work, said Chief Curator William Keyse Rudolph. This exhibition invites the visitor to look over John Marins shoulder and to see his artistic development and process through his working sketches.
Since the early twentieth century, John Marin (18701953) has been considered an important member of the American modernists and one of America's premier watercolorists. Even though he experimented with art from childhood, he did not become a serious artist until he met Alfred Stieglitz in 1909 when Marin was almost forty years old. In Becoming John Marin, the visitor will see John Marins evolution from draftsman and architect to painter, abstractionist, and modern master.
The works vary from vibrant depictions of Manhattan structures and Maine landscapes to lesser-known pieces based on figures: portraits, bustling urban crowds, and performers in motion. When Marin could work undisturbed such as on the Maine coast, he would paint a watercolor without sketching it first. But when he was on the hectic streets of New York and could not sit for a long time, he often drew sketches on notepads. These sketches capture Marins initial ideas and give insight into his artistic process.
The exhibition is on view through January 20, 2019.