- Sculptor: James Earle Fraser
- Architect: John Russell Pope
- Dedicated: 1940
- Medium and size: Bronze equestrian group (10 feet), granite pedestal (8.6 feet), friezes on either side, life-size figures on cornice
- Location: American Museum of Natural History, Central Park West and 79th Street
- Subway: B, C to 81st Street – Museum of Natural History
Theodore Roosevelt’s Review of the 1913 Armory Show
Although in many ways Rough Rider Theodore Roosevelt is the epitome of a blustery macho man, he was interested in art as well. During his presidency he invited Augustus Saint Gaudens, Charles McKim and John Quincy Adams Ward to advise him on art. In 1905 he even invited Saint Gaudens to help redesign American coinage, which Roosevelt derided as being in a state of “artistically atrocious hideousness.” (More on that in Outdoor Monuments of Manhattan: A Historical Guide.)
Soon after his second term as president ended, Roosevelt wrote a short review of the Armory Show, one of the most influential art exhibitions ever held in the United States. Bear in mind that Roosevelt grew up in the late nineteenth century, when New Yorkers saw some of the best sculpture Americans ever produced erected in their city by such accomplished artists as Augustus Saint Gaudens, John Quincy Adams Ward and Daniel Chester French. Roosevelt disparaged many works at the Armory Show that he considered “extremist.” His essay is a useful reminder that not all new art is good art, even when the critics rave about it.
Roosevelt’s essay on the Armory Show wasn’t available elsewhere on the Internet when I originally wrote this [2013], so I included the whole essay. The University of Virginia offers images of many items in the 1913 Armory Show: links are included to those.
The recent “International Exhibition of Modern Art” in New York was really noteworthy. Mssrs. Davies, Kuhn, Gregg, and their fellow members of the Association of American Painters and Sculptors did a work of very real value in securing such an exhibition of the works of both foreign and native painters and sculptors. Primarily their purpose was to give the public a chance to see what has recently been going on abroad. No similar collection of the works of European “moderns” has ever been exhibited in this country. The exhibitors were quite right as to the need of showing to our people in this manner the art forces which of late have been at work in Europe, forces which can not be ignored.
This does not mean that I in the least accept the view that these men take of the European extremists whose pictures were here exhibited. It is true, as the champions of these extremists say, that there can be no life without change, no development without change, and that to be afraid of what is different or unfamiliar is to be afraid of life. It is no less true, however, that change may mean death and not life, and retrogression instead of development. Probably we err in treating most of these pictures seriously. It is likely that many of them represent in the painters the astute appreciation of the power to make folly lucrative which the late P.T. Barnum showed with his faked mermaid. There are thousands of people who will pay small sums to look at a faked mermaid; and now and then one of this kind with enough money will buy a Cubist picture, or a picture of a misshapen nude woman, repellent from every standpoint.
In some ways it is the work of the American painters and sculptors which is of most interest in this collection, and a glance at this work must convince any one of the real good that is coming out of the new movements, fantastic though many of the developments of these new movements are. There was one note entirely absent from the exhibition, and that was the note of the commonplace. There was not a touch of simpering, self-satisfied conventionality anywhere in the exhibition. Any sculptor or painter who had in him something to express and the power of expressing it found the field open to him. He did not have to be afraid because his work was not along ordinary lines. There was no stunting or dwarfing, no requirement that a man whose gift lay in new directions should measure up or down to stereotyped an fossilized standards.For all of this there can be only hearty praise. But this does not in the least mean that the extremists whose paintings and pictures were represented are entitled to any praise, save, perhaps, that they have helped to break fetters. Probably in any reform movement, any progressive movement, in any field of life, the penalty for avoiding the commonplace is a liability to extravagance. It is vitally necessary to move forward and to shake off the dead hand, often the fossilized dead hand, of the reactionaries; and yet we have to face the fact that there is apt to be a lunatic fringe among the votaries of any forward movement. In this recent art exhibition the lunatic fringe was fully in evidence, especially in the rooms devoted to the Cubists and the Futurists, or Near-Impressionists. I am not entirely certain which of the two latter terms should be used in connection with some of the various pictures and representations of plastic art – and, frankly, it is not of the least consequence. The Cubists are entitled to the serious attention of all who find enjoyment in the colored puzzle-pictures of the Sunday newspapers. Of course there is no reason for choosing the cube as a symbol, except that it is probably less fitted than any other mathematical expression for any but the most formal decorative art. There is no reason why people should not call themselves Cubists, or Octagonists, or Parallelopipedonists, or Knights of the Isoceles Triangle, or Brothers of the Cosine, if they so desire; as expressing anything serious and permanent, one term is as fatuous as another. Take the picture which for some reason is called “A Naked Man Going Down Stairs” [i.e., Duchamp’s “Nude Descending a Staircase”]. There is in my bathroom a really good Navajo rug which, on any proper interpretation of Cubist theory, is a far more satisfactory and decorative picture. Now, if, for some inscrutable reason, it suited somebody to call this rug a picture of, say, “A Well-Dressed Man Going Up a Ladder,” the name would fit the facts just about as well as in the case of the Cubist picture of the “Naked Man Going Down Stairs.” From the standpoint of terminology each name would have whatever merit inheres in a rather cheap straining after effect; and from the standpoint of decorative value, of sincerity, and of artistic merit, the Navajo rug is infinitely ahead of the picture.
As for many of the human figures in the pictures of the Futurists, they show that the school would be better entitled to the name of the “Past-ists.” I was interested to find that a man of scientific attainments who had likewise looked at the pictures had been struck, as I was, by their resemblance to the later work of the palaeolithic artists of the French and Spanish caves [such as Altamira and Lascaux]. There are interesting samples of the strivings for the representation of the human form among artists of many different countries and times, all in the same stage of palaeolithic culture, to be found in a recent number of the “Revue d’Ethnographie.” The palaeolithic artist was able to portray the bison, the mammoth, the reindeer, and the horse with spirit and success, while he still stumbled painfully in the effort to portray man. This stumbling effort in his case represented progress, and he was entitled to great credit for it. Forty thousand years later, when entered into artificially and deliberately, it represents only a smirking pose of retrogression, and is not praiseworthy. So with much of the sculpture. A family group of precisely the merit that inheres in a structure made of the wooden blocks in a nursery is not entitled to be reproduced in marble. Admirers speak of the kneeling female figure by [Wilhelm] Lehmbruck – I use “female” advisedly, for although obviously mammalian it is not especially human – as “full of lyric grace,” as “tremendously sincere,” and “of a jewel-like preciousness.” I am not competent to say whether these words themselves represent sincerity or merely a conventional jargon; it is just as easy to be conventional about the fantastic as about the commonplace. In any event one might as well speak of the “lyric grace” of a praying mantis, which adopts much the same attitude; and why a deformed pelvis should be called “sincere,” or a tibia of giraffe-like length “precious,” seems to a reasonably sane view of the pictures of Matisse a question of pathological rather than artistic significance. This figure and the absurd portrait head of some young lady have the merit that inheres in extravagant caricature. It is a merit, but it is not a high merit. It entitles these pieces to stand in sculpture where nonsense rhymes stand in literature and the sketches of Aubrey Beardsley in pictorial art. These modern sculptured caricatures in no way approach the gargoyles of Gothic cathedrals, probably because the modern artists are too self-conscious and make themselves ridiculous by pretentiousness. The makers of the gargoyles knew very well that the gargoyles did not represent what was most important in the Gothic cathedrals. They stood for just a little point of grotesque reaction against, and relief from, the tremendous elemental vastness and grandeur of the Houses of God. They were imps, sinister and comic, grim and yet futile, and they fitted admirably into the framework of the theology that found its expression in the towering and wonderful piles which they ornamented.
Very little of the work of the extremists among the European “moderns” seems to be good in and for itself; nevertheless it has certainly helped any number of American artists to do work that is original and serious; and this not only in painting but in sculpture. I wish the exhibition had contained some of the work of the late Marcius Symonds; very few people knew or cared for it while he lived [or now, either: his works aren’t on the Net]; but not since [J.M.W.] Turner has there been another man on whose canvas glowed so much of that unearthly “light that never was on land or sea.” But the exhibition contained so much of extraordinary merit that it is ungrateful even to mention an omission. To name the pictures one would like to possess – and the bronzes and tanagras [terracotta figurines] and plasters – would mean to make a catalogue of indefinite length. One of the most striking pictures was the “Terminal Yards” [by Leon Kroll] – the seeing eye was there, and the cunning hand. I should like to mention all the pictures of the president of the association, Arthur B. Davies [sample of Davies’ work]. As first-class decorative work of an entirely new type, the very unexpected pictures of Sheriff Bob Chandler [i.e., Chanler] have a merit all their own. The “Arizona Desert,” the “Canadian Night,” the group of girls on the roof a New York tenement-house, the studies in the Bronx Zoo, the “Heracles,” the studies of the Utah monument, the little group called “Gossip,” which has something of the quality of the famous fifteenth idyl of Theocritus, the “Pelf,” with its grim suggestiveness – these and a hundred others are worthy of study, each of them; I am naming at random those which at the moment I happen to recall. I am not speaking of the acknowledged masters, of Whistler, Puvis de Chavannes, Monet; nor of John’s children [Gwen John, 1876-1939, or her brother Augustus John, 1878-1961]; nor of Cezanne’s old woman with a rosary; nor of [Odilon] Redon’s marvellous color-pieces – a worthy critic should speak of these. All I am trying to do is to point out why a layman is grateful to those who arranged this exhibition.
Theodore Roosevelt, “An Art Exhibition,” History as Literature, 1913
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