NEW HAVEN, CONN.- William Bailey: Looking through Time considers the career of William Bailey (b. 1930, b.f.a. 1955, m.f.a. 1957), the Kingman Brewster Professor Emeritus of Art at Yale University, through a focused survey of the artists paintings, drawings, and prints. Special emphasis is given to Baileys still-life paintings in oil, including the
Yale University Art Gallerys Still LifeTable with Ochre Wall (1972), an outstanding example of the artists signature style.
Known for his meditative canvases depicting objects and figures painted from memory and imagination, Bailey is one of the artistsincluding Audrey Flack, Alex Katz, and Philip Pearlsteinwho defied the prevailing taste for abstraction at mid-century and instead committed themselves to representational painting. His works have been compared to visual poems, a fitting description given their freedom from the constraints of descriptive realism, evocative balance of both form and color, and iterative development of a distinct visual aesthetic.
Working closely with the artist, Mark D. Mitchell, the Holcombe T. Green Curator of American Paintings and Sculpture, selected approximately 40 works spanning the 6 decades of Baileys career. Some of the artists finest pieces have been borrowed from private collections, and many have not been on public display in a quarter century. These will be presented alongside key loans from the Whitney Museum of American Art, New York, and the Fralin Museum of Art at the University of Virginia, Charlottesville. Most of the approximately 20 drawings and prints on view were chosen from the artists own collection, offering a more intimate perspective on his vision, process, and stylistic development over time.
Baileys artistic inspirations span centuries, from Raphael and Piero della Francesca to Giorgio de Chirico and Piet Mondrian, with Jean-Auguste-Dominique Ingres and Paul Cézanne in between. Since the late 1960s, Bailey has shown his work continuously and extensively in the United States and Europe, and he has maintained residences and studios in both Connecticut and northern Italy for most of that time. The artist has spent the majority of his career at Yale, first as a student under the modernist Josef Albers at the Yale School of Art and then as a member of the faculty until his retirement in 1995, with a seven-year hiatus in the mid-1960s, when he taught at Indiana University. Bailey has received numerous awards and honors, including a Guggenheim Fellowship (1965), elections to both the National Academy of Design (1983) and the American Academy of Arts and Letters (1986), and several honorary doctorates. His art is included in more than 60 public collections, including the Museum of Modern Art, New York, the Smithsonian American Art Museum, Washington, D.C., and the Art Institute of Chicago.
This exhibition is a fitting tribute to an esteemed member of the Yale communityforemost as an accomplished artist, but also as a distinguished graduate and an admired professor, says Stephanie Wiles, the Henry J. Heinz II Director. It is a pleasure to present this illuminating survey of William Baileys work and reflect on the impact of the Gallerys extraordinary collection, which he has studied and taught from for more than half a century.
We have much to learn from William Baileys work, explains Mitchell. As a student of Albers who sustained the value of form in an age of formlessness, Bailey brought forward from the history of art a personal vocabulary of allusion and affect that is perceived only gradually, through contemplative viewing. What better antidote to our digital age?