225 100 22MB
English Pages 384 [329] Year 2016
Arthur Dove
Arthur Dove Always Connect
Rachael Z. DeLue
The University of Chicago Press Chicago and London
Rachael Z. DeLue is associate professor of art history and archaeology at Princeton University. She is the author of George Inness and the Science of Landscape, also published by the University of Chicago Press, and coeditor of Landscape Theory. The University of Chicago Press, Chicago 60637 The University of Chicago Press, Ltd., London © 2016 by The University of Chicago All rights reserved. Published 2016. Printed in China 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 1 2 3 4 5 ISBN-13: 978-0-226-14219-7 (cloth) ISBN-13: 978-0-226-28123-0 (e-book) DOI: 10.7208/chicago/9780226281230.001.0001 This publication is made possible in part by a grant from the Barr Ferree Foundation Fund for Publications, Department of Art and Archaeology, Princeton University. All works by Arthur Dove are courtesy of and copyright The Estate of Arthur G. Dove / Courtesy Terry Dintenfass, Inc. Frontispiece: see fig. 1, p. 2, for more information. Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data DeLue, Rachael Ziady, author. Arthur Dove : always connect / Rachael Z. DeLue. pages cm Includes bibliographical references and index. ISBN 978-0-226-14219-7 (cloth : alkaline paper) — ISBN 978-0-22628123-0 (e-book). 1. Dove, Arthur Garfield, 1880–1946—Criticism and interpretation. I. Title. ND237.D67D45 2016 759.13—dc23 2015004315 ♾ This paper meets the requirements of ANSI/NISO Z39.48-1992 (Permanence of Paper).
For my parents
Contents
ix
List of Illustrations
xv Acknowledgments 1 Introduction
1 Circles
11
2 Weather
83
3 Sound
147
4 Things
191
251 Epilogue 255 Notes 287
Selected Bibliography
303 Index
vii
Illustrations
Fig. 1 Alfred Stieglitz, Arthur G. Dove, 1923 2 Fig. 2 Arthur G. Dove, Sun Drawing Water, 1933 10 Fig. 3 Arthur G. Dove, Seagull Motif (Violet and Green), 1928 13 Fig. 4 Arthur G. Dove, Fog Horns, 1929 14 Fig. 5 Arthur G. Dove, Moon, 1935 15 Fig. 6 Arthur G. Dove, Silver Sun, 1929 16 Fig. 7 Arthur G. Dove, Sunrise III, 1936–1937 17 Fig. 8 Arthur G. Dove, Sunrise, Northport Harbor, 1929 18 Fig. 9 Arthur G. Dove, Golden Sun, 1937 19 Fig. 10 Arthur G. Dove, Naples Yellow Morning, 1935 20 Fig. 11 Arthur G. Dove, Pozzuoli Red, 1941 21 Fig. 12
“ Structure of the Radium Atom,” in H. A. Kramers and Helge Holst, The Atom and the Bohr Theory of Its Structure (1923) 21
Fig. 13 Page 3 of an Arthur G. Dove letter to Helen Torr Dove, Nov. 10, 1933 23 Fig. 14 Page 4 of an Arthur G. Dove letter to Helen Torr Dove, Nov. 22, 1934 24 Fig. 15 Page 9 of an Arthur G. Dove letter to Helen Torr Dove, Nov. 10, 1933 or 1934 24 Fig. 16 Essay by Arthur G. Dove, Dec. 13, 1928 26 Fig. 17 Arthur G. Dove, Telegraph Pole, 1929 32 Fig. 18 Arthur G. Dove diary pages, Mar. 19 and 20, 1942 33 Fig. 19
“Word Drill,” in John Robert Gregg, Gregg Shorthand (1930) 34 ix
Fig. 20 Arthur G. Dove, R 25-A, 1942 35 Fig. 21 Arthur G. Dove, A Reasonable Facsimile, 1942 36 Fig. 22 Arthur G. Dove, Lake Afternoon, 1935 36 Fig. 23 Arthur G. Dove, Rose and Locust Stump, 1943 37 Fig. 24 Arthur G. Dove, Sea II, 1925 37 Fig. 25 Arthur G. Dove, Rain, 1924 38 Fig. 26 Arthur G. Dove, Untitled, 1942 40 Fig. 27 Arthur G. Dove, No Feather Pillow, 1940 41 Fig. 28 Arthur G. Dove, No Feather Pillow, 1940 42 Fig. 29 Arthur G. Dove, Sun, 1943 43 Fig. 30 Arthur G. Dove, Sun, 1943 43 Fig. 31 Detail from Arthur G. Dove, Sun, 1943 44 Fig. 32 Arthur G. Dove, Summer, 1935 45 Fig. 33 Detail from Arthur G. Dove, Telegraph Pole, 1929 45 Fig. 34 Arthur G. Dove, Young Old Master, 1946 46 Fig. 35 Detail from Arthur G. Dove, Young Old Master, 1946 46 Fig. 36 Detail from Arthur G. Dove, Pozzuoli Red, 1941 46 Fig. 37 Arthur G. Dove, Thunder Shower, 1940 47 Fig. 38 Detail from Arthur G. Dove, Thunder Shower, 1940 47 Fig. 39 Arthur G. Dove, Another Arrangement, 1944 48 Fig. 40 Detail from Arthur G. Dove, Another Arrangement, 1944 48 Fig. 41 Arthur G. Dove, Red, Olive and Yellow, 1941 49 Fig. 42 Detail from Arthur G. Dove, Red, Olive and Yellow, 1941 49 Fig. 43 Arthur G. Dove, Ferry Boat Wreck, 1931 50 Fig. 44 Detail from Arthur G. Dove, Ferry Boat Wreck, 1931 50 Fig. 45 Arthur G. Dove, Dawn III, 1932 55 Fig. 46 Alfred Stieglitz, Music—A Sequence of Ten Cloud Photographs, No. X, 1922 56 Fig. 47 Arthur G. Dove, Portrait of Alfred Stieglitz, 1924 58 Fig. 48 Arthur G. Dove, Untitled (Portrait of Rebecca and Paul Strand), ca. 1925 59 Fig. 49 Arthur G. Dove, Silver Tanks, 1929 61 Fig. 50 Arthur G. Dove, Silver Tanks and Moon, 1930 61 Fig. 51 Arthur G. Dove, City Moon, 1938 62 Fig. 52 Arthur G. Dove, Me and the Moon, 1937 63 Fig. 53 Lee Lawrie, Sound, 1934 64 Fig. 54 Sears, Roebuck and Co., Radio Headquarters catalog, 1924 64 Fig. 55 Vincent Lopez and Owen Murphy, On the Radio (1924) 64 Fig. 56 Arthur G. Dove, Me and the Moon, n.d. 66 Fig. 57 Arthur G. Dove, Penetration, 1924 67 Fig. 58 Arthur G. Dove, River Bottom, Silver, Ochre, Carmine, Green, 1923 70 Fig. 59 Arthur G. Dove, Sea Gull Motive (Sea Thunder or The Wave), 1928 71 Fig. 60 Florine Stettheimer, Portrait of Alfred Stieglitz, 1928 76
x
Illustrations
Fig. 61 Drawing on the back of a letter from Edward Alden Jewell to Arthur G. Dove, Jan. 25, 19– 77 Fig. 62 Page from Arthur G. Dove’s “Abstraction” essay, n.d. 77 Fig. 63 Arthur G. Dove diary pages, Mar. 31 and Apr. 1, 1942 78 Fig. 64 Arthur G. Dove, Formation I, 1943 86 Fig. 65 Arthur G. Dove, Formation III (Green Landscape), ca. 1942 87 Fig. 66 Arthur G. Dove, “Notes,” annotated page of E. C. Andrews, Color and Its Application to Printing (1911) 90 Fig. 67 Arthur G. Dove, Sails, 1911–1912 92 Fig. 68 Arthur G. Dove, Team of Horses, 1911 or 1912 93 Fig. 69 Arthur G. Dove, Nature Symbolized No. 2, ca. 1911 94 Fig. 70 Arthur G. Dove, Cows in Pasture, 1935 95 Fig. 71 Arthur G. Dove, Thunderstorm, 1921 101 Fig. 72 Arthur G. Dove, After the Storm, Silver and Green (Vault Sky), ca. 1923 102 Fig. 73 Arthur G. Dove, Golden Storm, 1925 103 Fig. 74 Arthur G. Dove, Storm Clouds, 1935 104 Fig. 75 Arthur G. Dove, Electric Peach Orchard, 1935 104 Fig. 76 Arthur G. Dove, Partly Cloudy, 1942 106 Fig. 77 Arthur G. Dove, Rain or Snow, 1943 107 Fig. 78 Helen Torr Dove and Arthur G. Dove diary pages, Sept. 28 and 29, 1936 109 Fig. 79 Two pages from the “Log for the Mona,” May 31–June 3, 1924 110 Fig. 80 Two pages from the “Log for the Mona,” May 27–30, 1924 111 Fig. 81 Page from an accounting ledger that details the personal and business expenses, 1923–1927, of Arthur G. Dove and Helen Torr Dove 112 Fig. 82 Page from an accounting ledger that details the personal and business expenses, 1923–1927, of Arthur G. Dove and Helen Torr Dove 113 Fig. 83 Arthur G. Dove diary pages, Jan. 18 and 19, 1942 114 Fig. 84 Arthur G. Dove diary pages, Nov. 10–16, 1941 115 Fig. 85 Daily Weather Map, Jan. 22, 1922, US Weather Bureau 118 Fig. 86 Daily Weather Map, Oct. 6, 1941, US Weather Bureau 128 Fig. 87 Arthur G. Dove, Sand and Sea, 1943 130 Fig. 88 Arthur G. Dove, Flight, 1943 130 Fig. 89 Arthur G. Dove, Clouds, 1927 132 Fig. 90
“ Tableau physique des Andes et pays voisins,” in Alexander von Humboldt and Aimé Bonpland, Essai sur la géographie des plantes (1807) 132
Fig. 91 Arthur G. Dove, Your Baby, 1942 138 Fig. 92 Arthur G. Dove, War, 1939 139 Fig. 93 Arthur G. Dove, U.S., 1940 139 Fig. 94 Arthur G. Dove, 1941, 1941 140 Fig. 95 Arthur G. Dove diary pages, Oct. 11 and 12, 1939 141 Fig. 96
“ Air Circulation in a Sea Breeze,” in Charles F. Brooks, Why the Weather? (1924) 143
Illustrations
xi
Fig. 97
“ Structure of the Atmosphere,” in Richard Whatham, Meteorology for Aviator and Layman (1930) 143
Fig. 98
“ Relation of the Local Isobars to Those of the General Circulation,” in Willis Luther Moore, Descriptive Meteorology (1910) 143
Fig. 99
“ Variation with Altitude of Cyclonic Vectors and Components,” in Willis Luther Moore, Descriptive Meteorology (1910) 143
Fig. 100 Arthur G. Dove, George Gershwin—Rhapsody in Blue, Part I, 1927 150 Fig. 101 Arthur G. Dove, George Gershwin—Rhapsody in Blue, Part II, 1927 151 Fig. 102 Arthur G. Dove, Orange Grove in California, by Irving Berlin, 1927 152 Fig. 103 Arthur G. Dove, George Gershwin—I’ll Build a Stairway to Paradise, 1927 153 Fig. 104 Arthur G. Dove, Improvision, 1927 154 Fig. 105
“ Theme 2 translated into points,” in Wassily Kandinsky, Point and Line to Plane (1926) 160
Fig. 106 Arthur G. Dove, Sentimental Music, ca. 1913 167 Fig. 107 Arthur G. Dove, Movement No. I, 1911 167 Fig. 108 Arthur G. Dove, Primitive Music, 1944 168 Fig. 109 Arthur G. Dove, Chinese Music, 1923 169 Fig. 110 Page 2 of an Arthur G. Dove letter to Helen Torr Dove, Aug. 23, 1936 172 Fig. 111 Arthur G. Dove, The Moon Was Laughing at Me, 1937 173 Fig. 112 Page 2 of an Arthur G. Dove letter to Helen Torr Dove, Sept. 26, 1936 175 Fig. 113 Arthur G. Dove, Study for Me and the Moon, between 1935 and 1938 178 Fig. 114 Arthur G. Dove, Swing Music (Louis Armstrong), 1938 183 Fig. 115 Arthur G. Dove, Neighborly Attempt at Murder, 1941 186 Fig. 116 Arthur G. Dove, Fire in the Sauerkraut Factory, 1936–1941 187 Fig. 117 Arthur G. Dove, Long Island, 1925 190 Fig. 118 Arthur G. Dove, The Critic, 1925 192 Fig. 119 Arthur G. Dove, Portrait of Ralph Dusenberry, 1924 193 Fig. 120 Arthur G. Dove, Hand Sewing Machine, 1927 196 Fig. 121 Arthur G. Dove, [Landscape], ca. 1941–1946 207 Fig. 122 Arthur G. Dove, Barn Next Door, 1934 208 Fig. 123 Arthur G. Dove, Over Seneca Lake, 1935 208 Fig. 124 Arthur G. Dove, Barn IV, 1935 209 Fig. 125 Arthur G. Dove, Trees on the Pond, 1941 210 Fig. 126 Arthur G. Dove, A Barn Here and a Tree There, 1940 211 Fig. 127 Arthur G. Dove, The Hand Sewing Machine, 1941 212 Fig. 128 Arthur G. Dove, The Intellectual, 1925 213 Fig. 129 Arthur G. Dove, Cross and Weather Vane, 1935 223 Fig. 130 Arthur G. Dove, A Walk: Poplars, 1912–1913 224 Fig. 131 Arthur G. Dove, Tree Forms, 1932 225 Fig. 132 Arthur G. Dove, The Sea I, 1925 227 Fig. 133 Arthur G. Dove, Starry Heavens, 1924 228 Fig. 134 Star chart in Popular Astronomy (1917) 229
xii
Illustrations
Fig. 135
“ Star Clouds and Black Holes in Sagittarius,” in David Peck Todd, Astronomy (1922) 229
Fig. 136 Arthur G. Dove, Moth Dance, 1929 235 Fig. 137 Arthur G. Dove, From a Wasp, ca. 1914 235 Fig. 138 Arthur G. Dove, Tree Forms II, 1935 236 Fig. 139 Arthur G. Dove, Car in Garage, 1934 236 Fig. 140 Arthur G. Dove, Composition in Green and Gray (Untitled), ca. 1930 238 Fig. 141 Arthur G. Dove, The Barn Next Door, 1934 239 Fig. 142 Arthur G. Dove, Barnyard Fantasy, 1935 239 Fig. 143 Arthur G. Dove, Reminiscence, 1937 241 Fig. 144 Arthur G. Dove, Monkey Fur, 1926 242 Fig. 145 Arthur G. Dove, Cinder Barge and Derrick, 1931 248
Illustrations
xiii
Acknowledgments
This book took shape over many years, and its existence depends on the assistance and generosity of scores of individuals and institutions, including, I am sure, some I have neglected to mention in the following paragraphs. For all omissions I offer my sincerest apologies, and to those persons omitted I offer assurance of my gratitude. To my colleagues in the Department of Art and Archaeology at Princeton I owe a large debt, for supporting my ongoing work and for helping to advance my thinking about Dove. Particular thanks go to Bridget Alsdorf, Yve-Alain Bois, Hal Foster, and John Wilmerding. Anne McCauley provided key feedback on Dove and photography, and Irene Small’s work on Hélio Oiticica inspired unexpected insights on Dove’s zoomorphism. Trudy Jacoby and David Connelly provided expert assistance with illustrations. At the Princeton University Art Museum, Kelly Baum, Calvin Brown, and Karl Kusserow made it possible for me to study work by Dove and his contemporaries in the collection, and their enthusiasm for my project has been heartening. Throughout my research and writing, Andrew and Ann Dintenfass of the Terry Dintenfass Gallery have provided essential support. I am truly grateful for their patience, collegiality, and commitment to new Dove scholarship. I can only hope that this book provides adequate recompense for their generosity and gracious assistance. I also owe a special debt of gratitude to Ann Lee Morgan, author of the Dove cataxv
xvi
logue raisonné, who has so generously shared her
ico; Berhman Faculty Fellows in the Humanities,
knowledge, wisdom, and good humor with me, and
Princeton University; Center for Advanced Study
with whom I have had many stimulating conver-
in the Visual Arts, National Gallery of Art; Centre
sations. No one knows more about Dove than she
Culturel International de Cerisy, Cerisy- la- Salle,
does, and I am truly grateful for her vital feedback,
France; Colby College Museum of Art; Committee
which has been unfailingly diplomatic and always
for Interdisciplinary Science Studies, Center for
spot-on. In addition, I am indebted to the Phillips
the Humanities, CUNY Graduate Center, New York;
Collection and its Center for the Study of Modern
Harvard University Graduate School of Design;
Art. A fellowship at the center provided five months
Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton; McGill
of uninterrupted research, aided by Karen Schnei-
University; Montgomery College; New- York His-
der, head librarian at the Phillips, whose energy,
torical Society; Newark Museum; The Old Guard,
expertise, collegiality, and wit proved indispens-
Princeton; Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts;
able, and who shared my pleasure in “listening” to
Petr Konchalovsky Foundation, Moscow; Philadel-
works of art. My library research was facilitated as
phia Museum of Art; Present Day Club, Princeton;
well by the intelligence and efficiency of Sarah Os-
Princeton Club of Los Angeles; Princeton Club of
borne Bender. The presence of Terri Weissman, also
Vero Beach; Smithsonian American Art Museum;
a center fellow (and my tablemate in the library),
Society of Fellows in the Liberal Arts, Princeton
made my time at the Phillips all the more valuable
University; Sterling and Francine Clark Art Insti-
and rich. Also at the Phillips, curator Renée Maurer,
tute; Swarthmore College; Trinity University, San
chief registrar Joe Holbach, and associate registrar
Antonio; Tulane University; University of Dela-
Trish Waters deserve thanks for making it possible
ware; University of North Carolina; University of
for me to study at length every work by Dove in the
Richmond; University of Wisconsin Center for the
collection and to illustrate this book with images
Humanities; Vero Beach Museum of Art; and Yale
of many of those works. I am grateful too for the
University.
support of Ruth Perlin and Jonathan Fineberg, who
A seminar on Alfred Stieglitz and his milieu
helped make my time at the center possible. In ad-
at the Centre Culturel International de Cerisy, in
dition to the Phillips fellowship, an Arthur H. Scrib-
Cerisy- la- Salle, France, organized in 2010 by Jay
ner Bicentennial Preceptorship, generously granted
Bochner and Jean-Pierre Montier and supported by
by Princeton University, supported this project and
the Terra Foundation for American Art, provided a
afforded me among other things a year’s leave to
week’s worth of rich discussion that vitally shaped
research and write. I also extend my gratitude to
my thinking about Dove. The Wyeth Foundation
the Barr Ferree Foundation Fund for Publications,
for American Art generously made possible my
Princeton University, for its support of this publi-
participation in the 2011 conference “Landscape
cation.
in American Art, 1940–2000” at the Center for Ad-
Designating a sole author obscures how depen-
vanced Study in the Visual Arts, National Gallery
dent any text is on its many interlocutors, yet a list
of Art, where I presented material from chapter 2
of the individuals whose comments and suggestions
and had the opportunity to test-run preliminary
over the years contributed to the evolution of my
thoughts on Dove’s late paintings. Equally produc-
ideas would take up more space than available here.
tive was my participation on a panel on American
So to those collaborators and audience members at
art and sound co-organized by Leo G. Mazow and
the following institutions and venues with whom I
Asma Naeem at the 2010 College Art Association
had the good fortune to discuss my work, and who
Annual Meeting, during which I presented mate-
took seriously and listened carefully to my musings
rial that would become part of chapter 3. I thank
on Dove, I extend my gratitude: XXXVII Coloquio
Leo and Asma for the opportunity to air publicly
Internacional de Historia del Arte, Querétaro, Mex-
my ideas about Dove and recorded sound for the
Acknowledgments
first time and for providing such a stimulating con-
material in their collections, including works of
text in which to do so. Leo has been an essential
art, papers, and related documents, with whom I
interlocutor and friend for almost two decades,
have interacted have been unfailingly generous in
unstintingly willing to entertain my intellectual
allowing me access and sharing information. This
fascinations and follies. Other colleagues who have
includes the many people who assisted me with im-
contributed decisively to the development of my
ages and permissions at the dozens of institutions
ideas and from whom I continue to learn include
that hold Dove works (as reflected in the captions),
Wendy Bellion, Todd Cronan, Michael Gaudio, Marc
and who helped make the process far less arduous
Gotlieb, Erica Hirshler, Suzanne Hudson, Matthew
than it could have been. It goes without saying that
Hunter, Elizabeth Hutchinson, Robin Kelsey, Mi-
without such cooperation this book would not ex-
chael Leja, Alexander Nemerov, Charles Palermo,
ist, and I am immensely grateful for the kind will-
Kirstin Ringelberg, Jennifer Roberts, Michael
ingness shown in assisting my endeavor at every
Schreyach, Tanya Sheehan, and Jason Weems. John
step. Thus I extend my most heartfelt thanks to
Ott must be singled out not only for his incisive
Steve Davis, Barney A. Ebsworth, J. R. and Barbara
comments on Dove and the question of the social
Hyde, Elizabeth Moore, Christine Roussel, Michael
but also for his winning bird puns, so welcome amid
Scharf, Jan T. and Marica Vilcek, Michael Ward, and
the terribly serious business of academic writing.
Charles K. Williams II. An equally sincere thank-
No scholar thinks apart from her students.
you goes to the following museums and institu-
My undergraduate and graduate students at the
tions that I visited and consulted for my research,
University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign, and
as well as to the many personnel at each who kindly
at Princeton have steadily expanded my view of
offered their assistance, often above and beyond
Dove and his world, and I am particularly grate-
the call of duty: Ackland Art Museum, University
ful to the students who participated in my gradu-
of North Carolina, Chapel Hill; Addison Art Gallery;
ate seminars on the Stieglitz circle and American
Alexandre Gallery; Amon Carter Museum; Archives
modernism in 2003 (UIUC), 2007 (Princeton), and
of American Art; Art Institute of Chicago; Art Re-
2013 (Princeton). I want all of them to know that I
source; Artist’s Rights Society; Beinecke Rare Book
appreciate their contributions very much. A special
and Manuscript Library, Yale University Library;
thank-you goes to Amanda Bock, for her thoughts
Carnegie Museum of Art, Pittsburgh; Christie’s;
about photography and pedagogy as well as her
Colorado Springs Fine Arts Center; Columbus Mu-
steady supply of Dove and Paul Strand anecdotes;
seum of Art; Crystal Bridges Museum of American
Allan Doyle, for his work on the idea of translation
Art; Denver Art Museum; Fine Arts Museums of San
in the French context; Nicole Elder, for her ideas
Francisco; Firestone Library and Firestone’s Graphic
about the objects of still life and her tireless work
Arts Collection, Princeton University; Fisk Univer-
as my research assistant; Miri Kim, for sharing and
sity; Heckscher Museum of Art; Herbert F. Johnson
abetting my fascination with the history of sound;
Museum of Art, Cornell University; Hirshhorn Mu-
Ashley Lazevnick, who made me think twice about
seum and Sculpture Garden, Smithsonian Institu-
Precisionism and line; Abra Levenson, for helping
tion; Kemper Art Museum, Washington University,
me to reflect more pointedly on portraiture in the
St. Louis; Kew Royal Botanic Gardens Library; Lewis
twentieth century; Jessica Maxwell, who shared
Library, Princeton University; Lilly Library, Univer-
with me her eloquent reading of Paul Strand; Julia
sity of Indiana, Bloomington; Marquand Library,
Sienkewicz, with whom I have productively been
Princeton University; McNay Art Museum, San
conversing about landscape for many years; and
Antonio; Memphis Brooks Museum of Art; Metro-
Elizabeth Zundo, whose work on cartography and
politan Museum of Art, New York; Montclair Art
visual culture continues to prompt my own.
Museum; Munson Williams Proctor Arts Institute;
Those institutions and individuals with Dove
Museum of Fine Arts, Boston; Museum of Modern Acknowledgments
xvii
Art, New York; National Gallery of Art, Washing-
a cemetery. “Mom,” he asked from the back seat,
ton, DC; National Oceanic and Atmospheric Ad-
“is that where Arthur Dove is buried?” Perhaps
ministration (NOAA); New Jersey State Museum
innocent, perhaps not—either way, his question
Collection; Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts;
suggested that he thought it was high time for his
Philadelphia Museum of Art; The Phillips Collec-
mother to put Dove to rest. I have finally done so,
tion; Princeton University Art Museum; Rockefeller
many years later, an accomplishment unthinkable
Center Archives; San Diego Museum of Art; Smith-
without the love and support of my family and the
sonian American Art Museum; Sotheby’s; Terra
assistance of everyone else mentioned in these
Foundation for American Art; Thyssen-Bornemisza
pages. Finally, Erik—I thank him for everything.
Collection, Madrid; University of Arizona Museum of Art, Tucson; University of Mississippi Museum and Historic Houses; The Vilcek Foundation; Whitney Museum of American Art; Yale University Art Gallery; and the Zimmerli Art Museum, Rutgers University. For their wisdom and insight, and for their extraordinary patience as my writing outpaced deadline after deadline, I offer my sincere gratitude to Susan Bielstein and Anthony Burton at the University of Chicago Press. It has been a true pleasure and privilege to work with them. Just as there are artists’ artists (Dove among them), Susan and Anthony are writers’ editors. Sincere thanks also go to James Whitman Toftness and Kelly Finefrock-Creed for their essential and generous work during the publication process. I should add here that I am also grateful to have had at my disposal exceptionally thorough and attentive anonymous readers’ reports for use in revising my manuscript. My deepest gratitude goes to my family, Erik, Asher, and Zane DeLue; my parents, Jon and Merrie Ziady; and my brother and his family, Josh, Ana, and June Hadar Ziady, all of whom have lived through far too many “summers of Dove.” My daughter Zane, being the youngest, has seen the least of it, but she is owed my thanks for all the times she makes me laugh out loud, Dove trouble be damned, and for abidingly sleeping through the night. My son Asher, whose existence coincides exactly with the years I devoted to this project, deserves especial gratitude for his patience and good soul, and for the perspective he brought to the mix. I recall with fondness and not a small amount of wonder the day, about midway through the trajectory of my work on the book, when a drive to the grocery store took us past xviii
Acknowledgments
Introduction
Arthur Dove My first serious encounter with the work of the American painter Arthur Garfield Dove (1880–1946) (fig. 1) occurred in 1997 at a major exhibition of his art at the Phillips Collection in Washington, DC. As a graduate student working on a dissertation about another American painter, George Inness (1825–1894), I had come to the Phillips to see the Inness paintings on view. My visit to the Dove galleries served as a diversion—some pleasant, no-strings-attached looking in the midst of intense scholarly study, or so I thought. Instead, what I saw captivated me: canvas after canvas teeming with quasi-abstract, vividly colored, and vibrantly motile forms, some of them downright odd, as well as an array of sculptural assemblages utterly catholic in their collection of material components, including paint, wood, and glass but also animal hide and bones, human hair, metal springs, ladies’ stockings, seashells, a camera lens, chiffon, and sand.1 Prior to my visit to the Phillips, I had seen the occasional Dove painting, but something about walking through a series of rooms filled with his work filled me with a sense of wonder. The experience also left me feeling perplexed, mainly because I had a hard time imagining from where the motivation to create such enchanting and eccentric pictures might have come. Works like Sun Drawing Water (1933) and Moon (1935) left me breathless, and they stuck with me over the years (figs. 2, 5). When I finally had a chance to dig deeper into Dove’s art and life I liked 1
(1926). He counted Georgia O’Keeffe among his dearest friends. He suspected that Stieglitz might be telepathic. He kept a daily, detailed record of the weather, noting the temperature, barometric pressure, and prevailing conditions, and whenever his wife, the artist Helen Torr, was sick, he recorded her temperature at regular intervals as well. He was an amateur drummer, played music with his friends, liked going to the movies and vaudeville shows, and loved jazz. He made a series of fully abstract paintings while listening to records on a phonograph on his boat, naming each canvas after the tune that inspired it; to the surface of one of these paintings he attached a metal clock spring. He fixed cars and designed textiles. He singled out geometry, and the conic sections especially, as potentially able to express the essence and fundamental forces of nature, a “mathematical dream” as he put it. He befriended a botanist named Bernard Rudolf Nebel who let him use his pantograph to transfer his sketches onto canvas and helped him photograph his paintFig. 1 Alfred Stieglitz, Arthur G. Dove, 1923, gelatin silver print, 24.1 × 19.1 cm, Alfred Stieglitz Collection, 1949.717, The Art Institute of Chicago. © 2015 Georgia O’Keeffe Museum / Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York.
ings. He patented a recipe for chocolate-covered popcorn. He wrote a poem called “Self Portraits by Others” and one titled “A Way to Look at Things.” He studied shorthand and corresponded with the inventor of Bakelite. He named one of his assemblages Monkey Fur—it featured a strip of monkey
him even more. For as a person he turned out to
hide—and titled a painting Neighborly Attempt at
be as captivating and unexpected as his work—not
Murder (figs. 144, 115). He insisted that what he did
outlandish in any way or beyond any conventional
was not abstraction but, rather, “extraction.” He
pale, just idiosyncratic and quirky enough that
also declared that what he set out to do as an artist
when I considered his life in combination with his
was impossible.
art the total package demanded that I take a serious and extended look. Among the things that piqued my interest: Dove
2
Dove’s Life
lived on a boat for a spell and created some of his
This book consists of an attempt to address my ini-
most interesting works, including his assemblages,
tial query of all those many years ago. From whence
while shipboard. He also made a home in a defunct
did Dove’s paintings and assemblages come and
roller-skating rink and, later, in an abandoned post
what did he expect them to express or to achieve?
office building, painting all the while. His personal
The basic facts of Dove’s biography have been well
pantheon consisted of Albert Einstein, Gertrude
documented and widely published, but they are
Stein, Alfred Stieglitz, Shakespeare, James Joyce,
worth rehearsing here because they bear on my ar-
and his childhood mentor Newton Weatherly. He
gument about the nature and meaning of his ar-
wrote an essay that half-quoted, half-rewrote sec-
tistic practice. More so than it has in my previous
tions of Wassily Kandinsky’s Point and Line to Plane
work, biography serves in this study as a signifi-
Introduction
cant form of evidence. This, needless to say, came
appearing more regularly in exhibitions. In 1912, he
as something of a surprise to me as my research
had his first one-man show at 291; the exhibition in-
and writing progressed. What resulted is a series
cluded the now well-known suite of quasi-Cubistic
of experiments with the biographical method that
pastel abstractions usually referred to as “The Ten
expand the idea of a life of an artist to include the
Commandments,” also on view a few weeks later at
exceedingly mundane (Dove watched the weather,
the W. Scott Thurber Galleries in Chicago.
Dove lived on a boat) alongside the conventionally 2
By 1917, Dove had stopped painting, resuming in
noteworthy or momentous. Born in 1880 in Canan-
1921, shortly after his father passed away. That same
daigua, New York, Dove moved with his family in
year, he left Florence for the artist Helen Torr, who
1885 to Geneva, New York, where his father ran a
was also married at the time, and moved with her to
profitable brick manufacturing and contracting
a houseboat on the Harlem River. In 1922, Dove and
business. After graduating from high school, Dove
Torr bought a yawl, the 42-foot Mona, which they
enrolled at Hobart College, in Geneva, before trans-
sailed on local rivers and in Long Island Sound until
ferring to Cornell University; while at Cornell, he
mooring it at Halesite, on Long Island, in 1924. For
studied prelaw but also took a few art classes. Af-
many years thereafter, until 1933, the Mona served
ter graduating in 1903, he moved to New York City
as their primary residence. When they moved
and took up work as a magazine illustrator; a year
aboard the Mona, Dove and Torr began keeping a
later, in 1904, he married Florence Dorsey. Around
daily diary, recording the events of their day-to-day
1906, Dove turned his attention to painting, and in
existence and describing Dove’s work in progress
1908, he and his wife departed for France, returning
and, less frequently, Torr’s. The first diary consisted
to New York in 1909, the same year one of Dove’s
of a ship’s log kept by Dove in 1924; Torr took over
paintings, The Lobster (1908), appeared in the Salon
in 1925 and made the majority of the entries for the
3
d’Automne at the Grand Palais, in Paris. Dove spent
next ten years. The 1936 and 1937 diaries contain
some of his French sojourn in Paris, but he painted
entries written by both of them, and from 1939 to
mainly in the surrounding countryside. While
1945 Dove handled the task. Shortly after the move
abroad, he met the artist Alfred Maurer, who would
onto the Mona, Dove’s work appeared in the 1925
become a dear friend.
Seven Americans exhibition organized by Stieglitz at
Back in New York, Dove returned to his work
the Anderson Galleries in New York, and starting
as an illustrator, but making the acquaintance of
in 1926, he had a one-man show under Stieglitz’s
the photographer and gallery proprietor Alfred
watch almost every year for the rest of his career.
Stieglitz in late 1909 or early 1910 helped encour-
Dove and Torr married in 1932 and, following the
age his pursuit of painting. During this time, the
death of Dove’s mother in 1933, they moved to the
Doves moved to Westport, Connecticut, to make
Dove family home in Geneva. It was during this
a go at farming; while there, they socialized (and
time that Dove met Duncan Phillips, who, like
played baseball) with other Westport residents and
Stieglitz, became a major advocate and patron; Phil-
visitors, including Maurer and other artists such as
lips regularly exhibited Dove’s work at his gallery
John Marin, Abraham Walkowitz, and Paul Strand,
in Washington, DC, and supported Dove with a sti-
the critics Van Wyck Brooks and Paul Rosenfeld,
pend in exchange for first pick of works from each
and the writer Sherwood Anderson. Stieglitz had
annual exhibition. Dove and Torr remained in Ge-
included The Lobster in a 1910 group exhibition at
neva until 1938, at which point they moved to Cen-
his gallery 291, originally the Little Galleries of the
terport, Long Island, near Huntington, where they
Photo-Secession but by 1908 referred to by the street
set up shop in a converted post office. Dove had a
number of the building on Fifth Avenue that had
heart attack in 1939 and was in ill health for much
4
housed the first iteration of the gallery. Yet it was
of the remainder of his life, although he continued
not until a few years later that Dove’s work began
to paint. He died in 1946. Introduction
3
Dove’s Art Often heralded as the first American artist to try his
4
tions, that the particular nature of Dove’s practice— both the material characteristics of his paintings and the specific constellation of ideas that these
hand at abstraction, Dove is perhaps best known
characteristics engaged— remains less than fully
for his nature-based abstract paintings, most of
addressed. My account of Dove does not intend
which stop short of total nonobjectivity. He was
to refute or supersede any of the aforementioned
one of several American artists actively champi-
strains of interpretation, all of them interesting
oned by Stieglitz, chiefly in the 1920s and 1930s, a
and vital. One could even say that, on its own, my
group that included John Marin, Marsden Hartley,
story is itself full of holes, for it relies on the other
Charles Demuth, Paul Strand, and Georgia O’Keeffe.
tales alongside which it sits, their telling affording
Stieglitz and the circle of critics associated with
me a perspective from which to fathom Dove anew,
him, including the effusive but sharp Paul Rosen-
to step directly into the thick mess of his art rather
feld, posited the work of these artists as exemplary
than bypass it for a neater, if equally interesting
of an advanced, homegrown American art. It thus
narrative about Dove and modernism, Dove and ab-
comes as no surprise that most accounts of Dove’s
straction, or Dove and Stieglitz. But I am not alone
practice tend to analyze his work under the sign of
in my belief that the time is right for a radical re-
Stieglitz, interpreting it as exemplary of Stieglitz’s
telling of Dove’s story. This new tale acknowledges
mission and consequently representative within
the captivating complexity and the challenge of his
the standard story of American modernism in the
pictures, taking their complicatedness to be partly
first half of the twentieth century. The tales of Dove
the point, and makes the description and study of
thus told can be divided roughly into three cate-
Dove’s larger milieu at times secondary but never
gories, each representing a typical approach to his
incidental to a methodical and deep exploration of
art: (1) biographical, where Dove’s very interesting
his art.
life takes precedence over his paintings, the idea
This book focuses on Dove’s practice after 1921,
being that Dove’s pictures require only abbrevi-
the year that marked his full return to painting af-
ated explanation because they exemplify Stieglitz’s
ter a multiyear hiatus, and considers this practice
well-defined and vigorously studied ideas about art;
through 1946, the last year of his life. Although my
(2) genealogical, where Dove is claimed as the first
analysis necessarily engages Dove’s output prior
American abstract painter and thus the progenitor,
to 1921, my interest lies in a style of painting that
in combination with the European avant-garde, of
emerged in the 1920s, was predominant between
American abstraction to come, his career primarily
1925 and 1940, and persisted in somewhat altered
a matter of ingesting and expressing a variety of
form during the final years of Dove’s life. My inter-
external sources and influences while setting the
est lies also in the group of sculptural assemblages
stage for Abstract Expressionism in the postwar
that Dove created between the years 1924 and 1930,
period; and (3) romantic, where Dove is imagined
which he called “things” and that I see as directly
as an urban-shy antimodern who retreated to the
dimensional related to the concerns of his two-
countryside in order to commune with nature and
practice. I make no argument for the specialness
render his subjective response to the natural world,
of this cohort of paintings and sculptures, but I
this individual, emotive, of-the-soil painting being
do insist on its distinctiveness as a strain within
the sort advocated by Stieglitz.5
Dove’s entire body of work and on the prevalence
None of these accounts get Dove fully wrong,
of this strain in the aforementioned years. As such,
but by the same token, none of them get him alto-
my study does not claim to be a comprehensive
gether right. Opting for the necessary and import-
survey of Dove’s art. Rather, it zeroes in on what I
ant task of describing Dove’s place in the history of
take to be certain of the abiding preoccupations of
American art has meant, with a few notable excep-
his practice, on a set of concerns that could easily
Introduction
be described as governing or presiding, but, im-
Stieglitz, perhaps, but not in terms of him—has yet
portantly, not single-minded. During the period
to be undertaken, a remarkable enough fact given
under discussion, this cluster of concerns mani-
that Dove’s pictures are not only acknowledged
fested across the entirety of Dove’s activity, from
as highly important within the history of mod-
his painting, sculpting, and sketching to his diary
ern American art but are on their own just plain
keeping, poetry writing, weather watching, and
stunning, absorbing in a manner that insists that
music listening—hence my concentrated focus.
they be studied closely and deeply, thickly rather
By referring to the “thick mess” of Dove’s art, I
than thinly.
indicate my intention to provide a thick descrip-
Throughout the book, I do my best to define
tion of Dove, one that hews to the late anthropol-
the terms I employ to elucidate Dove’s practice. But
ogist Clifford Geertz’s injunction to listen care-
because they are so prominent within my analysis,
fully and closely to one’s object of study. As Geertz
three of these terms—language, translation, and
insisted, the stories told by the person or group
intersubjectivity—demand explication at the out-
under scrutiny are as valuable as description and
set. All three emerged as a result of my search for
interpretation as are the arguments fashioned by
a vocabulary for use in characterizing what I saw
the scholar; likewise, the terms used by those be-
in Dove’s work as well as from the concepts and
ing studied provide an analytical vocabulary equal
themes that rose to the surface as I plumbed the
in viability to the terminology native to a scholarly
depths of his artistic practice and the historical
6
discipline. Following this, my approach to Dove
record. They are my terms, then, not Dove’s, but
involves attending primarily to three things: what
Dove and the historical fabric of which he was a
Dove made, said, and read. I take this approach in
part compelled my selection of them. Thus, while
order to develop a new and rigorously historical
deeply embedded in the history and cultural for-
vocabulary for describing Dove’s practice and also
mations of Dove’s moment, these particular terms,
to formulate an idea of what Dove himself might
unlike the bulk of those I employ throughout this
have imagined he was doing when he painted a
study, do not appropriate specific locutions from
picture or created an assemblage, with archival and
period discourse.
documentary evidence (the “said” and the “read”)
Take “language,” to start. My account of Dove
illuminating the salient material characteristics of
hinges on the claim that he was preoccupied with
his work. In combination with an attention to the
the nature, properties, and effects of language, and
critical reception of his art and a thorough study
by “language” I mean most basically the spoken or
of the fields or domains that art engaged—the his-
written words and signs used by humans to com-
tory of sound technology, for instance, or the visual
municate. This includes text and speech but also
and material culture of meteorology—my listening
systems of communication that employ symbols,
to Dove constructs an argument about what it was
such as those used in mathematics, musical nota-
historically possible for him to have imagined his
tion, or cartography, or sounds, such as the taps of
art to be about, that is, what he could have intended
Morse code or timed foghorn blasts. Hence I also
when he created his works, even if what resulted
make use of the phrase “notational system” when
does not to our eyes appear to match this intention.
referring to certain forms of language in order to
In so doing, I pay attention to what Dove thought
imply the inclusiveness of the term for me and,
about and took interest in, as well as what his his-
more specifically, to signal that I use it to refer both
torical moment would have allowed him to think
to language as it is used and language as a system of
about and find compelling. Such an approach may
words, marks, or sounds governed by conventions or
strike the reader as terribly old fashioned, and it is.
rules. This follows in part from the example of the
But the fact remains that this sort of interpretation
philosopher Nelson Goodman. Although my sense
of Dove, this “thick” reading of his art—alongside
of language in Dove shares almost nothing with Introduction
5
Goodman’s exacting typological and functional
at here. According to Benjamin, translation, rather
analysis of linguistic forms and modes, Goodman’s
than simply an entity or an act, consists of a “mode,”
preference for the idea of “symbol systems” over
and its primary effect entails more than a transfer
the descriptor “language”—because, as he says, the
of information through reproduction. Constitut-
former more adequately posits language as a mech-
ing the original’s afterlife, translation is an entity
anism of cognition and because it registers the
vitally connected to its antecedent. Yet translation
linguistic and nonlinguistic character of symbols—
ultimately transpires as different than and no lon-
accords with my sense of Dove’s approach to the
ger in need of this precursor, producing an under-
language of both art and ordinary life.7 “Language”
standing that transcends the specific content of
as I use it also encompasses signs or sounds with
the texts involved in the transfer. For, according
extrahuman origins, such as the graphic record of
to Benjamin, translation’s ultimate purpose is the
a nonseeable phenomenon produced by a register-
expression of the essentially reciprocal relationship
ing instrument; so-called natural signs, including
among languages, their natural convergence and
cloud formations, rainbows, wind, or the coloring
interrelation, a suprahistorical kinship and comple-
of a stormy sky; or the machine-based noises pro-
mentariness of intentions or modes that the act of
duced by a technology like phonography that anno-
translation yields as a “pure language,” or the “one
tate and supplement the musical sound generated
true” language latent in all tongues.9
by that device. Finally, I configure language not as
Following Benjamin, I understand translation
a closed system but as a medium, because Dove did
in relation to Dove as at once a transformation
so, approaching it as a fundamental linking agent
or a transmutation that produces a new form, di-
among subjects and objects, as has been theorized
vergent from the original, and an operation that
by philosophers such as Hegel and Hans- Georg
hinges on similarity or sameness and, in particu-
Gadamer, who called language “the preliminary
lar, on correspondences that take the shape of re-
8
6
medium that encompasses all beings.” While Ga-
lationships established among multiple entities.
damer’s assertion applied only to things expressed
Put another way, my sense of translation entails
in words, his sense of language as a motile, fluid
attributing to it metamorphosis but also a quality
entity—as an operation or process more so than an
or condition of exchange: the translation of some-
inert collection of signs—aptly expresses what I ar-
thing draws on the original while the status of the
gue language was for Dove.
original undergoes reshaping and recalibration ac-
The second term, “translation,” might be de-
cording to its afterlife in translation. Dove did not
scribed as a property or a capacity of the first and
share Benjamin’s interest in pure or true language,
relates closely to the idea of language as a medium.
but the critic’s characterization of translation as
Most often used to describe the conversion of a
a relational and interconnecting mode provides a
word, phrase, or passage in one language into an-
productive framework for charting what I will de-
other language or to refer to the product of that
scribe as Dove’s preoccupation with translation, not
conversion, translation also refers more generally
least because Dove’s sense of the task of translation
to a change in form, condition, or state, or to the
equaled Benjamin’s in its utopianism, its fixation
transfer of an entity or idea from one place or sphere
on gathering parts into a sum or a whole, and its
to another. As a keyword within my study of Dove,
insistence on the special power of translation as a
“translation” embodies both senses of the term, and
based, relational, and, ultimately, intelanguage-
in using it I mean to retain its ties to language even
grating operation.10 In this way, the term “trans-
as I employ it to characterize a whole host of other
lation” in my analysis also draws on its definition
transforming and transmuting operations. Walter
and usage within sociology and, more specifically,
Benjamin’s essay “The Task of the Translator” (1923)
within what has been labeled actor-network theory,
offers one avenue into explaining what I am getting
an approach developed within science studies to
Introduction
describing the nature of the relations that consti-
comes (translation) of communication. “Communi-
tute social systems or networks, especially scientific
cation” is itself a key term here, one that figures sig-
11
or technological ones. “Translation” as a term here
nificantly in my account of Dove, for it describes the
characterizes the congealing of persons, things, and
operations and effects of both language and trans-
concepts into a group as compelled initially by an
lation, including connection, transmission, and ex-
intention or a problem and subsequently driven by
change, all of which characterize the condition of
the collecting and accumulation of additional en-
intersubjectivity.13 In its most basic sense, intersub-
tities and ideas into a temporary network or sys-
jectivity connotes agreement between two or more
tem for use in fulfilling the intention or solving the
parties or a commonality of belief within a group as
problem. For example, a scientist poses a question
arising from human interaction. More complexly,
and crafts a hypothesis; in order to test this hypoth-
within the domains of psychoanalysis and philos-
esis, he or she devises an experiment; in order to
ophy, phenomenology in particular, the term indi-
conduct the experiment, he or she gathers mate-
cates shared cognition and the constitution of net-
rials and instruments for use in doing so along with
works of cognitive and psychic interchange among
fellow scientists to assist in the process. The con-
multiple interrelating subjects and/or objects. Here,
gealed group counts as a bonded system because all
intersubjectivity is understood as the coconstitu-
parts, human and nonhuman alike, behave accord-
tion and sharing of subjective states that transpires
ing to or substantively affect the original charge,
within a network of relations (psychoanalysis) or as
which transfers from one entity to the next in the
the product of empathy or identification compelled
process of the group’s formation and interaction,
by the perception of or interaction with other ob-
but also, and importantly, translates along the way,
jects, human or nonhuman (phenomenology). In
each jump of that charge between transmitter and
both cases, intersubjectivity as a concept addresses
receptor (between one scientist and another, say, or
the problem of knowing other minds or entities and
between a scientist and a piece of technology used
encompasses the processes by which others become
in the experiment) serving to transform the labor
present to a perceiving subject as well as the mecha-
and outcomes of that network as well as the net-
nisms by which meaning and relationships are cre-
12
work’s very nature. Understood in this manner,
ated among multiple subjects and/or objects so as
translation as an operation establishes relations but
to create an animated system of interrelations and
also forges substantive bonds, interweaving dispa-
interchanges, with emphasis on the idea of a system,
rate entities into a single complex, a self-contained
over and against the concepts of unity or gestalt.
entity composed of essentially interrelated parts.
And, variously defined within multiple disciplines
Experimentation with just such a suturing capac-
or fields of inquiry including psychoanalysis and
ity transpired throughout Dove’s practice, and Dove
philosophy but also, for example, anthropology and
explored in his work the adjoined character and
neuroscience, intersubjectivity as a concept allows
transmitting capacity of networks and systems of
for multiple kinds of intersubject/interobject rela-
various sorts. Translation thus serves for me as a
tions and exchanges: literal or figurative, optical or
historically appropriate and conceptually dynamic
corporeal, cognitive or material, natural or occult.14
term for use in elucidating these preoccupations as
In this way, intersubjectivity embodies terminolog-
they were expressed in Dove’s art.
ical and conceptual specificity and frank openness
The third and final term on my list, “intersub-
simultaneously. It concerns subject/object rela-
jectivity,” relates closely to the first two, “language”
tions in particular but allows for consideration of
and “translation,” for it refers to the sharing of a
all manner of relations among all manner of things.
subjective experience or state among two or more
As a result, the term has proved immensely useful
individuals, a condition potentially facilitated by
in my accounting of Dove’s art, precisely because
the materials (language) and operations or out-
that art was notably preoccupied with questions of Introduction
7
rapport, connection, and interrelation yet explored
Einstein, Friedrich Nietzsche, Sherwood Anderson,
and expressed these concerns and conditions from
Shakespeare, Rembrandt, Stieglitz, O’Keeffe, and
myriad points of view and through wide-ranging,
Menaechmus (the ancient Greek mathematician)
eclectic means.
that served to inspire what one might call his ar-
This brings me to a series of points I would like
tistic philosophy (a charitable designation, to say
to make regarding Dove as I portray him in this
the least) would drive a pedant to distraction. As
book. In the course of analyzing his practice, I call
another example, his paintings and assemblages
on a diversity of disciplines, including philosophy,
without a doubt demand to be considered in light of
the history of science, sociology, literature, meteo-
contemporaneous science, but they do things that
rology, geography, and natural history. I also evoke a
are not in the least scientific and they take great
multitude of concepts other than language, transla-
license with science’s ideas and tools. Put another
tion, and intersubjectivity, among them invisibility,
way, when one tries to match up Dove’s practice
objecthood, network, the multisensory, and agency.
with the science of his day, the two wind up looking
In some instances, the ideas or methods of a disci-
not a whole lot like one another and, as a result, the
pline that I reference or the particular conceptual
initial connection can appear specious or forced.
paradigm that I invoke were contemporaneous with
But if one abandons the quest for a perfect match,
Dove. The portion of my analysis that concerns
and accepts the fact that Dove did whatever he
Dove and meteorology, for example, focuses on
wanted with the tools, concepts, and materials he
period weather science, and the section on Dove’s
culled from the ideas and imagery of various fields,
poetry considers it in relation to his own literary
always with a specific and thoroughly if not pains-
contexts. In other instances, I make use of more re-
takingly considered purpose in mind, the problem
cently developed methodologies or concepts to aid
of concordance disappears. This is not to say that in
me in coming to terms with Dove’s art. In either
the way of interpretation anything goes. Rather, it
case, and between the two, I run the risk of painting
is to suggest that one must remain attuned to the
Dove as, among other things, a fervent and ency-
openness and unprejudiced curiosity with which
clopedic reader, a serious and dedicated student of
Dove faced the world as a source of material for
science, a philosopher in training, a literary savant,
his art in order to understand what happened to
a poststructuralist, an audiophile, a jazz aficionado,
that material when he got his hands on it. It is also
around brilliant an expert engineer, and an all-
to insist that, methodologically speaking, any one
mind. He was none of these. Smart, yes, intellec-
piece of evidence must be considered in relation to
tually curious, to be sure, but he was neither eru-
the whole archival mass, works of art included. A
dite nor was he especially scholarly in disposition.
reference to Herman Melville’s Moby-Dick in Dove’s
He read, but not constantly or systematically, and
daily diary or in one of his letters, for example,
he learned a fair amount by listening to Torr, who
could mean a great deal or perhaps not very much,
15
8
was a real reader. Dove knew a fair amount about
but we may only become aware of its significance or
a lot of things, but only as it suited him—a little
lack thereof by attempting to see Melville through
theosophy here, a little theoretical physics there, a
Dove’s eyes (or Torr’s, for she likely read portions of
bit of jazz added to the mix, and perhaps a dollop
Moby-Dick aloud to him, as she did a number of the
of weather wisdom and a pinch of Dada to finish
texts mentioned in the diaries). By the same token,
it off. Certain ideas Dove bungled in translation or
Dove’s interest in language does not mean he was
got plain wrong, sometimes on purpose. His was
immersed, deeply or at all, in period linguistic the-
not at all a textbook theosophy, for instance, and
ory, nor does a scattering of references to séances,
the claims he made for weather science might have
Swami Nikhilananda, or astrology in his diaries or
struck a meteorologist as a bit off the mark, while
letters necessarily certify him as a fully committed,
the mash-up of James Joyce, Gertrude Stein, Albert
card-carrying occultist.
Introduction
Two final points. First, Dove created abstract
what I offer here aims to revise previous interpre-
paintings and assemblages, some of them retain-
tations of Dove, which by and large have posited
ing a pictorial link to objective appearance, some
him as an artist interested in communing with
of them not. For this reason, any interpretation of
nature and sharing the personal, subjective result
Dove must acknowledge that questions regarding
by plumbing nature’s depths for its essences and
abstraction are at issue in his work. Yet I am less
first principles and rendering these things visible in
interested here in the fact of Dove’s abstraction—
pictures, have I as a consequence evacuated a fun-
whether he was the first to do it, why he did it so
damental aspect of Dove’s practice or, even worse,
early in the game, and what theories of representa-
blinded myself to the chief characteristic of his very
tion or philosophies of being underpinned his turn
comportment toward the world? I do not believe
to an abstract vocabulary—than I am in abstrac-
so. My focus on language, translation, and intersub-
tion’s modalities for Dove: the forms his abstraction
jectivity—on signs, communication systems, and
took and, even more, the operations that his abstract
relational conditions—may appear to preclude the
vocabulary attempted to perform. I spend time ad-
possibility of understanding Dove as someone for
dressing Dove’s own accounts of why realism did
whom nature was a source of pleasure, a means to
not work for him and why abstraction did the trick.
contemplation, a wellspring of knowledge, or a spir-
But rather than dwelling on just what it was about
itual balm. Nature most certainly was these things
abstraction that he found suitable or presuming
for Dove, as the Dove literature has already made
that because he painted abstractly and admired
clear, and Dove had more than a little in common
Kandinsky he had to possess a systematic theory or
with his American predecessors— Thomas Cole,
prescription for the production of abstract imagery,
Frederic Church, Martin Johnson Heade, Robert S.
I move quickly to a consideration of abstraction’s
Duncanson, and George Inness among them—who
behavior, its actions and operations rather than its
in the nineteenth century cast the natural land-
nature of being, within his work. This jump reflects
scape as an extraordinary, exalted, and animating
Dove’s own proclivity to make rather than to rumi-
terrain. But Dove was not any of these men. He had
nate at length on the precepts and principles of his
additional things on his mind when he looked to
art, and it also signals that for him making was a
nature or away from it in order to paint, and this
matter of thinking: the registration, synthesis, and
is the point of my book, written in order to supple-
array of data as knowledge or insight in the space
ment rather than replace the tales that have been
of crafting a painting or an assemblage. And this is
told about Dove so that the various accounts of his
yet another way of saying that instead of treating
practice, taken as a whole, live up to the complexity,
Dove’s pictures as syntheses of the sources on which
vigor, and intricately layered density of his art. In
he drew, presenting them as illustrations of ideas or
other words, I want my reader to recognize Dove,
theories, from then or from now, or assuming that
but I also want Dove in these pages to come as a
these pictures arose from a direct, unmediated, and
surprise.
intuitive encounter with the natural world, I set out in this study to establish Dove himself as a thinker and a theorizer, a serious if haphazard and eclectic one, as a creator of concepts and paradigms through the often idiosyncratic means and always compelling forms of his work. My final point comes in the form of a question: What about nature, then? Dove’s magnificent seascapes, his radiant sunsets, his glowing moons, his wind-tossed meadows, and his heavenly skies? If Introduction
9
Fig. 2 Arthur G. Dove, Sun Drawing Water, 1933, oil on canvas, 243⁄8 × 335⁄8 in. (61.9125 × 85.4075 cm), The Phillips Collection, Washington, DC, acquired 1933. Any reproduction of this image shall not be made without written consent of The Phillips Collection, Washington, DC.
1
Circles Supersight Arthur Dove painted Sun Drawing Water in January of 1933 (fig. 2). At the time, Dove lived with his wife, the artist Helen Torr, on their boat, the Mona, moored at Halesite, on the North Shore of Long Island.1 Like many of his paintings from this period, Sun Drawing Water takes the landscape of the shore as its subject. Yet the work retains only a glimmer of the particulars of locale and place, as if recalling something seen in a dream—the curve of the beach here, the surge of the water there—or perhaps registering an afterimage, the lingering residue of the world once perceived. This is typical of Dove’s art. Throughout his career, Dove drew inspiration from the stuff of the observable, material world. And then he distorted, even disfigured this stuff, pushing the majority of his pictures to the cusp of nonobjectivity, distorting and inventing without altogether abandoning reference to the real. In this he was not in the least unique or special, for he shared his tendency toward abstraction with numerous artists among the American and European avant-garde.2 In Sun Drawing Water, Dove represents the heave and surge of ocean meeting land. Waves at the bottom edge of the canvas, rendered in gray, light blue, and blue-green, gently press against what we take to be the shore, that bulge of yellow-green that extends across the lower half of the canvas. The transparent softness of the paint that designates the waves, diluted so that it approaches the feel of watercolor, evokes the 11
12
fluid and constant lapping of water onto sand,
at the shore, save for maybe the tails of kites, but
the back-and-forth pull and swish of liquid across
that is not what they are. These twisting forms that
a semisolid expanse. Clouds pass over the scene,
undulate across and plunge up and down appear to
and at left, just above the point where one of these
be Dove’s attempt to give to light a material, picto-
clouds arcs elegantly into its own wavelike form,
rial form, standing for the wave patterns of light
the sun presses through the haze of fog and damp,
as it travels through air. The downward plunge of
its rays disappearing behind patches of blue and re-
the “V” visualizes the action of light and heat on
appearing as wide yellow bands that bend and flow
the earth’s surface, its upward surge the aftereffect
across the sky.
of this action: water transformed into the stuff
Put another way: In Sun Drawing Water, the
of atmosphere. The swirling ribbons also register
viewer sees what he or she might see on a visit to
wind, the bulk flow of air in time and through space.
the Long Island shore. But that viewer perceives far
Early in his career, on the occasion of the Chicago
more than just this, gaining visual access to things
exhibition of “The Ten Commandments,” Dove ex-
that one should not be able to make out at all, phe-
plained his efforts to depict wind, making clear his
nomena that are not visible or apprehensible by
intentions to render first and foremost the force it-
way of the naked eye: wind, evaporation, light, tidal
self. To paint a cyclone, he said, “I would paint the
force. To be sure, one can see the effects of these phe-
mighty folds of the wind. . . . I would show repeti-
nomena: objects blown by the wind; water drying
tions and convolutions of the rage of the tempest.
up; the sun’s glow and the things that it brings to
I would paint the wind, not a landscape chastised
light; the tide moving in and out over the course of
by the wind.”3 The repeating swerves and jigs of the
a day. But one cannot see cause; that is, one cannot
ribbons in Sun Drawing Water impart the motion of
discern the actual forces behind these end effects,
wind as it folds and bends in space, an unseen force
the phenomena of which these things are the ulti-
making its way through equally unseen terrain. The
mate result: changes in barometric pressure and the
stacked bands of tonally varied yellow-green that
consequent movement of air mass (wind), the tran-
designate the rise of land toward the front of the
sition of molecules from a liquid to a gaseous state
scene also diagram wind. Each band signals a mass
(evaporation), electromagnetic radiation moving in
of air touching a spot along the curve of the hill as it
wave-or particle-form through air (light), the grav-
moves, the tonal striations from light at the base to
itational effect of one body on another (the moon
darker at the top evoking traversal across the space
acting on the earth so as to create the tides).
as a whole as well as the variations of color we see in
In Dove’s world, however, viewers are made privy
a field of beach grass buffeted by billowing gusts, as
to what the unaided eye cannot see. In Sun Drawing
the waxy undersides of blades are exposed, creating
Water, the transmutation of molecules from liquid
a shifting sea of darker and lighter greens.
to gas—the mechanism of evaporation—manifests
These ribbons may have served another, ad-
visually in the thrusting blue-gray cylinders at the
ditional purpose: that of visualizing the flight of
center of the canvas, chutes of water sucked into the
birds. Prominent in two watercolor studies Dove
sky. The fading of darker blue into light yellow-gray
made for Sun Drawing Water, similar lines appear in
toward the top of the cylinders, where they round
other of Dove’s paintings, including his Seagull Mo-
off and dissolve into cloud, reiterates this idea—
tif (Violet and Green) (1928) (fig. 3).4 In both canvases
the transformation of a substance from one state
these lines appear to represent, in visual, abstract
into another—as does the transition from black to
form, what the unassisted eye cannot see: the drafts
yellow that occurs just as the V-shaped ribbon at
of air produced by the flapping of wings as well as
center traverses the boundary between land and air.
the drafts produced by the wind on which seagulls
This and the other ribbons swirling in the sky do
float and soar, those forces of lift and drag that con-
not seem to denote anything that one might see
stitute the aerodynamics of flight.5 The lines might
Chapter One
Fig. 3 Arthur G. Dove, Seagull Motif (Violet and Green), 1928, oil on metal, Collection of J. R. and Barbara Hyde.
also represent the idea of movement itself, the ef-
landscape.7 Their ripples and swells also evoke the
fect of displacement in time and space. During the
idea of a moving stream, one that flows as all streams
short period he was at work on Sun Drawing Water,
do but that also appears to “follow” a moving object,
Dove wrote a long letter to Stieglitz. He wrote this
such as a train. By rendering through these ribbons
letter while on a train headed home from Geneva,
the perceived effect of a stream relocating and ad-
New York, where he had traveled after the death of
vancing on terrain, keeping time with the train, it
his mother. In the letter, Dove told Stieglitz that he
may be that Dove wished to insert into Sun Drawing
had made two watercolors while aboard the train,
Water an emblem of the journey that interrupted
and he also described what he saw as he rode: “A
his work on the painting. He started to paint Sun
light fall of snow. And a green stream following
Drawing Water on January 17 and completed the
6
the train.” Sun Drawing Water does not depict a
picture in just under two weeks, wrapping up on
view from a train window as does another of Dove’s
January 31, but the train trip to Geneva, which oc-
works, Fields of Grain Seen from Train (1931), which
curred during this interval, forced Dove to leave off
registers through telescoping perspective the com-
painting for several days.8 The ribbon forms thus
bined effect of a fast- passing foreground and a
instill within the picture the temporality of its
static distance, but the ribbons that twist through
creation, for these forms act as a pictorial souvenir
the cloudy sky of Dove’s seaside scene do call to
of Dove’s trip and his train-bound encounter with
mind the meander of a stream through a snowy
the tag-along stream. The memory of a stream that
Fig. 4 Arthur G. Dove, Fog Horns, 1929, oil on canvas, 18 × 26 in. (45.7 × 66 cm), Colorado Springs Fine Arts Center, Anonymous Gift, FA 1954.1.
14
Chapter One
Fig. 5 Arthur G. Dove, Moon, 1935, oil on canvas, 88.9 × 63.5 cm (35 × 25 in.), National Gallery of Art, Washington, DC, Collection of Barney A. Ebsworth, 2009.39.1.
seemed to accompany him in time and space fur-
bands of gray, purple, and plum diagramming the
nished Dove with an emblem of the temporal and
travel of sound waves through air as well as the
geographic interlude that constituted the paint-
perceived transmutation of sound—here, that of a
ing’s coming into being, the serial displacement of
foghorn signal—as relative to a stationary listener.
the stream transmuting in Sun Drawing Water into
In Moon (1935) (fig. 5), a tree stands silhouetted
the shimmer and swirl of wind, water vapor, and
against the glow of the lunar sky. Dove shows what
birds moving in air.
the moon does, not what it looks like, and he gives
The impulse to render in visual form the nonvis-
visual form to its actions on the earth, marshaling
ible or phenomena not perceivable by the unassisted
paint to make seen what is normally unavailable to
human eye marks many of Dove’s pictures. As other
the eye. The trunk establishes a literal connection
scholars have previously suggested, if not explored
between moon and earth, as if to evoke the gravi-
at length, Dove wished for these supersighted
tational force exerted by the one on the other, the
paintings to show his viewers the world anew, to
brown limb pressing toward the ground as if bend-
9
grant access to a kind of superhuman vision. In Fog
ing under the weight and pull of the radiant orb.
Horns (1929) (fig. 4), for instance, Dove transforms
The shift in the outmost circle from black, in the
sonic sensation into visible matter, with spiraling
bottom half, to blue, in the upper, gives visual form
Fig. 6 Arthur G. Dove, Silver Sun, 1929, oil, metallic paint, and wax (?) on canvas, 55.3 × 74.9 cm (21¾ × 29½ in.), Alfred Stieglitz Collection, 1949.531, The Art Institute of Chicago.
16
Chapter One
Fig. 7 Arthur G. Dove, Sunrise III, 1936–1937, wax emulsion and oil on canvas, partly coated in gesso, 63.5 × 89.1 cm (25 × 351⁄16 in.), Yale University Art Gallery, Gift of Katherine S. Dreier to the Collection Société Anonyme, 1949.3.
to the idea of a lunar phase, the waxing and waning
alizing radiating light as well as the movement of
of the illuminated portion of the moon as visible
the earth around the sun, what one sees only as a
from earth that the eye can only see as a series of
series of static spatial displacements as the earth’s
fixed states, unable as it is to detect the infinitesimal
position relative to the sun shifts over the course
and constant transformations in size and shape of
of a day. A smaller concentric circle motif appears
this illuminated patch that occur during the lunar
just beneath these forms, hovering at the earth’s
cycle. I am struck by how much Dove’s concentric
crust, its tonalities reversing that of its larger coun-
circles here conjure something like a giant, staring
terpart: dark on the outside, light at center. This
eye, suggesting that Dove indeed depicts a view of
point-counterpoint maps the operation of reflec-
things as if seen by a superhuman orb, so that all of
tion, light cast onto and bounced off a surface, a
a sudden the unseeable, physical forces that govern
phenomenon that Dove registers materially here by
the earth appear in plain sight.
way of a metal-based silver paint, so that the can-
Dove frequently employed such a concentric
vas becomes, quite literally, a medium of reflection,
circle motif to render the motion and mechanics
reflecting and refracting waves of light across and
of light or celestial bodies, both in his paintings,
through its silvery metal sheen. A similar big-circle,
as in Me and the Moon (1937), Silver Sun (1929), and
little-circle pairing occurs in Dove’s Sunrise, North-
Sunrise III (1936–1937), and throughout his small-
port Harbor (1929) (fig. 8), where the sun at the hori-
scale sketches and studies, where the motif prolif-
zon confronts its reversed reflection in the waves
10
erates in myriad forms (figs. 52, 6, 7). In Sunrise III
beneath it, dark orange migrating from perimeter
the sun and its rays take on a concentric cast, while
to center in the shift from sun to not-quite-mirror
curving lines and biomorphic forms amplify the ro-
image. In Golden Sun (1937) (fig. 9), Dove doubly fig-
tational force of the composition, an effect repro-
ures the travel of light waves from sun to earth’s
duced in Sunrise I and Sunrise II, both 1936, which
surface: by concentric bands of yellow and white
11
together with Sunrise III form a series. In Silver Sun,
and by a collection of lines that slice through space,
careening circles originate in inky black and spiral
originating at or near the sun’s yellow center, trav-
out through shades of blue to a whitish-gray, visu-
eling through layers of paint, and touching down Circles
17
Fig. 8 Arthur G. Dove, Sunrise, Northport Harbor, 1929, oil on canvas, 38 × 51 cm (1415⁄16 × 201⁄16 in.), Princeton University Art Museum, Gift of John S. McGovern, Class of 1926, y1962-44.
Fig. 9 Arthur G. Dove, Golden Sun, 1937, oil on canvas, Collection of J. R. and Barbara Hyde.
Fig. 10 Arthur G. Dove, Naples Yellow Morning, 1935, oil on linen, 251⁄8 × 35 in. (63.8175 × 88.9 cm). Courtesy of the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, Philadelphia (www.pafa.org). The Vivian O. and Meyer P. Potamkin Collection, Bequest of Vivian O. Potamkin, 2003.1.2.
20
amid encircling bands of green and stacked strips
stuff of vegetal life, constituting the chemical pro-
of black and gray.
cess vital to the growth of plants—photosynthesis,
In Naples Yellow Morning (1935) (fig. 10), Dove
fully described within science by the nineteenth
establishes a similar yellow-sun, green-earth con-
century—and essential to all life on earth.12 The
nection by way of a whimsical collection of concen-
title of this work refers, of course, to the time of
tric circle motifs. Just as the bands of yellow dia-
day depicted in the scene and to the yellow light of
gram the transmission of light from sky to earth,
the morning sun, but it also refers to the paint that
the bands of green that make up two tree-forms
Dove used to create it, Naples yellow, a synthetic,
evoke vegetal growth, the budding and spreading
lead-based pigment, with roots in the Renaissance,
of leaves and branches over a period of time, a pro-
that lands somewhere between the soft yellow of
cess made possible by the sun and that one cannot
banana flesh and the brighter yellow of a daffodil.13
literally see. The blue and blue-gray cloud-amoebas
Naples yellow is remarkable as a yellow for its par-
continue this lesson in natural science. Situated
adoxically cool warmth, something that probably
between the sun and the trees against a backdrop
appealed to Dove, for this quality allowed him to
yellow atmosphere, their moisture- laden of pale-
capture the morning’s admixture of sun and chill—
heft and drag evokes the interrelationships among
the anticipation of warmth, rather than heat itself.
light, plant, oxygen, and water that make up the
Dove cited his media in other titles, such as Pozzuoli
Chapter One
Fig. 11 Above, Arthur G. Dove, Pozzuoli Red, 1941, wax emulsion on canvas, 221⁄8 × 36 in. (56.1975 × 91.44 cm), The Phillips Collection, Washington, DC, acquired 1941. Any reproduction of this image shall not be made without written consent of The Phillips Collection, Washington, DC. Fig. 12 Left, “Structure of the Radium Atom,” in H. A. Kramers and Helge Holst, The Atom and the Bohr Theory of Its Structure: An Elementary Presentation, trans. R. B. Lindsay and Rachel T. Lindsay (New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1923), color plate 2. Lewis Library, Princeton University. Photograph: David Connelly.
Red (1941) (fig. 11), which refers to a pigment of clay
cess, photosynthesis, as well as the product of this
tinted warm red-brown by iron oxide and obtained
p rocess.
14
from iron ore deposits near Pozzuoli, Italy. In such
Dove’s efforts to render unseeable aspects of
cases, the title indicates both the painting’s subject
the physical universe somehow available to the vi-
matter and its medium, thus alluding to both the
sual sense coincided with similar exertions on the
what and the how, a doubled reference most fitting
part of other artists of the period as well as with
for Naples Morning Yellow, which describes a pro-
comparable undertakings in other disciplines, inCircles
21
cluding the sciences. Diagrams, charts, graphs, and
and non-Euclidean geometry and to the concept of
mathematical equations and symbols had begun to
the fourth dimension, which was theorized in the
supersede illustrations of objective appearance so
late nineteenth century and the early twentieth as a
as to make possible the picturing of a whole range
yet undetected physical characteristic of space and
of newly theorized but not necessarily observed
a realm of higher consciousness, and he cited or al-
15
phenomena and effects. Exemplary is a diagram
luded to numerous other sources from the realms of
of the structure of the radium atom that appeared
science and philosophy that took up consideration
in The Atom and the Bohr Theory of Its Structure (1923)
of the laws or fundamental forces of nature and the
by H. A. Kramers and Helge Holst, which only ab-
matter of rendering these laws and forces in picto-
stractly approximates rather than illustrates the
rial or graphic form.19
atom’s form (fig. 12). Dove would have been ac-
These scientific and philosophical contexts
quainted with this range of imagery and with the
most certainly informed Dove’s formulation of his
spheres of inquiry that had given rise to it. He took
abstract vocabulary, including the concentric circle
a course in physics while enrolled at Cornell. He
motif. Dove spoke frequently of his quest for a set
noted in his ship’s log that he had borrowed a tele-
of forms or “motives” that would push painting
scope and consulted astronomy texts obtained at
beyond specificity and particularity and toward
the library in Huntington, on Long Island, while
something more universal in its expression of na-
at work on an assemblage, Starry Heavens (1924),
ture’s principles, a pictorial language that would
that depicts the moon, stars, and the Big and Little
sideline direct observation and eschew “innumer-
Dippers, star groupings within the constellations
able little facts” and “dependence upon the ob-
Ursa Major and Ursa Minor (fig. 133). In a 1934 let-
ject.” Such a mode would, as Dove stated, “contain
ter to Stieglitz, he named Albert Einstein as one
all of nature, built on and enveloped in a precisely
of four in a list of “the few great ones” (the other
pure mathematical dream.”20 But as the research of
three were his childhood mentor Newton Weath-
Sherrye Cohn and Ann Lee Morgan has suggested,
erly, Alfred Stieglitz, and Jesus Christ), and Dove’s
Dove’s paintings are far from simple illustrations
son, William Dove, reported that there were two
of scientific ideas or evocations of scientific im-
people his father wished he had been able to meet
agery; his relationship to the scientific and philo-
during his lifetime: Gertrude Stein was one, and
sophical material on which he drew was never one
Einstein was the other.16 Dove made numerous spe-
of straightforward borrowing or modeling, and his
cific references to Einstein in his correspondence
recourse to this material was never systematic.21
and writing. In letters to Steiglitz, he noted an
So although Dove’s interest in giving visual form
Einstein essay as well as an interview that he had
to unseen or unseeable phenomena was, indisput-
read and enjoyed, and he also referred to popular
ably, an important part of his project, this effort was
studies of the physicist’s work, including Bertrand
not at all the whole or extent of his endeavor. Put
Russell’s The ABC of Relativity (1925), which Dove
another way, Dove’s practice constituted far more
purchased at a bookshop in New York in 1929. In
than a search for an appropriately abstract vocab-
1930, he wrote to Stieglitz that “Einstein . . . is more
ulary for use in rendering the unseen or invisible
of a painter than most literature and a great deal of
forces and laws of nature, as revealed and scruti-
art.” An undated typewritten essay of Dove’s indi-
nized by science, or for recording his individual,
cates that Einstein’s ideas had affected him so much
subjective response to the effects of these forces
that he found it almost impossible “to sit and make
and laws. Abstraction was a necessary by-product of
17
paintings with what I know any more.” In 1920, a
a different quest, one preoccupied with what a work
critic referred to Dove as a member of “the Einstein
of art, abstract or otherwise, might achieve through
18
school.” Dove also made allusions in his writing, including in the undated essay, to both Euclidean 22
Chapter One
its forms, whatever those forms might be. The diagramming impulse of a work like Sun
Drawing Water, with its mapping of the mechanisms
and unrestrained sense of human communication
of wind, the tides, evaporation, and flight, or a
and interchange.
painting such as Moon, with its charting of celestial operations, formed part of a much larger, far more complex and distinctive pictorial project, one that
Translation
I conceive as constituting a geography of circles,
Extensive period documentation of Dove’s activi-
waves, and weather. When used to refer to a disci-
ties and interests exists, and Dove had more than a
pline of study, “geography” connotes both distilla-
fair amount to say about his art—in letters, in di-
tion, such as the reductions and abstractions of a
aries, in exhibition catalog statements, in drafts of
regional or topographical map or a statistical group,
never-published essays and poems, in the margins
and expansion or lateral spread, for geography is at
of technical manuals, in the daily ship’s log he kept
bottom a science of distribution, mobility, region,
for years while living aboard the Mona, on the backs
and terrain. As such, geography provides both con-
of paintings, and on slips of paper stowed here and
ceptual latitude and terminological specificity for
there. What emerges from this material is a portrait
comprehending and describing the chief impulses and predominating forms of Dove’s art: abstraction, of course, but also modalities and forms other than abstraction. This would include language, understood in keeping with Dove’s own practice as any type of sign or system of expression, and that, as a form, simultaneously distills and proliferates, reducing complexity to a system of efficient signs, as does a map, while circulating and transforming widely and endlessly, as do terrain and its inhabitants. Dove’s project was fundamentally driven by an abiding interest in language, broadly defined, and, more specifically, in two of language’s chief operations. The first of these operations was translation, the rendering of something that exists in one form in another alternate form. The second was communication, the conveying of information between parties by way of a mutually intelligible system of signs, as made possible by translation. Dove’s preoccupation with translation and communication was such that he made them the primary procedures of his art, although his understanding of their operations and effects was decidedly nonspecific and broad, and intelligibility was never a constant criterion. Rather than carefully wrought definitions of particular procedures underpinned by specific theoretical paradigms or texts, or even by conventional usage, Dove’s practice called forth an idiosyncratic and eccentric, at times inexpert, embrace of myriad forms of transmutation and conveyance, one that reflected his own expansive
Fig. 13 Page 3 of an Arthur Garfield Dove letter to Helen Torr Dove, Nov. 10, 1933. Arthur and Helen Torr Dove Papers, 1905–1974. Archives of American Art, Smithsonian Institution, 2:1:41, image #8.
Circles
23
of an artist who wrote regularly and abundantly—
Torr was visiting her mother in Hartford, Connecti-
the Dove holdings at the Archives of American Art
cut, Dove arrayed the letters of “Sweets” vertically
include over fifteen folders’ worth of his unpub-
and then repeated these letters immediately to the
lished poetry and prose—as well as an individual
right of this column, but in reverse, as if a mirror
intensely interested in the properties of language
image (fig. 13). Dashes between like letters empha-
and, in particular, the capacity of language in its
size the connection between the two columns, as
multiple incarnations to transmit and communi-
do the spiral lines that Dove drew around the two
22
cate information.
24
stacks, enclosing them in an irregular cylinder of
Play with prose, words, and single letters sur-
space. A horizontally spiraling line sits at the base
faces throughout Dove’s published and unpublished
of this cylinder, with portions of its loops filled in
writing. In letters to Torr, of which there are many,
with ink. Short, vibrant strokes radiate out from the
Dove often signed off as “Sweets,” and in some cases
edges of the double stack, and Dove explains his
he transformed this nickname into a graphic pat-
design in a short phrase penned next to it: “That’s
tern or design. In the body of a letter written while
a hug from me to you.” Here, words combine with
Fig. 14 Page 4 of an Arthur Garfield Dove letter to Helen Torr Dove, Nov. 22, 1934. Arthur and Helen Torr Dove Papers, 1905–1974, Archives of American Art, Smithsonian Institution, 2:1:31, image #30.
Fig. 15 Page 9 of an Arthur Garfield Dove letter to Helen Torr Dove, Nov. 10, 1933 or 1934. Arthur and Helen Torr Dove Papers, 1905–1974, Archives of American Art, Smithsonian Institution, 2:1:31, image #11.
Chapter One
graphic marks to create an image of a hug but also
and Torr enjoyed reading the Hyman Kaplan sto-
the idea of an embrace. The result occupies a middle
ries, written by Leo Rosten under the pseudonym
or hybrid ground between text and image, with the
“Leonard Q. Ross” and published in the 1930s in the
spiral form creating a link between Dove’s writing
New Yorker.26 These told the story of Kaplan, an im-
of the letter and the rest of his body of work, in
migrant enrolled in an evening English-language
which circles and spirals proliferate. Dove closed
course in New York. Kaplan’s inability or unwill-
the letter with another play on his nickname, where
ingness to master the rules and pronunciation of
the final “s” of “Sweets” spirals out and entangles
English forms the basis for a larger narrative in the
the preceding letters in a series of loops.23
stories about language and its limits and, also, about
Dove produced something similar in another
how simple errors in spelling, grammar, or pronun-
letter to Torr, sent in November 1934, in which
ciation result in sizeable miscommunication, often
he reports that he is “due at 10 at the dentist to-
to humorous effect. The rendition of Kaplan’s name
morrow” (fig. 14). He renders the word “dentist” in
in print—as H * Y * M * A * N K * A * P * L * A * N—
capital letters and adds tick marks along the edges
calls to mind Dove’s own graphic additions to let-
of several of the letters so as to indicate rows of
ters and words, and Dove made a point of approx-
teeth. In another note, most likely sent earlier that
imating this combination of letters and asterisks
same month, and shortly after Torr departed Ge-
when he referred to the Kaplan stories in a letter
neva by train, Dove wrote that he hoped the porter
to Torr.27 Such an attentiveness to language play is
had attended to her luggage at the station, sparing
on evidence in a short essay written by Dove, dated
her the effort. The conductor, Dove recalled, had
December 13, 1928, in which he considers questions
“said he would see to it as he went by.” Dove spelled
of size, contrast, and relation in artistic expression,
the “see” of this sentence in capital letters sepa-
using the example of relationships among different
rated by dashes, two between the “s” and the first
numerical values to explain his understanding of
“e” and one after each “e,” so that the word stretches
relationships among pictorial forms. In stating that
across half the span of the page (fig. 15). Dove drew a
numbers and forms have like properties and behave
schematic arrow above and running parallel to the
according to the same set of laws, Dove suggests an
elongated “see.” The arrow’s tip points toward the
equivalency or interchangeability between the two,
right edge of the sheet and a few short strokes at the
a point underscored by the circular configuration
other end designate the fletching. Here, words and
of numbers he crafts to elucidate a point about rep-
graphic marks combine to evoke the idea of a man
resenting the size of the sun (fig. 16).28 Here, Dove
moving and acting in time and space, for the exag-
wittily substitutes a ring of numbers for a natural
gerated procession of the letters across the page and
form, transforming the natural world into series of
the directional arrow call to mind the conductor’s
notational symbols and in turn compelling those
traverse of the station platform as he seeks out the
symbols to assume pictorial form. As with his
missing porter. The combination of three types of
picture-text hybrids in his letters to Torr and the
sign—letters, punctuation marks, and a symbol—
Hyman Kaplan moniker, which combines letters
allows Dove to register multiple acts (moving and
and a typographical symbol, the asterisk, making
looking) as well as multiple tenses (he will see to it,
the name take on the quality of an image, the in-
but he is not at present doing so) in a single, effi-
tervening little stars giving it an almost sculptural
cient notation. He does so redundantly, of course,
appearance, Dove with his number-sun generates a
because the arrow-letter configuration renders in
transfer among multiple notational and represen-
abbreviated form what the words of his letter al-
tational forms, breaching the limits of each so as to
ready convey, with Dove thus translating his own
create a novel expressive mode.
24
speech into a hybrid word-image sign.
Dove clearly appreciated such wordplay.25 He
Dove’s interest in language extended beyond the witty and playful. In his writings he contemCircles
25
feeling in a universal language is quite a job. Especially when confined to one language.” Dove then remarked on the relationship between writing and painting and the difficulty of translating the one into the other. “It would be quite difficult for a painter to paint about writing,” he said. “One might today paint Joyce for instance, he can still be fine, but more a man like Rembrandt . . . or Menaechmus, the ancient Einstein who was a Greek sculptor.”30 Here Dove suggests that it would take a man of rare skill to translate the work of James Joyce into pictorial form, and he offers two different possibilities for such a translation: painting as such, but also the language of mathematics and, specifically, the vocabulary of geometry. Menaechmus was a Greek mathematician and the supposed discoverer of the conic sections, curves produced by intersecting a cone with a plane, as in the circle or ellipse, parabola, and hyperbola. Dove referred to these sections in the final draft of his letter to Kootz, published in 1930 in Kootz’s Modern American Painters, as the “Maenechmian Triads.” In the final letter, he indicated that study of the conic sections had provided for him, much as color had, a means by which to render the unique essence of “all objects in nature” Fig. 16 An essay by Arthur Garfield Dove dated Dec. 13, 1928. Arthur and Helen Torr Dove Papers, 1905–1974, Archives of American Art, Smithsonian Institution, 3:3:1, image #3.
and thus to move away from “representation in the ordinary sense.”31 Dove was of course not unique in turning to geometry as inspiration for his abstract vocabulary, but his suggestion that writing might be rendered mathematically indicates that his interest
26
plated the potential of using various forms or signs
in geometry lay as much in matters of language or
to craft an ideal language. “Maybe art should be sign
signification as in the question of abstraction.
language,” he mused in one unpublished note.29 In a
What is more, the fact that Dove referred to
draft of a letter to the critic and author Samuel M.
the Greek mathematician as the “ancient Einstein”
Kootz, Dove took up the topic of communication
suggests that to his mind the conic sections could
and its misfires, considering the possibility of a lan-
install, in the space of painting, a type of lan-
guage or form that might be universally understood.
guage—in this example, a pictorial translation of
He characterized the difficulty of universal commu-
Joyce by Menaechmus or Rembrandt—that pos-
nication in terms of the legibility of an act to an ob-
sessed temporal and spatial dimensions. Dove else-
server, in this case the act of building a house. “The
where evoked such a connection among writing, ge-
spirit of anything modern or ancient,” he wrote, “is
ometry, space, and time, thus imagining writing in
understood but by a few. If one took a sandy beach
something other than its conventional text-bound
and built a house thereon that would be useable to
and two-dimensional guise. In a letter to the critic
someone. If one did it on a desert island and went
Edward Alden Jewell, which he titled “Self Portraits
away he might not be understood. To express one’s
by Others,” Dove strung together a series of obser-
Chapter One
vations and aphorisms to create something resembling verse, including the following line: “One can
A silver leaf frame goes round a painting and does its duty as it should—33
be caliographic [sic] in planes as well as line, just as sidereal.” Here, Dove suggests that writing (as in
Here, nouns and adjectives accumulate as a kind of
calligraphy) can assume planar form yet still pos-
verbal still life, while phrases that indicate actions
sess a spatiotemporal dimension, as indicated by
and everyday use—“left over,” “canisters that have
the term “sidereal,” which refers to measurements
to be filled occasionally,” “dented a bit,” “the day’s
of time based on the movement of celestial bod-
work”—give Dove’s lines the feel of a portrait, in
ies, including the sun, moon, and stars.32 Like the
which an accounting of the lives of objects replaces
spirals of “Sweets” that evoke the circle and spiral
likeness as the mode of portrayal.
forms that populate his pictures, Dove’s allusion
Such experiments with poetry and prose re-
to the sidereal here establishes a direct connection
flect Dove’s interest in words and their use in com-
between his writing and his art, for his paintings
munication as do other examples of his written
and assemblages are rife with depictions of celes-
expression. The bulk of Dove’s published writing
tial bodies and their motion relative to the earth,
appeared in the pamphlets that accompanied the
suggesting Dove’s own attempt to mingle the prop-
exhibitions of his work at Stieglitz’s galleries. Most
erties of language, art, time, and space.
often this writing took the form of poetry or poetry-
Jewell was not the only recipient of Dove’s id-
like meditations and, like the wordplay in his corre-
iosyncratic verse. An undated letter to the critic
spondence, evidenced an interest in manipulating
Henry McBride contained a series of lines describ-
language so as to produce an effect beyond simple
ing the objects arrayed on Dove’s kitchen table, the
description. “An Idea,” printed in the pamphlet
form of the text falling somewhere between a poem
for Dove’s 1927 exhibition at Stieglitz’s Intimate
and a laundry list, as in the following excerpt:
Gallery, begins with a question—“Why not make things look like nature?”—before wending through
About an inch of bread, and a package of Lucky Strikes— An aluminum colander and a 10¢ store bottle of Schneiders chili sauce—
a series of observations and allusions, including references to Wassily Kandinsky, weather lore, science, and music. Dove closes by evoking Kandinsky’s 1926 Point and Line to Plane, in which Kandinsky analyzed
Some butter left over—
what he believed to be the basic elements of vari-
A big table spoon, not used and two knives,
ous forms of artistic expression, including painting
one not used, one dirty. And a little salt & pepper in canisters that have to be filled occasionally.
and music, and illustrated these basic elements in part by describing the transposition of sensory or physical phenomena such as the body in motion
And some paper napkins—
or a musical composition into diagrammatic form.
A Birdseye match that isn’t struck—
Dove’s version of Kandinsky’s ideas initially hews to
And there’s the top cap for the pin money
the spirit of the Russian artist’s remarks, but after
pickles that is dented a bit— And a card board box, pink—part of a pie in it—
a few clauses he departs significantly, spiraling out from Kandinsky’s careful elaboration of geometric translation into a meditation on existence: “As the
And O yes one burnt match—
point moves it becomes a line, as the line moves it
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
becomes a plane, as the plane moves it becomes a
There is the necessity of soap powder before
solid, as the solid moves, it becomes life and as life
the day’s work is done— And to roll your own cigarettes takes time, if your time is valuable.
moves, it becomes the present.”34 Dove elsewhere produced texts laden with allusions and bent on toying with the properties and procedures of lanCircles
27
guage. His poem “A Way to Look at Things,” which
and European artistic and literary avant-garde, in-
appeared in the catalog to Stieglitz’s 1925 Seven
cluding Max Ernst, Paul Klee, Pablo Picasso, Juan
Americans exhibition and was reprinted in the pam-
Gris, Kurt Schwitters, Marcel Duchamp, Man Ray,
phlet for Dove’s 1942 exhibition at An American
Loringhoven, Hart Hans Arp, Elsa von Freytag-
Place, reads as an earnest meditation on the nature
Crane, André Gide, Franz Kafka, André Breton,
of representation, the fallacy of likeness, and the
William Carlos Williams, Samuel Beckett, Ger-
primacy of abstraction, but it also toys with lan-
trude Stein, and James Joyce.36 Dove described
guage, each sentence taking its cue from a word or
the linguistic experimentalism of the journal by
idea in the preceding sentence and then riffing on
calling it uncharacteristic as a text in its seeming
it, taking that word or idea in a new, often unpre-
aliveness; transition, Dove wrote to Stieglitz, “gives
dictable direction:
quite an idea of what is going on” and “has always interested me as a live thing—one of the very few
We have not yet made shoes that fit like sand.
printed ones.”37 James Joyce was a particular favor-
Nor clothes that fit like water—
ite of Dove’s. He read portions of Joyce’s “Work in
Nor thoughts that fit like air.
Progress,” a partial draft of Finnegan’s Wake that
There is much to be done—
appeared serially in several numbers of transition,
Works of nature are abstract.
and he mentioned Joyce frequently in his writing
They do not lean on other things for
and correspondence.38 Joyce is “is certainly quite a person,” Dove wrote to Stieglitz in 1928; in another
meanings. The sea-gull is not like the sea.
letter he produced a short list of contemporaries he
Nor the sun like the moon.
admired, with Joyce appearing alongside Stieglitz,
The sun draws water from the sea.
O’Keeffe, John Marin, and D. H. Lawrence; and in a
The clouds are not like either one—
third he enclosed a statement titled “On Reading
They do not keep one form forever.
the Current Papers” in which he lamented the lack
That the mountainside looks like a face is
of “pure writing” about art and opposed Joyce and
accidental.
35
Picasso to Thomas Hart Benton who, along with Thomas Craven, exemplified for Dove all things
In this and other of Dove’s articulations, the line
pernicious in art and culture.39
between profundity and apparent meaninglessness
Dove himself contributed to the avant- garde
is so fine that one feels that he must have been hav-
press. His submission to an issue of the little maga-
ing a little bit of fun, truly playing with words—not
zine MSS on the subject “Can a Photograph Have the
as a joke, to be sure, but rather in order to see what
Significance of Art?” appeared alongside statements
words might do for him or for his paintings, so as to
by artists and writers known for their experimental
explore the arrays or sequences they might take on
approach to language, writing, and words, including
a page, with serendipitous meanings and behaviors
Duchamp and Marius de Zayas; the cover of the is-
arising as a result.
sue, designed by O’Keeffe, consciously mimicked the
As a member of the circle of artists, writers, and
word and phrase repetitions of Dada, with “Manu-
critics associated with Stieglitz, Dove was of course
scripts Number Four New York December 1922” run-
well aware of contemporaneous artistic and literary
ning in a continuous loop across the bottom half.
experiments with language. He was a regular reader
Dove’s contribution reflected his interest in verbal
of vanguard journals and art writing, including the
experimentation, and it came complete with his
Paris-based experimental literary journal transition.
own version of Dadaesque looping and babble:
This publication declared in its manifesto that “the revolution in the English language is an accomplished fact,” and it featured work by the American 28
Chapter One
What does photography mean to me?— Nothing!
I’d rather have some photographs than most
a consideration of personality, the characteristic behavior of friends and family, and the human im-
paintings. I’d rather have some paintings than most
pulse to produce offspring that Stein would go on to include in her Matisse Picasso and Gertrude Stein with
photographs. I’d rather have writing than typewriting.
Two Shorter Stories (1933), and that Dove described as
I’d rather have vision than art.
“a beauty.” Both texts reflect Stein’s experimental, at
I’d rather have today than yesterday.
times bewildering narrative style and both appeared
I’d rather have tomorrow than today.
in the modernist literary journal the Dial, which is
I’d rather have Stieglitz than Rembrandt.
where Dove encountered them.41 In addition, Dove
I’d rather have Chaplin than Twain.
read Tender Buttons (1914), which was reprinted in
I’d rather have the impossible than the
transition in 1928, and The Autobiography of Alice B. Toklas (1933), and he commented in a 1932 letter to
possible. I’d rather have the abstract than the real.
Stieglitz that, despite the claims of the writer and
I’d rather have truth than beauty.
illustrator Oliver Herford, who had argued that Ten-
I’d rather have a soul than a shape.
der Buttons derived from biblical verse, Stein’s book
I’d rather have orange than blue.
was closer in spirit to Shakespeare.42 In a 1934 letter
I’d rather have black than white.
to the art writer Elizabeth McCausland, who had become a dear friend of his, Dove wrote, “The Stein
But all these things are identical so 40
photography means nothing to me.
play is great!” referring to Stein’s Four Saints in Three Acts, which opened on Broadway that February.
As in other of his articulations, Dove’s remarks here
Dove could have seen the play, but the comment
walk a fine line between serious commentary and
was most likely prompted by McCausland’s review
deliberate opacity, philosophical musing and ba-
of it, which she sent to him. He also indicated that
nal, meaningless blather. Such oscillation suggests
he was planning to read Stein’s The Making of Ameri-
that in addition to being a text about photography,
cans, an abridged edition of which was published in
Dove also meant his poem to be a text about itself,
the United States in 1934. He told McCausland that
one that remarked on its own capacity to transmit
Torr said the book “is about the greatest thing she
information by being simultaneously captivating
has read” and “should be compulsory reading” for
and recalcitrant, the combination of its singsong
everyone.43 As early as 1912, a writer in the Chicago
cadence and arbitrary- seeming judgments con-
Tribune suggested a connection between Dove and
founding full comprehension.
Stein, albeit in the form of a gentle lampoon. After
Dove’s playful riff on the nature of photography
reprinting the portrait poem of Matisse by Stein
along with the verbal still life that he conjured from
that had appeared in Camera Work, the writer noted
his kitchen table call to mind the experimental
that “compared with the foregoing, the canvases of
writing of Gertrude Stein, whose work Dove avidly
Mr. Arthur Dove were miracles of simplicity.”44
read and greatly admired. One of two people Dove
The affinity between Dove’s prose and Stein’s,
wished he could have met during his lifetime (the
and Dove’s great admiration for her, further dem
other, recall, was Einstein), Stein served as a con-
onstrates Dove’s interest in language and its op-
stant model for Dove’s thinking, writing, and mak-
erations as well as his own investment in verbal
ing. Dove noted in letters to Stieglitz his reading
experimentation. Dove’s kitchen table portrait,
of Stein’s 1926 “Composition as Explanation,” a dis-
although more straightforwardly descriptive, calls
cussion of modern narrative and an attempt to “ex-
to mind the object portraits and word clusters of
plain” her aims as a writer as well as certain of her
Tender Buttons, where words do not describe but
chief literary devices, such as repetition. He also in-
rather construct and incarnate their subjects even
dicated that he had read Stein’s “A Long Gay Book,”
as they vigorously exceed their function as stand- Circles
29
ins for things, as in “A Carafe, That Is a Blind Glass,”
Stein contributed her own word-portrait of Stieg-
one of the best known poems from the collection:
litz to America and Alfred Stieglitz: “That is Stieglitz’s
“A kind in glass and a cousin, a spectacle and noth-
way. . . . He was the first one that ever printed any-
ing strange a single hurt color and an arrangement
thing that I had done. And you can imagine what
in a system to pointing. All this and not ordinary,
that meant to me or to any one. I remember him
not unordered in not resembling. The difference
dark and I felt him having white hair. He can do
45
But it is Dove’s published poetry
both of these things or anything.” Although less of a
and prose, with its wordplay, repetition, staccato
paean to Stieglitz than Dove’s, and cagey in its oscil-
rhythms, seeming pithiness, deliberate obscurity,
lation between homage and possible satire, Stein’s
and slightly lurching forward momentum, includ-
poem is close enough in form to Dove’s to suggest
ing “A Way to Look at Things,” that bears the closest
that Dove drew on her style in crafting his verses,
resemblance to Stein’s writing. Take, for example,
here and in other written works.48 To be sure, Dove’s
this passage from Dove’s essay “291,” published in
writing in no way equaled Stein’s in sophistication
Camera Work in 1914 along with other homages to
or innovation, and one would be hard-pressed to ar-
Stieglitz and his gallery: “It has grown and out-
gue that Dove should be inserted into the modern-
grown in order to grow. It grew because there was a
ist literary canon. Rather, Dove’s imitation of Stein’s
need for such a place, yet it is not a place. Not being
modernist experiment with words constitutes one
a movement, it moves, so do ‘race horses,’ and some
aspect of what was a larger interest on his part in
people, and ‘there are all sorts of sports,’ but no bet-
the nature and operations of language and human
ting. It is finer to find than to win. This seems to be
sign systems and in the potential that might be un-
‘291’ or is it Stieglitz?”46 Or consider his prose poem
leashed through manipulating and reconfiguring
“A Different One,” which appeared in America and Al-
letters, words, and texts.
is spreading.”
fred Stieglitz: A Collective Portrait (1934) and included the following playful yet earnest lines:
Dove’s interest in language and its operations, in particular translation and communication, did not confine itself to experiments in speech, sym-
There was a great necessity for a live one because there were so many undertakers,
communication also fascinated him, including the
and they all made their livings from the
phonograph, radio, and telegraphy. Chapter 3 con-
dead ones.
siders this fascination at length, including a series
The Gentlemen of the Juries would go to
30
bol, or script. Technologies of translation and
of paintings that Dove created while listening to
Stieglitz’s exhibitions and get themselves
phonograph records and several paintings based
talked to by an honest man which they
on radio listening. For now, I will simply note that
never liked any more than they did the
in painting while listening to records, Dove trans-
paintings.
lated into visual form the tunes to which he lis-
But it put some of them onto themselves and
tened, this sonic stimulus itself the product of two
it put others onto them, so they had to
translations: from live music into recording, with
paint modern faces on the backs of their
music expressed graphically as a spiral groove on
heads, but the knowing ones knew that
a plastic disc, and then back again into volumetric
the undertakers’ faces were on the other
sound. In the paintings based on radio listening,
side so they couldn’t go in places where
something similar occurred. Dove registered his ex-
there were mirrors.
perience of hearing popular tunes on his radio and
And they had to wear snap ties, and all
in so doing rendered sound that had transmuted
together it was pretty difficult.
multiple times: from live or recorded sound played
And everyone laughed at the wrong moment.
at a radio station into acoustic signals traveling as
And they forgot to bring their check-book.47
radio waves and then back into sound, as translated
Chapter One
and amplified by the radio apparatus. Dove’s explo-
telegraphy comprised its own language and consti-
ration of the translating potential of sound tech-
tuted a network of interrelated apparatuses through
nology also intersected with his forays into occult
which this language was transmitted; in this sense,
communication. Although not at all a fully com-
it constituted a signaling instrument as well as a
mitted occultist, and little interested in enchant-
system of communication. Thus for Dove it would
ment or mysticism, Dove was attentive to phenom-
have expounded the potential of graphic, sonic,
ena that appeared to exceed ordinary natural and
and mechanical notation and communication and,
human limits, and he plainly believed there existed
consequently, formed part of his larger interest in
a human capacity to transmit thought in an extra-
sonic translation and communication and his par-
sensory fashion. His letters and writings contain
allel interest in the mechanisms of registration as-
numerous references to telepathic events and to
sociated with such transmission along with enti-
the telepathic capabilities of certain of his friends
ties employed therein, such as phonograph needles,
and acquaintances, including Stieglitz. In speaking
telegraph keys, electrical wires, and human bodies.
of mental telepathy, Dove employed a technolog-
In a letter to Torr dated October 15, 1936, Dove wrote
“instrument,” “sending outfit,” ical vocabulary—
about his radio listening, and he also took time to
“radio”—indicating that he classified extrasensory
describe a recent invention similar in conception
communication among the other devices and sys-
to the telegraph: “Some guy in Wash. has invented
tems of transmission, technological and otherwise,
a typewriter that will take and print messages over
49
that he engaged and explored in his practice.
radio.”53 On its own, this statement seems innoc-
In the period, mental telepathy was regularly
uous. Taken together with his exploration of the
associated with communication technologies, in-
phonograph, telegraphy, and radio, Dove’s noting
cluding radio and another of Dove’s interests, te-
of another sort of modern transmission device—
50
legraphy. Dove’s brother Paul reported that Dove
one that triply translated, from speech into type,
was very handy, creating for his sibling “windmills
from type into radio sound or waves, and from radio
run by electric motors, even a camera which took
back again into print—exemplifies his keen curios-
excellent photographs on glass” as well as “electri-
ity about the apparatuses and operations of tech-
cally operated toys.” Among these creations was a
nologies of translation and communication.54
“telegraph instrument,” its manufacture and use as-
Additional examples of Dove’s preoccupation
sisted by Dove’s knowledge of Morse code.51 Dove’s
with translation and communication abound. He
extraordinary Telegraph Pole (1929) (fig. 17) mani-
fashioned a system by which to render musical
fests his interest in telegraphy. Painted on a steel
sound in a vertical format using strips of ticker
plate, Telegraph Pole both represents and potentially
tape–like paper, creating “a score for written mu-
embodies the conductivity of the materials em-
sic . . . not a painted interpretation of it.”55 Not
ployed in telegraphy, while the flickering, twisting
interpretation, but translation: this undertaking,
leaflike forms that constitute the surface of the pole
about which little is known, appears to have been
and arm evoke the crisp tap-tapping of telegraphic
designed to explore the visual dimension of trans-
language—the dashes and dots of a clicking tele-
mitted sound— that is, what sound might look
graph key along with the “dah,” “di,” and “dit”
like if one could see it or how one might express
sounds of Morse code when spoken out loud—as
it through a visual vocabulary commensurate with
well as the intervals of electrical current that carry
its sonic properties. About “music over the radio,”
this code.52 Dove depicts the pole and its horizon-
Dove asked, “Have you ever tried to think how it
tal crossarm seeming to bend under the weight of
would look?” This query may have been related
the electrical signal transmitted through the wire.
to the ticker tape scheme, for according to one
Telegraphy would have captivated Dove’s interest
of Dove’s earliest biographers, Suzanne Mullett-
as had radio and the phonograph. As a technology,
Smith, Dove’s transcription of jazz heard over the Circles
31
Fig. 17 Arthur G. Dove, Telegraph Pole, 1929, oil, metallic paint, and pencil on steel plate, 71.1 × 50.5 cm (28 × 197⁄8 in.), Alfred Stieglitz Collection, 1949.535, The Art Institute of Chicago.
radio was linear, with lines replacing notes on a ver-
when I needed television.”57 Dove may have been
tical rather than a horizontal scale: “Experimenting
referring here to the developing technology of tele-
with sounds he had worked out his own shorthand
vision transmission (what Herbert Hoover in 1927
system that recorded sounds as music does on a
described as the unprecedented “transmission of
scale—the music scales were used vertically and the
sight”), or he may have adopted the term to describe
sounds were written by linear movements instead
more literally his wish to see through a kind of opti-
56
of notes.” In a 1936 letter to Torr, Dove envisaged a
cal telepathy the people whose voices he heard over
similar sound-to-image translation, but instead of
the telephone: “tele” + “vision.”58 Either way (and it
music rendered graphically, he envisaged the pros-
may have been both), his remark underscores his
pect of making visible the unseen, distant source of
desire to explore and experiment with processes of
sound transmitted over the telephone. Referring to
transmission and translation as well as his capac-
a previous phone conversation, Dove wrote, “I was
ity for reimagining existing transmission technolo-
going to send greetings to R. Jr. but it all went so
gies, a form of curiosity apparent in his hypothesiz-
fast. Your voice changed to Marian’s without any
ing about the “look” of radio.
warning then Bill’s and the angels [kids]. That was
Dove’s experimentation with notational sys-
Fig. 18 Arthur Garfield Dove diary pages dated Mar. 19 and 20, 1942. Arthur and Helen Torr Dove Papers, 1905–1974, Archives of American Art, Smithsonian Institution, 3:2:13, image #43.
Circles
33
ing of which is “sound writing” (fig. 19). The use of Gregg shorthand entailed learning how to translate among multiple systems of communication— speech, writing, and drawing—and the system itself combined its aims of ease and efficiency with an aspiration to universal use.60 It may thus have offered Dove another model, in addition to that of the musical score, for imagining the relationship between the graphic and the sonic as well as their mutual translation, or perhaps another template, alongside geometry, for a universal language. According to William, Dove also regularly practiced speedwriting.61 This transcription method involved spelling words without vowels and rendering certain sounds with letters other than those employed in conventional English spelling. Anne Cohen DePietro notes the example “klwdy” for “cloudy,” one among many weather abbreviations Dove fashioned for use in his diaries based on the principles of speedwriting; Dove employed other abbreviated words, such as “wkd” for “worked,” throughout the diaries as well.62 Although far less complicated than Fig. 19 “Word Drill,” in John Robert Gregg, Gregg Shorthand: A Light-Line Phonography for the Million, anniv. ed. (New York: The Gregg Publishing Company, 1930), p. 98, exercise 175. Photograph: David Connelly.
Gregg shorthand, and legible to the untrained eye in a manner that Gregg notations are not, Dove’s speedwriting caused some confusion on the part of the critic Edward Alden Jewell, who mistakenly believed that the title “Colored Dwg” on the list for the 1930 exhibition of Dove’s work at An American
tems that translated sonic stimulus into pictorial
Place referred to a canine subject (“dog”) rather than
or graphic form was not limited to music. Dove’s
to the medium of the work (“drawing”). In order to
son, William, reported that his father had “studied
see a dog in either of the two works by Dove that
shorthand for years,” teaching himself the Gregg
bore the title in question, one on paper, the other a
method, a stenographic form mainly used for tran-
work on canvas, Jewell wrote that the viewer would
scribing speech first introduced in 1888 by John Rob-
have to go into “the sort of trance that Irish mystics
ert Gregg. Dove regularly employed shorthand in his
manage when they sit in the caves of the Druids.
diary entries, as exemplified by the final two lines of
In short, you might have to go temporarily ga-ga.”63
59
34
the entry for March 20, 1942 (fig. 18). As explained
Dove’s paintings themselves manifest a con-
in the anniversary edition of Gregg’s instructional
stant and assiduous pictorial exploration of the
manual, Gregg Shorthand: A Light-Line Phonography
idea of translation, one that occurs across his body
for the Million (1929), Gregg shorthand was “written
of work. Over and over again in his pictures, forms
by sound.” Consisting of a phonetic writing system,
encounter other forms and, as a result of these col-
combinations of curvilinear and straight lines and
lisions, transform, translated from one state into
other types of marks, including dots, dashes, and
another. R 25-A (1942) is exemplary (fig. 20). This
crisscrossed lines, stood in for spoken sounds—
is a canvas very much about shapes encountering
hence the term “phonography,” the literal mean-
boundaries or seams and mutating as they do, about
Chapter One
Fig. 20 Arthur G. Dove, R 25-A, 1942, wax emulsion on canvas, 15 × 21 in. (38.1 × 53.34 cm), The Phillips Collection, Washington, DC, acquired 1946. Any reproduction of this image shall not be made without written consent of The Phillips Collection, Washington, DC.
halfway points that split shapes in two and demar-
ize the idea of one sort of form transmuting into
cate moments of transposition. A circle just below
another. Even Dove’s signature, at bottom center,
center, its left half brownish-red, transmutes into
articulates the idea of translation, shading from a
a brighter red as it encounters a line that vertically
darker blue to a lighter one as the “e” at the end
bisects the composition. This line signals another
of “Dove” encounters and crosses over the canvas’s
translation, that of blue-gray into a lighter version
central divide, as if the artist wanted to make ab-
of itself as a biomorphic trapezoid traverses the
solutely clear, through the use of actual language,
surface plane. Something similar happens to the
that translation was what was on his mind. The
inverted trapezoid in the upper half of the canvas,
canvas’s subject, R 25-A, the main road along Long
dark brown on the left, purple-plum on the right,
Island’s North Shore, which passed Dove’s house in
and in the smaller circles that hover at left and
Centerport, might be understood to serve a similar
right, each one hitting a dividing line constituted
purpose, with its evocation of bodies and vehicles
by yet more shapes colliding and transforming and,
transposed from one place to another—an effect
consequently, slipping into another hue. The area
not unlike that produced by the “see” arrow motif in
of pale yellow, in the canvas’s right half, translates
Dove’s letter to Torr. Numerous other works boast
from planar sweep into linear thrust when it bumps
similar effects, including A Reasonable Facsimile (fig.
up against the inverted trapezoid, as if to literal-
21), created the same year as R 25-A, in 1942, with the Circles
35
Fig. 21 Left, Arthur G. Dove, A Reasonable Facsimile, 1942, encaustic on canvas, 47.3 × 63.2 cm (185⁄8 × 247⁄8 in.), Alfred Stieglitz Collection, 1949.541, The Art Institute of Chicago. Fig. 22 Below, Arthur G. Dove, Lake Afternoon, 1935, wax emulsion on canvas, 25 × 35 in. (63.5 × 88.9 cm), The Phillips Collection, Washington, DC, acquired 1947. Any reproduction of this image shall not be made without written consent of The Phillips Collection, Washington, DC.
Fig. 23 Top right, Arthur G. Dove, Rose and Locust Stump, 1943, wax emulsion on canvas, 24 × 32 in. (60.96 × 81.28 cm), The Phillips Collection, Washington, DC, acquired 1944. Any reproduction of this image shall not be made without written consent of The Phillips Collection, Washington, DC. Fig. 24 Bottom right, Arthur G. Dove, Sea II, 1925, chiffon over metal with sand, Collection of Barney A. Ebsworth.
Fig. 25 Arthur G. Dove, Rain, 1924, twigs and rubber cement on metal and glass, 49.5 × 39.7 cm (19½ × 155⁄8 in.), National Gallery of Art, Washington, DC, Avalon Fund, 1997.1.1.
term “facsimile” evoking the passage of data from
cal notes and etched grooves, which are both them-
one state into another and, perhaps, by way of the
selves and something else, the medium registers
word “reasonable,” signaling the difficulty or impos-
simultaneously as itself (chiffon, glue) and what it
sibility of exact or precise transcription. Lake After-
stands for (water, paint, rain) in a pictorial system
noon (1935) (fig. 22), in which zoomorphic forms
that combines certain of the effects of resemblance
intersect and transmute, presents another example
and symbolic representation without behaving
of the translation motifs that populate Dove’s work.
exactly or properly as either. Dove tried out mul-
So too Seagull Motif (Violet and Green) (fig. 3), where
tiple monikers for these assemblages—calling them
curving lines and ribbonlike forms that slice into
“portraits,” “things,” “stuff things,” “sculpture paint-
and spiral through the central cyclone shape mark
ings,” “painting sculptures,” “caricature paintings,”
transitions between tonalities and hues, and Rose
even, simply, “paintings”—as if curious to see what
and Locust Stump (1943) (fig. 23), in which circular,
might happen to these works or to his understand-
rectangular, and biomorphic shapes shift in color
ing of their procedures when variously signified,
midway through their course.
this list of possible names evoking the transforma-
Dove experimented with media in the body of work known as his assemblages, the subject of
tions and substitutions resident in the assemblages themselves.64
chapter 4, interchanging materials in these works
As numerous scholars have described, Dove
so as to make, for example, chiffon look like streaks
sketched regularly, producing preparatory draw-
of paint or maybe waves and drips of glue like rain.
ings for many of his paintings (figs. 28, 30, 56, 113,
In Sea II (1925) (fig. 24), Dove stretched blue-gray
122). In the 1930s, he began making small- scale
chiffon over a metal plate so as to approximate the
studies, usually three by four inches, some of them
look and feel of sea and sky as well as the effect of
surrounded by a frame of unmarked paper, in vari-
bold strokes produced by a paint-soaked brush, and
ous media—oil, wax emulsion, watercolor, gouache,
in Rain (1924) (fig. 25) dabs and strings of rubber
graphite, ink, or combinations thereof—in which
cement combine with a cluster of twigs to repre-
he experimented with various configurations of
sent drops falling from the sky and beading on a
color and form (fig. 26). Some of the small-scale
glass surface. What Dove does in works such as
studies, which Dove called “ideas,” contain motifs
these differs from the sign-signifier relationship
that Dove excerpted for use in subsequent paint-
conventional to representational painting or sculp-
ings, and some of the studies map out wholesale
ture, where the properties of an artistic medium or
the compositions of larger works, as in the series
material are suppressed in order to approximate the
of ten sketches preliminary to Dove’s 1942 paint-
qualities particular to the thing depicted. Instead of
ing The Brothers.65 But many did not serve such a
illusion or representation, the key term for Dove’s
preparatory function. There are scores of these
assemblages must be “substitution.” Substituting
pocket-size studies in various museum collections,
one material for another, with the first standing
a large portion of them the gift of Dove’s son, Wil-
in for the second, Dove’s assemblages perform an
liam, and they constitute a sizable and arresting
operation analogous to the procedures of musical
body of work. A good number of the studies bear
notation or shorthand, where graphic marks regis-
an exact date—day, month, and year—and many
ter sound and speech, and one similar to the proce-
include Dove’s notes-to-self, such as “egg yolk and
dures of phonography, where music translates into
oil color” and “dries in an hour,” or “wx and egg +
grooves on a plastic disc. Rather than suggesting a
tube oil.”66 Some of the studies depict recognizable
new entity or implying that the thing that does the
subjects, while others are fully abstract. All of them
replacing is identical to that which is replaced, sub-
have the feel of an artist meticulously and fascinat-
stitution connotes surrogacy or proxy, neither the
edly investigating the possibilities of form and the
same as nor something altogether new. Like musi-
properties of media, each study serving as a miniaCircles
39
Fig. 26 Arthur G. Dove, Untitled, 1942, oil on wove paper, 17.8 × 13.3 cm (7 × 5¼ in.), National Gallery of Art, Washington, DC, Gift of William Dove, 1992.111.17.
ture laboratory for Dove. As a group they register
moved to Centerport, Dove made use of the panto-
the pleasure Dove took in making, every rectangle
graph housed at the state-run Agricultural Experi-
of color an occasion for discovery and delight in the
ment Station, where he had become friendly with
potential of visual form.
one of the station’s scientists, the German botanist
In many of the cases in which the studies served
Bernard Rudolf Nebel.68 Dove was, of course, not
as preparatory, Dove used a magic lantern or a pan-
alone as an artist in his use of such a device, but
tograph to transfer their basic forms onto a primed
in conjunction with everything else I have detailed,
67
40
canvas. With four arms jointed together to form
the practice—which entailed a translation of me-
a parallelogram, the pantograph device allowed
dium as well as of scale—strikes me as significant,
Dove to move a pointer, attached to one arm of the
not least because the tracing of the pantograph’s
pantograph, along the contours of a small-scale
pointer along the contours of a drawing or painted
image such that a pencil, attached to another arm,
sketch calls to mind a phonograph needle track-
traced an identical pattern at enlarged scale onto
ing a record’s grooves, with the result in each case
year residence a canvas surface. During his five-
being data rendered in a new form. With a panto-
in Geneva, New York, from 1933 to 1938, before he
graphic transfer, of course, and unlike the needle-
Chapter One
groove-sound translation, the trace is quite close in
if unmet aim of the phonograph at the time, it was
appearance to the original image. Yet a notational
not necessarily Dove’s. Dove most likely created A
translation still occurs, one that registers at the
Reasonable Facsimile (fig. 21) by enlarging a sketch for
level of medium and scale but also by way of the
the picture with a pantograph, yet outspoken in its
slight deviations between small image and large
titular claim against exact duplication, the painting
painting, those accidental perturbations or jigs
makes clear Dove’s lack of interest in exact replica-
caused by an unsteady arm or an uneven surface
tion or translation.69
or perhaps purposeful steerings- off- course that
The configurations of line and form in Dove’s
one might think of as analogs to the extramusical
No Feather Pillow (1940) and its preparatory water-
sounds produced by the workings of a phonograph
color sketch do the same (figs. 27, 28). An excellent
apparatus, noises that are not part of an original
example of Dove’s sketch-to-painting translations,
musical performance but arise from the mechanism
the pair also comments on the operation of mechan-
itself and thus wind up constituting its technolog-
ical translation through which the painting, clearly
ical translation and transmutation (about which I
the result of a pantographic or lantern trace, came
will have more to say in chapter 3). In neither case—
into being.70 At the right of each, an ellipse—or a
phonograph nor pantograph—did straightforward
disc in oblique perspective—overlaps the edge of
imitation result. Although mimesis was the stated
a semirectangular form; at the exact point of in-
Fig. 27 Arthur G. Dove, No Feather Pillow, 1940, oil and wax emulsion on canvas, 16 × 22 in. (overall), Edward W. Root Bequest, 57.134, Munson-Williams-Proctor Arts Institute. Photo Credit: Munson-Williams-Proctor Arts Institute, Utica, NY / Art Resource, NY.
Circles
41
Fig. 28 Arthur G. Dove, No Feather Pillow, 1940, watercolor on wove paper, Herbert F. Johnson Museum of Art, Cornell University, Dr. and Mrs. Milton Lurie Kramer, Class of 1936 Collection; Bequest of Helen Kroll Kramer, 72.110.005. Photography courtesy of the Herbert F. Johnson Museum of Art, Cornell University.
tersection, the line that forms the ellipse’s con-
blue, and indicating a pantographic or lantern
tour (marked by ticks in the sketch) changes into
transfer, most likely from the wax emulsion study
a series of dots. There is a color shift as well, from
(fig. 30), which is closer in basic structure to the
bright yellow to yellow-tan, a change echoed in the
painting than is the watercolor and bears similar
painting (but not the watercolor) by the smaller el-
tick marks (in the other sketch, the line looks liked
lipse sitting astride the line that marks the point of
barbed wire). In Sun, the oblique tilt of the ellipse
contact and transformation and that shifts in tone
may evoke the curvature of the earth, or perhaps
from light gray to dark. In each image the contour
the surface of a body of water reflecting the sun as
of the ellipse is broken, its upper half, the one con-
it crosses the sky. This point-counterpoint, along
tained in the semirectangle, and its lower portion
with the idea of reflection itself, draws attention
not quite matching up on the left-hand side. Here,
to the inexact relationship between study and fin-
shifts in color, shape, or line that occur at inter-
ished painting as established by the mechanical
sections and points of encounter, akin to those in
transfer of the one to the other. The shifts in color
the works discussed above, combine with this mis-
that occur as the ellipse encounters the contours of
matching of forms in order to put front and center
the series of green-brown bands that connote water
the simultaneously imitative and transformative
or land similarly call to mind the transmutations of
process of translation.
translation, as do the tonal shifts from dark orange
A similar ellipse in the lower right of Dove’s Sun (1943) also emblematizes translation (fig. 29). Dove
42
to apple green in the bands that surround the sky- bound sun.
made two studies preliminary to Sun, one in water-
In Sun, Dove’s signature, rendered in brown but
color and ink and the other, like the painting, in
adorned with a light-green aura or reflective shine—
wax emulsion. A pencil line adorned with V-shaped
strokes of paint that shadow the curves and straight-
tick marks—one to the right of the sun’s center and
aways of his script—serves as a badge for the pro-
one to the left—undulates across the upper half of
cess of reflection depicted in the painting (fig. 31).
the finished work, dividing the central orb into un-
In that it visually summarizes or consolidates the
equal halves, one plum colored, the other midnight
subject of the picture, collapsing a complex image
Chapter One
Fig. 29 Above, Arthur G. Dove, Sun, 1943, wax emulsion on canvas, 24 × 32 in. (61 × 81.4 cm), Smithsonian American Art Museum, Bequest of Suzanne M. Smith, 1989.83.3. Fig. 30 Left, Arthur G. Dove, Sun, 1943, wax emulsion on paper mounted on paperboard, 3 × 4 in. (7.6 × 10.2 cm), Smithsonian American Art Museum, Bequest of Suzanne M. Smith, 1989.83.2.
Fig. 31 Detail from Arthur G. Dove, Sun, 1943, wax emulsion on canvas, 24 × 32 in. (61 × 81.4 cm), Smithsonian American Art Museum, Bequest of Suzanne M. Smith, 1989.83.3.
44
of reflection into a short sequence of four letters,
as he does in Sun, using two pigments: metallic sil-
Dove’s signature also serves as an emblem or sign
ver paint for the letters and a coppery red at the
of translation. In fact, Dove’s signature performs
edges, to highlight the letters’ twists and turns (fig.
this function throughout his body of work, regu-
33). This combination reiterates two of the work’s
larly miming or recapitulating, in radically reduced
dominant hues, but the metallic paint also regis-
form, the chief subject or formal properties of a
ters the fact that Dove rendered his composition on
painting, much as shorthand reduces the complex-
a metal ground, a steel plate, to be exact. In other
ity and variety of language to an abbreviated series
paintings, Dove’s signature appears to partake in
of simplified marks, including curvilinear notations
the scene, registering a line or a form as if acted on
that bear a close resemblance to the arcs and tilts of
by it, much like the way a mechanical instrument
Dove’s own handwriting. Like many artists before
registers input, such as a telegraph key registering
him, including Frederic Church, Winslow Homer,
strokes or a phonograph needle registering grooves,
and Thomas Eakins from the American context,
or the manner in which a device indexes a condi-
Dove’s signature serves a purpose beyond signifying
tion by itself changing form, such as the expansion
authorship. Playing with his own name in the space
or contraction of mercury in a thermometer, say, or
of his pictures is yet another way to announce his
the motion of a barometer’s arrow around its dial. In
interest in language and to explore the properties
Young Old Master (1946), for instance, Dove’s name
and operations of systems of notation and commu-
tracks the curving border between a blue shape and
nication, translation chief among them.71
a brown one, as if lifted up and tossed about by the
In some cases, as in Moon (fig. 5) and Summer
line on which it sits (figs. 34, 35). Similarly, in Poz-
(1935) (fig. 32), Dove’s signature straightforwardly
zuoli Red, Dove’s signature appears at once buoyed
recapitulates the predominant contours, forms, or
by and pressed under a flow of reddish-brown (fig.
colors of a composition. In Moon, Dove extends and
36). In Sun on the Lake (1938), a wave cradles Dove’s
bends the first and last letters of his name so that
name, making it appear to bob in the current.72
they mirror the horizontal arc of the foreground
And in Thunder Shower (1940), the signature, placed
slope, and in Summer, he repeats the upward thrust
against two jagged strips of pale yellow- green,
of the central dolphin-like shape in the decisive in-
crackles with the energy and force of the lightning
cline of the lowercase “d.” In his sunrise series (fig.
bolt depicted above it (figs. 37, 38). I have already
7) and in numerous other works, Dove renders his
noted that in Dove’s R 25-A (fig. 20), his signature
signature using a principal color from the compo-
shifts in hue at the site of an encounter between
sition. Dove fashions his signature in Telegraph Pole,
two shapes, each one a different shade of blue.
Chapter One
Fig. 32 Left, Arthur G. Dove, Summer, 1935, oil on canvas, 63.82 × 86.36 cm (251⁄8 × 34 in.), Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, Gift of the William H. Lane Foundation, 1990.405. Photograph © 2016 Museum of Fine Arts, Boston. Fig. 33 Right, detail from Arthur G. Dove, Telegraph Pole, 1929, oil, metallic paint, and pencil on steel plate, 71.1 × 50.5 cm (28 × 197⁄8 in.), Alfred Stieglitz Collection, 1949.535, The Art Institute of Chicago.
Likewise, in Another Arrangement (1944), dark blue
with the boat, washed to shore on the same wave
letters—the “d,” “o,” and a snippet of the “v”—shift
that caused the ship to founder.
to lighter blue at the point of intersection between
Such signature play occurs throughout Dove’s
an oblong stretch of the lighter blue and a plane of
body of work from 1930 onward, making the assidu-
the darker hue (figs. 39, 40). In Red, Olive and Yellow
ousness with which he used his signature to register
(1941), the two-toned signature—light brown with
the form and content of his pictures a striking fea-
a dark-brown shadow or aura—echoes the overall
ture of his practice. Those canvases that feature a
earthy tonality of the painting but also registers the
nondescript or neutral signature are in the minority,
two-toned wing of the painting’s seeming protago-
suggesting that Dove endeavored in the space of
nist, a bird, with the “v” in “Dove” reiterating the V
his paintings to establish a relationship between
shape of the bird’s wing, and the word itself, “dove,”
the paintings’ pictorial vocabulary and another
of course calling to mind a creature from the avian
notational form, in this case writing, and that he
realm (figs. 41, 42). And in Ferry Boat Wreck (1931), red
imagined that this relationship was constituted by
letters painted over black that appear to stand out
conversion or abbreviation, operations associated
in relief register physical destruction and an air of
with the process of translation and, by extension,
disaster while condensing into script the painting’s
communication. This is the case not least because
most striking motif, concentric circles of red and
the point-counterpoint established between com-
black that signify the violent event (figs. 43, 44). De-
position and condensing signature produces a kind
spite the sculptural effect created by the juxtaposi-
of internal dialogue, a back-and-forth between pic-
tion of red and black, Dove’s signature here appears
torial parts. By 1930, Dove almost always placed his
to exist in the same slanting plane that designates
signature at the center of the lower edge of his can-
a portion of land near the wreck, marking it, at least
vas, rather than in the lower left or right corner. Do-
fictionally, as part of the depicted scene rather than
ing so was of course not unprecedented, but given
an accoutrement of the canvas support. The effect
the manner in which his signatures engage their
is one of the signature having run aground along
pictorial surround, they can be said to perform the Circles
45
Fig. 34 Left, Arthur G. Dove, Young Old Master, 1946, oil on canvas, 10 × 11 in. (25.4 × 27.94 cm), The Phillips Collection, Washington, DC, acquired 1946. Any reproduction of this image shall not be made without written consent of The Phillips Collection, Washington, DC.
Fig. 35 Right, top, detail from Arthur G. Dove, Young Old Master, 1946, oil on canvas, 10 × 11 in. (25.4 × 27.94 cm), The Phillips Collection, Washington, DC, acquired 1946. Any reproduction of this image shall not be made without written consent of The Phillips Collection, Washington, DC. Fig. 36 Right, bottom, detail from Arthur G. Dove, Pozzuoli Red, 1941, wax emulsion on canvas, 221⁄8 × 36 in. (56.1975 × 91.44 cm), The Phillips Collection, Washington, DC, acquired 1941. Any reproduction of this image shall not be made without written consent of The Phillips Collection, Washington, DC.
Fig. 37 Above, Arthur G. Dove, Thunder Shower, 1940, oil and wax emulsion on canvas, Amon Carter Museum of American Art, Fort Worth, Texas, 1967.190. Fig. 38 Left, detail from Arthur G. Dove, Thunder Shower, 1940, oil and wax emulsion on canvas, Amon Carter Museum of American Art, Fort Worth, Texas, 1967.190.
Fig. 39 Arthur G. Dove, Another Arrangement, 1944, oil on canvas, 68.5 × 91.4 cm (2615⁄16 × 36 in.), Collection Zimmerli Art Museum at Rutgers University, 1398. Photo by Peter Jacobs.
Fig. 40 Detail from Arthur G. Dove, Another Arrangement, 1944, oil on canvas, 68.5 × 91.4 cm (2615⁄16 × 36 in.), Collection Zimmerli Art Museum at Rutgers University, 1398. Photo by Peter Jacobs.
Fig. 41 Above, Arthur G. Dove, Red, Olive and Yellow, 1941, wax emulsion on canvas, 15 × 21 in. (38.1 × 53.34 cm), The Phillips Collection, Washington, DC, acquired 1945. Any reproduction of this image shall not be made without written consent of The Phillips Collection, Washington, DC. Fig. 42 Left, detail from Arthur G. Dove, Red, Olive and Yellow, 1941, wax emulsion on canvas, 15 × 21 in. (38.1 × 53.34 cm), The Phillips Collection, Washington, DC, acquired 1945. Any reproduction of this image shall not be made without written consent of The Phillips Collection, Washington, DC.
Fig. 43 Arthur G. Dove, Ferry Boat Wreck, 1931, oil on canvas, 181⁄8 × 301⁄8 in. (46 × 76.5 cm), Whitney Museum of American Art, New York, purchase, with funds from Mr. and Mrs. Roy R. Neuberger, 56.21. Digital image © Whitney Museum of American Art.
Fig. 44 Detail from Arthur G. Dove, Ferry Boat Wreck, 1931, oil on canvas, 181⁄8 × 301⁄8 in. (46 × 76.5 cm), Whitney Museum of American Art, New York, purchase, with funds from Mr. and Mrs. Roy R. Neuberger, 56.21. Digital image © Whitney Museum of American Art.
function of a caption, as in a book or magazine illustration or a scientific diagram. In such a manner,
50
Circles
the caption assists in making legible to the viewer
It should be clear by now that Dove was an art-
what the painting presents in visual terms, and thus
ist with more than a passing fancy for questions
distributes the dialogue that unfolded in Dove’s
of language and expression, and that he set out
painting, signapictures among three entities—
in his work to explore multiple varieties of nota-
ture, and viewer—rather than two or, to be precise,
tional systems, those representational codes and
among four, if one includes the artist himself.73
forms—letters, words, numbers, images, diagrams,
Chapter One
symbols, sounds—employed in the articulation and
annotations make clear that the text had an impact
communication of information. The very process of
on his ideas about color and its utility in art and,
encoding—that is, the transmission or translation
also, that Andrews inspired certain of the experi-
of said information from one form or state into an-
ments with color that he described in his diary and
other, with exchange between entities as the end
letters.75 Yet the Andrews text played a role beyond
result—clearly also captivated Dove. The concen-
the merely practical or instructional in solidifying
tric circle motif that pervades Dove’s body of work,
Dove’s thinking about his project and about his
appearing throughout his oeuvre in the context of
circles in particular.
a wide range of subjects, from suns and moons to
Andrews was a trained chemist and addressed
ferryboat wrecks, foghorns, and jazz, itself served as
Color and Its Application to Printing to all practical
a predominant emblem for this set of procedures.
users of color, especially artists and printers. In
As is evident, Dove employed the circle motif to vi-
the book, he combined chapters on the physical
sualize the nonvisual, the unseen, or the invisible
properties of light and color with chapters on color
(light or sound waves, gravity, and evaporation, for
perception and the laws governing color’s visual
example). But his ambitions for it were grander
effects; the manual closes with several chapters
than this. He also meant for his concentric circle
on the printing process itself, as informed by the
motifs to incarnate the very processes, translation
information and arguments of the preceding sec-
and communication, by which such visualization
tions. The second chapter, entitled “Light and the
occurred. The subject matter of these works, trans-
Spectrum,” begins with a discussion of the physical
mission and contact between entities, between the
properties of light. The metaphor Andrews employs
sun and the earth, for instance, or between a fog-
in this chapter to describe light’s wave motion,
horn and a receiving ear, vigorously underscores
which he says he borrowed from the Nobel Prize–
this intent. I return to the circle motif now in order
winning physicist Albert Abraham Michelson,
to begin to elucidate just what Dove had in mind for
points directly to Dove’s circles. The wave motion
his paintings and assemblages when he set about
of light, Andrews writes, following Michelson, is
making translation and communication and, more
akin to the wave motion of sound: “Doubtless there
broadly, the materials, operations, and limits of lan-
are but few who have not watched with interest
guage and expression—human, technological, and
the circular waves produced by a stone cast into a
otherwise—a focus of his practice.
still pond of water, the ever-widening circles going
To start, why circles? The beginning of an an-
farther and farther from the center of disturbance,
swer may be found in Dove’s preoccupation with
until they are lost in the distance or break on the
the properties of his paint. As is well known, Dove
shore.”76 With this description, Andrews conjures
took great interest in the basic materials of the art-
an image of the familiar pattern initiated by a hole
ist’s craft, especially the qualities and capacities of
punched in water at a plunging rock’s point of im-
the medium of paint, and throughout his career
pact, an emphatic point of origin that then expands
he devoted himself to exploring the character and
into a series of concentric circles, each one larger
potential of various pigments and solutions, in-
than the one that preceded it. Such a ringed pattern
cluding mixtures he concocted on his own. To this
oscillates between being an impression of succes-
end, he owned and regularly consulted a number of
sive rings and an image of a series of circular bands,
technical manuals, annotating some of them, and
the latter suggested by the successive intervals of
he kept up a regular and detailed discussion of his
ripple-free water between each expanding ring.
experiments with media in his diary entries and 74
It goes without saying that the image sum-
correspondence. His collection of how-to books
moned by Andrews accords well with the look and
included Color and Its Application to Printing (1911) by
implied behavior of Dove’s concentric circles. Dove
E. C. Andrews. Dove annotated this volume, and his
constructed these circles in order to depict sources Circles
51
52
of light and sound, including the sun, moon, and
This insight allows one to grasp two very im-
foghorns, as well as the movement of that light and
portant qualities that attend Dove’s concentric
sound through time and space. For both Andrews
circle motifs. First of all, Dove, like Andrews, in-
and Dove, then, concentric circles serve as a device
tended his concentric circles to act as a metaphor:
for visualizing something that the human eye on
a metaphor for wave motion, of course, but also for
its own cannot detect. But if one understands the
the process of translation. For both Andrews and
phenomenal sources in Dove’s paintings (celestial
Dove, circles comprise instances of translation.
bodies, sound-making entities) as analogous to An-
Andrews translates the idea of wave motion into
drews’s cast stone, and the phenomena themselves
both a verbal description and a mental image of
(light and sound traveling through air) to be anal-
circular ripples, and Dove translates the same idea
ogous to Andrews’s ripples, another critical, and
into pictures of concentric bands. Each in his own
more fundamental, aspect of Dove’s circles, one I
way, then, converts a natural phenomenon into a
have only alluded to thus far, stands out in relief.
graphic representation, creating a picture for use
With some of his circles, Dove implied infinite
in conveying something without native pictorial or
traverse, and with others he evoked a finite span
graphic qualities, as when a composer renders mu-
between source and recipient, as with the earth
sical sound as musical notation. The idea of a con-
receiving the sun’s light or a human ear receiving
version is key here. Dove’s concentric circles, as a
a sound. In either case, Dove endeavored to show
graphic metaphor that calls to mind a familiar ver-
not just the fact of traverse, but the mechanisms
bal metaphor that itself serves to translate words
by which that traverse occurred and the manner in
into a mental image, thus mimic the procedure of
which it registered its presence and motion on its
translation as performed by figurative language. As
surround as it moved and, ultimately, on its final
a result, these circles call vigorous attention to their
destination. As did Andrews, who characterized
own translating capacity, suggesting their status,
the effect of concentric rippling as the result of the
for Dove, as a conversion device akin to a figure of
disturbance and displacement of liquid through
speech or a musical score.
the introduction of a foreign body that disrupts
Second, in both Andrews’s text and Dove’s im-
the surface tension of a body of water, causing the
ages, the phenomenon of transmission figured by
initial disturbance to propagate as waves, Dove
concentric circles is posited not simply as a matter
with his concentric circle motif conjures a fluid dy-
of motion between here and there but also as en-
namics of transmission. Originating from a circular
counter or exchange, such as a stone breaking the
center that evokes the initial stone’s throw into a
surface of a pond, or a wave breaking on the shore,
pond, Dove’s ever-expanding bands, in mimicking
physically shaping that shore by displacing dirt or
this originating circle form even as they undergo
sand even as the shore in turn materially shapes the
perturbations as they propagate, coming into con-
wave by slowing its course and causing it to crest,
tact as they do with other forms and intervening
spill, and collapse. Indeed, the ever-widening and
sections of paint, also articulate their status as
proliferating rings or bands in both Dove’s paint-
successively displaced matter, this despite the fact
ings and in Andrews’s text articulate matter mov-
that they intend to stand for something putatively
ing from one place to another, but they also suggest
impalpable—that is, for light, sound, or air. By mak-
a sort of back-and-forth, an interaction rather than
ing these circles behave materially, as does water,
a single act. Like the moment of contact between
and appearing to approximate with them the famil-
wave and shore in Andrews’s example and the
iar idea of radiating ripples in a pond, Dove insists
consequent mutual reshaping of the two, the rela-
on marking traverse in his pictures as a mechanical
tionships that Dove constructs between his rings
phenomenon, one that unfolds in a physical uni-
and bands and the other parts of his pictures—
verse governed by physical laws.
between moon and earth, or sun and sea or plant
Chapter One
life—call to mind the material effect produced by
Fundamental to one of the most proliferate
transmission on a receiving entity, the physical
forms of Dove’s pictures, then, was the idea and
contact that the process of transmission almost
instantiation of communication, understood as a
always entails. Dove thus configures transmis-
mutually affecting transaction or exchange bet
sion as conspicuously transactional, as an action
ween entities or parts, a transfer that produced a
that transpires between entities and constitutes
structure that was essentially relational in nature,
material and multidirectional exchange, resulting
forming as it did a conceptual and material net-
in a connection or connections being formed. As
work of interrelated entities. If language, broadly
a chief consequence of this postulation, Dove af-
understood as any system of communication or
firms translation—itself an act of transmission—as
notation, preoccupied Dove, it was his investment
a matter of interchange, a conversion that occurs
in the product of language’s translating opera-
between entities that leaves both affected or altered
tions that underpinned much of what he strove to
by the exchange, thus transpiring chiefly as a rela-
do in his art. It was the operations and offspring
tionship, the formulation of a bond between things.
of language—networks of relations as well as the
In this way Dove figures both transmission and
very idea of relationality itself—that Dove sought
translation in his pictures as a matter of commu-
to install in order to explore them in his work. For
nication, where encounters between entities occur
this the concentric circle motif served as a princi-
through the transmission of phenomena such as
pal tool. As a visual form, it efficiently and compel-
light and sound and wind up resembling the form
lingly configured the idea of relationality in picto-
and structure of human converse, again, with ef-
rial terms. Yet given its implied multidirectionality
fects of encounter and exchange as the correspond-
(center to periphery or vice versa, radial rotation or
ing links. Take as an example the trunk-like form in
rotation of the whole), as well as its conventionality
Moon (fig. 5) that spans the distance between moon
in the period as a figure for movement and contact
and earth. This stretching rectangular slab evokes
in space and time, the motif would have induced,
both the traverse of light waves through the air and
not just represented, these operations in the space
the material effect of the moon’s gravitational force
of one of Dove’s works. Furthermore, the circle, as
on the earth, the moon making contact with the
one of Dove’s exalted conic sections, served to liter-
earth as earthbound viewers in turn commune with
alize the concepts of connection and relation, for a
it. The moon of course does not in a literal sense
circle comes into being as a shape by way of the in-
communicate with the earth, but Dove’s emphasis
tersection of a plane with a cone, and it consists at
on connection, contact, and rapport in this paint-
once as an abstract concept and as a physical entity.
ing and in others like it suggests that he wished
Golden Sun (1937), Naples Yellow Morning (1935),
in his work to construe the relationship between
and Dawn III (1932) are exemplary in this regard (figs.
two things as not simply a matter of association or
9, 10, 45). In Golden Sun, a painting once owned by
spatial relation but, rather, as one of material en-
O’Keeffe and displayed at her Abiquiu, New Mexico,
counter and material exchange, a type of transac-
residence, Dove groups three forms along a diago-
tion he articulated in his assemblages through his
nal axis that runs from upper left to lower right.77
switchbacking between materials, chiffon to paint,
The topmost form, the sun, consists of a series of
say, or glue to rain. By installing the properties of
yellow and white concentric circles, with a bright-
communication—contact, transfer, mutual reshap-
yellow circle at its core. Beneath this, concentric
ing—if not the phenomenon itself, in his works in
ellipses radiate from dark green at center to bright
such a manner, Dove created the visual equivalent
white at the perimeter. This collection of greens
of substantial converse as well as a pictorial version
and whites, likely indicating plant life, appears
of its source, translation, with the concentric circle
supported by five horizontally undulating bands, all
form, again, as the presiding explanatory motif.
shades of black or gray, that together call to mind a Circles
53
54
cross section of striated rock or soil. Dove indicates
One could also compare Dove’s lines in Golden Sun,
a material relationship among these three forms in
which look very much like shallow incisions even
numerous ways. The sun’s outermost circle presses
though they are not, to the precisely etched grooves
into the perimeter of the plant form, which in turn
in a phonograph record, an association augmented
nestles snugly within the cradle formed by the gray
by the sun’s concentric circular bands. Perhaps
and black bands. Streaks of yellow paint that orig-
Dove wished to insert, through an allusion to the
inate in the sun bathe the lower forms in radiant
translating operations of the phonograph, yet an-
light, and the upward incline of the elliptical bands
other sign of translation and its various forms of
at center connotes the upward growth of a plant as
contact and interconnection into the mix. And be-
made possible by the sun and also gives the impres-
cause the razor-sharp lines in Golden Sun were most
sion that the plant is stretching skyward to reach
likely rendered with the aid of a straightedge, one
the source of its sustenance. Three precisely drawn
might imagine such activation of a device in the act
lines reinforce the implied connections and mo-
of painting as akin to Dove’s material activation of
ments of contact among the painting’s parts. One
a machine, the phonograph, in the process of paint-
line originates from within the sun’s core and ter-
ing from records, or the pantograph, in the process
minates toward the bottom of the plant. The other
of transferring sketch to canvas.
two share a point of origin in the white band that
Reinforcing this reading is the fact that, like Sun
encircles the sun’s center, and they then diverge as
Drawing Water, which depicts the transmutation of
they descend; one stops just right of the plant’s cen-
water into air and cloud, Golden Sun renders an anal-
tral ellipse, and the other continues on, penetrating
ogous process, that of photosynthesis, the conver-
the gray and black bands before it runs its course.
sion of sunlight into energy and food for plants, as
Most portions of these lines sit at the surface of the
evoked by Dove in Naples Yellow Morning (fig. 10). Na-
canvas, but in a few places, Dove painted over them,
ples Yellow Morning configures a relationship among
making it appear as if the lines weave in and out of
a concentric circle sun, gray- banded clouds and
their painted surround. The rightmost line breaks
haze, and concentric circle plants, diagramming the
toward its base, stopping short just before it hits
material interchange between the celestial sphere
the gray band and resuming as it intersects with
and life on earth. The parts of this painting—the
this band; another shorter line, adjacent to but not
sun, the tree forms, and the wisps and bulges of
continuous with the longer line, patches the break.
cloud—behave as if engaged in conversation with
These effects of weaving and stoppage mimic the
one another, or at least involved in some sort of ex-
behavior of light when it intersects with the earth’s
change, one similar to the back-and-forth among
atmosphere and earthbound matter: light’s im-
forms in Golden Sun and evocative of that painting’s
peded trajectory through clouds, fog, or haze and the
interconnecting, groove- like lines. The topmost
refraction and scattering that results, for instance,
cloud form in Naples Yellow Morning nudges the sun,
or light waves reflected off of a solid surface and
desirous of its attention, and the sun nuzzles back,
forced to change their course, as represented by the
its right edge stretching a bit beyond what would
jig of the rightmost line. It is tempting to see Golden
be a circle’s exact perimeter so as to commune with
Sun as a redaction of Sun Drawing Water (fig. 2), with
the cloud. The wisp of haze or mist in the middle
the diagonal lines and upward-inclining ellipses in
inclines toward the trees, gesturing for their atten-
Golden Sun an alternate version of the watery cyl-
tion, the up-and-down curvilinear bend of the wisp
inders that connect earth and sky in the earlier
echoing the trees’ circular arcs. These two trees tip
work. It is also tempting to see the discontinuous
toward one another as if sharing a joke, and they
and breaking lines as emblems of translation’s mis-
effectively stare out of the canvas, suggesting that
fires, figurations of the transmutations that occur
they have come to attention on hearing a viewer’s
in the process of transmitting or communicating.
approach and peer curiously beyond the picture’s
Chapter One
frame to see just what and who that viewer is. As he
circle forms, themselves connected by a chain-link
does with the aid of his captioning signatures, Dove
of ovals that extends from the sun to its reflection
here creates a dialogue among multiple entities,
on the ground. Treelike shapes stretch upward, as
artist included, the latter posited as the facilitator
if responding to the sun’s heat, quivering under its
of a network of encounters among sun, sky, earth,
hot, melting glare. Like the tree forms in Naples Yel-
plant life, painting, and viewer, what would result if
low Morning, these plant personages appear called
the linking straight edge of Golden Sun assumed hu-
to attention by something or someone outside the
man form. A similar web of relations arises among
scene, transforming a view of nature into a web
the forms in Dawn III (fig. 45), in which Dove pins
of pictorial and extrapictorial encounter and ex-
sky to earth by way of reverberating concentric
change.
Fig. 45 Arthur G. Dove, Dawn III, 1932, oil on canvas, 22 × 22 in. (55.9 × 55.9 cm), Mary and Sylvan Lang Collection, McNay Art Museum, San Antonio, Texas, USA. Photograph © McNay Art Museum / Art Resource, NY.
Circles
55
In both Silver Sun and Sunrise, Northport Harbor,
are about suns rising or setting, also puts the viewer
Dove uses the concentric circle motif to create an
in mind of the material relationship between the
analogous sort of dialogue, pairing his sky-bound
earth and the heavens which in turn highlights the
suns with their reversed, water-bound or earth-
fact that one’s sense of the latter (the heavens) is
bound reflections (figs. 6, 8). In Silver Sun, he con-
always relational (as opposed to straightforwardly
verts large to small and a dark center and lighter pe-
empirical), a function of the relative positions
rimeter to a white core bounded by a band of black.
between here and there. This pairing also points up
Similarly, in Sunrise, Northport Harbor, he replaces a
the fact that this relationship arises out of literal
white-yellow center for a dark-orange one, switch-
contact, through an encounter between celestial
ing the colors of inner and outer so as to create a
light waves and the ocular apparatus, with a form of
diminutive sun substitute. By using a motif of re-
material as well as visual exchange—the experience
flection to evoke not mirroring but displacement or
of perception—the end result.
transposition, Dove signals his interest in the trans-
What is more, by virtue of calling to mind in
lations and transmutations endemic to myriad sign
Silver Sun and Sunrise, Northport Harbor the idea of a
systems—with the sun as referent, the reflection
reversed or negative image as produced by the ac-
as nonmimetic, transmuted sign. Such a pairing,
tion of light, Dove evokes a specific instrument or
which makes these paintings as much about the
mechanism of transmission, photography, that was
idea of a relationship between two terms as they
conceived of by Dove’s close associates, including
Fig. 46 Alfred Stieglitz, Music—A Sequence of Ten Cloud Photographs, No. X, 1922, gelatin silver print, 23 × 18.5 cm (91⁄16 × 75⁄16 in.), National Gallery of Art, Washington, DC, Alfred Stieglitz Collection, 1949.3.838. © 2015 Georgia O’Keeffe Museum / Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York.
56
Chapter One
Stieglitz and Paul Strand, as a translating rather
contingency. We have been hoping to be able to
than a mimetic medium. Photography, they under-
paint our interior all white for some time. It looks
stood, reconfigured the stuff of the world, such as
now as though it would have to be done soon. The
clouds and porch shadows, into a new and at times
walls of this old post office are supposed to be white,
strange visual language for use in, as Strand put
but scrubbing did not make them as pure as they
78
it, the creation of a “living expression.” Although
should be.” A few weeks later, he wrote to Stieglitz
photography was of course not Dove’s medium of
that “the photographs are marvelous things to have
choice, he regularly took photographs, some to use
on the wall. We have been very happy with them.
as models for his illustrations and others to doc-
New ideas have come since they have been here. It
ument his life and his relationships with family
is great to have such fine company.”83
and friends; he also had photographs made of his 79
Given the importance of Stieglitz’s photographs
own work. Dove’s contribution to the MSS issue
for Dove, one surmises that the silver metal-based
on photography in 1922, despite its coy obfuscating,
paint in Dove’s Silver Sun served in part as an ana-
indicates an interest in the medium, as does his fer-
log for the chemicals employed in the photographic
vent admiration for Stieglitz’s work. A show at the
process. Relevant here is the painting by Dove now
Anderson Galleries in April of 1923 included a group
called Sunrise in Northport Harbor (1929), which is
of images Stieglitz titled “Music—A Sequence of
strikingly similar in appearance and effect to his
Ten Cloud Photographs” (fig. 46), comprising work
Sunrise, Northport Harbor (fig. 8), a painting that
Stieglitz had initiated at his home on Lake George
also dates to 1929, although Dove used metal, rather
80
in 1922. Dove greatly admired these photographs
than canvas, for the ground of Sunrise in Northport
as well as their progeny, the Equivalents, made over
Harbor, and incorporated the reflective warp of the
the following decade or more, so much so that he
metal sheet into his rendition of the sunlit sky in
and Torr purchased an Equivalent print in 1942, an
this work.84 This suggests that metal may have been
acquisition that was accompanied by Stieglitz’s gift
very much on his mind when he created the paired
of a second print from the series. When Dove sent
big and little suns in the other Northport scene. The
Stieglitz a check for $200 to cover the purchase of
Equivalents, so admired by Dove, were gelatin silver
one print, to be chosen by Stieglitz, he wrote that
prints; the final image consisted of metallic silver
81
he and Torr had “been hoping for this for years.”
embedded in a gelatin coating.85 With his metallic
This statement echoed one made a month earlier, in
paint, Dove likely paid homage to Stieglitz and to
another letter to Stieglitz, in which Dove wrote of
photography more generally, a proposition rein-
his wish to acquire one of his mentor’s works: “We
forced by the assemblage portrait of Stieglitz that
both feel so very glad to have this fine last num-
Dove created in 1924 (fig. 47), shortly after the 1923
ber of this ‘Twice a Year’ with the reproductions of
exhibition of Stieglitz’s early cloud photographs.
the ‘Equivalents.’—Of which we are going to have
In the portrait, Dove assembled a lens, a mirrored
[one], if anything tangible happens to make it pos-
glass plate, a watch spring (toward the top of the
sible. It has been on our minds for some years, and
plate), a clock spring (in the lower left quadrant of
it is part of our plan.”82 The two Equivalents, once in
the plate), and a strip of steel wool on a plywood
Dove’s hands, decisively shaped his thinking about
ground. The reflective plate— transparent glass
his own art. “The work is going fine now,” he wrote
backed with a metal coating—calls to mind the
to Stieglitz. “The photographs really are a great
metals (silver, platinum, and palladium) and the
help. . . . We are enjoying the photographs and lov-
metal-coated plates or paper commonly used by
ing them.” He continued by explaining how their
both Stieglitz and Strand in the printing process. By
presence in his Centerport residence transformed
attaching the metal springs and the steel wool to the
his conception of that space and its suitability for
plate, Dove fashioned a direct association between
the display of art: “They have brought up another
metal and photography, suggesting that metal figCircles
57
Fig. 47 Arthur G. Dove, Portrait of Alfred Stieglitz, 1924, assemblage of lens, mirrored glass plate, springs, steel wool, glue, and nails mounted on board, 157⁄8 × 121⁄8 in. (40.3 × 30.8 cm), The Museum of Modern Art, New York, NY, USA, purchase, 193.1955. Digital image © The Museum of Modern Art / Licensed by SCALA / Art Resource, NY.
ured largely in his conception of the photographic
surface of the board support, further evoking Stieg-
process, regardless of the actual process itself. The
litz’s practice, and photography more generally, by
mirror image of the metal springs cast in the plate’s
referring to the smoky, atmospheric effects of many
reflective surface solidifies this association—metal
of his photographs and to the camera’s translating
is here both the subject (springs) and the medium
effects.86
(the mirror’s metal backing) of representation—as
Dove’s assemblage portrait of Rebecca and Paul
does the fact that the uneven and eroded coating of
Strand (fig. 48), titled Painted Forms, Friends when it
the plate transforms the look of the springs, much
was exhibited in 1925 at the Seven Americans exhibi-
as Stieglitz hoped his photographs would trans-
tion along with the assemblage portrait of Stieglitz,
mute the objective appearances of the observable
also includes a metal spring as well as other metal
world. Dove smoked the lens before gluing it to the
items: rods, wire, nails, a fence staple, and a disc.87
Fig. 48 Arthur G. Dove, Untitled (Portrait of Rebecca and Paul Strand), ca. 1925, oil paint, metal rods, wire, nails, metal spring, fence staple, metal disk, and wood mounted on panel, 4¾ × 51⁄8 in. (12.1 × 13 cm), Philadelphia Museum of Art, Gift of Paul Strand, 1974, 1974-175-1.
Circles
59
Here again Dove draws a connection between pho-
I should add that the small size of Dove’s assem-
tography and metal, and he does so in conjunction
blage portraits of Stieglitz and the Strands more
with three iterations of the concentric circle motif,
closely approaches the dimensions of the photog-
that summa of translation associated in Silver Sun
raphers’ original prints than it does the easel-scale
and Sunrise, Northport Harbor with the photographic
of contemporaneous painting, including the bulk
process. In the Strand portrait, Dove glued a two-
of Dove’s own works; the same can be said for the
pronged piece of wood, striped with blue, to the sur-
diminutive size of Golden Sun which, at around thir-
face of a rectangular panel. Adjacent to this bit of
teen by nine inches, was an unusually small paint-
wood, he attached a circle shape adorned with rings
ing for Dove. Thus scale, along with metal, signifies
of black, plum, red, and yellow. Beneath the circle,
the relationship Dove wished to articulate between
he attached at an angle a spirally grooved metal rod,
both his person and his work and Stieglitz and the
probably a screw bolt shaft, its lowest end abutting
Strands, both in terms of the likeness in size of
the upper incline of a partially coiled metal spring,
his paintings and assemblages to theirs and also
likely from a clock. A fence staple, painted dark blue,
because scale automatically posits a relationship
appears to prop up a second spiraled bolt shaft that
between one thing and another, one underscored
is wedged in between the clock spring and a metal
by the work’s original title, Painted Forms, Friends,
disc that Dove has tacked to the panel and painted
which triangulates paint, things, and friendship.
with concentric circles of red, orange, yellow, and
Such a connection among media, people, and ex-
white. Rust disrupts in places the pigment adorn-
perience arises in the assemblage portrait of Stieg-
ing this circle, making the disc’s surface resemble
litz, as well. “The one of you was on vellum with a
dry and cracked earth. Dove divided the whole
smoked lens,” Dove explained to Stieglitz, “suggest-
into triangular sections with intersecting wire and
ing what I saw about you when you were speaking
painted lines, and he filled in these sections with a
of your mother to Bloch the musician at your broth-
range of yellows, blues, grays, and greens. Delicate
er’s house.”88 As a property Dove would have associ-
flares or spikes of blue-black radiate from one of the
ated with a pantographic transfer, scale also served
clock spring’s lower curves, a crimson aura edges
for him as a figure for the translating operations
the panel, and the whole assortment rests on a
responsible for creating relational bonds.
wooden base fashioned out of a strip of molding or trim stained dark brown. Together with the coiled spring’s tracking of the curve of the sun-like disc,
60
Waves
the point-counterpoint effect produced by this disc
As should be clear by now, in almost all his works
and the circles at the heart of the spring—akin to
that feature the concentric circle motif or itera-
the negative-like reversals in Silver Sun and Sunrise,
tions of it, such as the actual springs he attached
Northport Harbor—establishes a material connec-
to a painting and to several assemblages, Dove em-
tion between the spring and the disc, or between
ployed this motif to envision the traverse of light
metal and sun, and fashions the spring’s outward
waves between sun or moon and earth as well as
coil as rays of light streaking toward the earth’s
the various actions of waves of light when they
surface, an effect underscored by the lines bursting
encountered and engaged earthly terrain or ma-
from the outermost coil. By making light waves and
chines, including cameras. In this guise, the motif
metal of a piece, Dove further suggests the translat-
both represented and actualized the associations
ing mechanism of photography, for of course it was
and relationships among the phenomena and en-
the relationship as comprised by physical interac-
tities involved in these exchanges as well as the in-
tion among light and the equipment and materials
terchanging mechanisms by which these networks
employed in the photographic process that con-
of relations came about, and also incarnated the
stituted the creation of a photograph at the time.
operations of encounter and exchange as such. For
Chapter One
Fig. 49 Arthur G. Dove, Silver Tanks, 1929, oil and metallic paint on canvas, mounted on panel, 54.6 × 77.5 cm (21½ × 30½ in.), Gift of Leo S. Guthman, 1996.793, The Art Institute of Chicago.
Fig. 50 Arthur G. Dove, Silver Tanks and Moon, 1930, oil and metallic paint on canvas, 233⁄16 × 181⁄16 in. (71.6 × 45.9 cm), Philadelphia Museum of Art, The Alfred Stieglitz Collection, 1949, 1949-18-3.
Fig. 51 Arthur G. Dove, City Moon, 1938, oil and wax emulsion on canvas, 347⁄8 × 25 in. (88.6 × 63.4 cm), Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, Smithsonian Institution, Gift of Joseph H. Hirshhorn, 1966, 66.1413. Photography by Cathy Carver.
Dove, translation and communication spoke ev-
encounter or contact in Silver Tanks and Moon arises
idently and essentially of connections made and
by way of resonance between the blue, gray, and sil-
relationships forged. Even in works such as Silver
ver bands that designate the moon and the vertical
Tanks (1929), Silver Tanks and Moon (1930), and City
banding that constitutes the two tanks, a connec-
Moon (1938), all three of which juxtapose a celes-
tion reinforced by the formal echo of the moon’s
tial body with the urban or the industrial rather
circular shape in the columnar shape of the tanks.
than the natural world, concentric circles suggest
Something similar occurs in Silver Tanks, which, like
contact and exchange via the mechanism of a wave
the other picture of moon and tanks, relies on me-
between interstellar space and the domain of hu-
tallic paint to generate its silvery sheen. Like the
man life (figs. 49, 50, 51). In City Moon, the moon
metallic pigment in Silver Sun, the metal in these
crowds the scene, pressing forward toward a screen
paintings suffuses the scene, uniting all parts, and
of crisscrossed lines and expanding beyond the
also enters into an exchange with waves of light:
frame on all sides but one. The spiky forms that
figuratively through the use of metal paint to de-
proceed across the bottom register of the painting
pict the moon’s radiation, and literally by virtue of
also reach upward toward the moon and in some
the manner in which the reflective silver pigment
cases make contact with its outermost circle, an
shapes and guides the encounter between actual
encounter similar to that between sun and earth in
light waves and the canvas surface.
Golden Sun and Naples Yellow Morning. The effect of 62
Chapter One
I draw attention to the connection between cir-
cles and waves in these paintings—to light waves
ning in the early nineteenth century, scientists such
and not simply to light—because waves of multiple
as Thomas Young, Hermann von Helmholtz, James
sorts populate Dove’s canvases, including those of
Clerk Maxwell, Michael Faraday, and Heinrich Hertz
light but also water waves and sound waves. Like his
converged on the wave as an explanatory figure for
concentric circle motifs, waves constitute a shared
the mechanics of all optical and electromagnetic
vocabulary across his works and thus serve as a
phenomena, establishing that multiple forms of
connective tissue among them. Dove’s waves fre-
energy, including visible light, exhibited wavelike
quently operate in conjunction with his circles, and
behavior when traveling through space. Einstein
like the circles, they play a significant role in carry-
and quantum theory would complicate wave the-
ing out the work that Dove called on his pictures to
ory in the early decades of the twentieth century,
perform. Of course, their precursors were many and
but waves as a mechanical common denominator
significant. The pursuit of a universal model for use
remained at the forefront of the public’s scientific
in describing and explaining processes such as light
imagination into the 1920s and 1930s, associated
and sound, and for which the wave provided one
as they were with all manner of phenomena and
answer, had roots in classical antiquity, and the fact
possibilities, including transatlantic travel, men-
that sound travels in the form of a wave had been
tal telepathy, the ether, astronomical observation
established as early as the sixteenth century. Begin-
and measurement, wireless telegraphy, and radio.89
Fig. 52 Arthur G. Dove, Me and the Moon, 1937, wax emulsion on canvas, 18 × 26 in. (45.72 × 66.04 cm), The Phillips Collection, Washington, DC, acquired 1939. Any reproduction of this image shall not be made without written consent of The Phillips Collection, Washington, DC.
Circles
63
Fig. 53 Lee Lawrie, Sound, 1934, main entrance, 30 Rockefeller Plaza, New York, NY, carved Indiana limestone, cast glass, polychrome paint, gilding. Photograph: Christine Roussel.
Fig. 54 Above, Sears, Roebuck and Co., Radio Headquarters catalog, 1924. Source: Steve Davis, via MagazineArt.org. Fig. 55 Right, Vincent Lopez and Owen Murphy, On the Radio (New York: Robbins-Engel, Inc., 1924). Courtesy of Lilly Library, Indiana University, Bloomington, Indiana.
Dove thus chose well in calling on waves to supply
an effect augmented by the formal echo among the
in combination with his circles a pan-oeuvre em-
radiating lines, the circular frame around the fam-
blem of translation and communication and, ac-
ily, and the circle shape of the radio’s amplifying
cordingly, contact and interrelation.
horn. The lines designating sound issuing from a
Me and the Moon (1937) (fig. 52) provides a good
radio in an image that illustrated the sheet music
example of such a pairing of circles and waves.
for On the Radio (fig. 55), composed by Vincent Lo-
Here, Dove’s concentric circle motif accompanies
pez and Owen Murphy in 1924 and performed that
raucously expanding and undulating adjoined
year by the Vincent Lopez Orchestra at the Green-
bands of color and a painted line that snakes and
wich Village Follies (a well-known and popular New
loops through the scene. Made by Dove in response
York revue), resemble those in the Sears picture and
to his experience of radio listening, this painting
call to mind the curving sound bands of Me and the
conjoins two types of waves: light waves, as repre-
Moon.92 They resemble the effects of brushwork, and
sented by the concentric circle moon, and sound
the borders between bands are uneven and rough;
waves, figured by the reverberating colored bands
their upward press represents waves of sound ex-
and the snaking line. The sound bands that Dove
iting the radio amplifier and filling a room as do
uses to evoke radio transmission might have been
the undulating but more precisely wrought bands
suggested to him by the idea of “bandwidth”—the
on which the radio appears to sit. A photograph of
frequency or wavelength range assigned to a radio
the orchestra at work occupies the rectangle formed
station or broadcaster—or by period imagery of
by the radio box, making explicit the nature of the
transmitted sound, in which sound takes the form
sound emanating from the apparatus, translated as
of a series of expanding circular or semicircular
it was from live performance into electromagnetic
bands. One well-known example, Lee Lawrie’s 1934
waves and then into a once again audible tune, with
sculptural relief Sound (fig. 53), adorns the main en-
several apparatuses aiding this course: a transmit-
trance of 30 Rockefeller Plaza in New York City and
ter, an antenna, a receiver, a detector, and an ampli-
depicts a man cupping his hands around his mouth
fier. In Me and the Moon, Dove likens the translations
as he cries out, the sound issuing forth as a series
that occur in the context of radio listening and the
of semicircular bands. The 1924 Sears, Roebuck and
communication between entities that results from
Co. Radio Headquarters catalog, widely distributed
these translations, as illustrated by such popular
and heavily advertised in popular magazines such
images, to the transmission of light between moon
as Boys’ Life, Popular Mechanics, and Popular Science,
and earth, something like the Sears lightning bolt
featured on its cover a similar motif, this time di-
on a cosmic scale. Rendering radio waves in his
90
The
painting with the same curvilinear (if not concen-
cover of the catalog, a picture of which was included
tric) banding effects employed in popular culture
in print advertisements, depicts a family listening
to designate radio sound and configuring the moon
to a radio and reacting with a combination of ex-
and its light through such bands as well, which for
citement and wonder. The source of their wonder
him of course also diagram waves of light, Dove
is, presumably, the wireless technology of radio, as
too creates an image of temporal and spatial trans-
represented by the bolt of lightning that issues from
mission and connectivity. The idea of a wave serves
cables atop the Sears, Roebuck and Co. headquar-
as the chief point of connection here. The shared
ters in Chicago, which broadcast the popular Sears-
banding motif and the loops of line that shimmy
operated radio station WLS between the years 1924
about the scene, configuring radio waves moving
rectly associated with radio sound (fig. 54).
91
and 1928. Rippled, concentric lines radiate from
through the atmosphere as does the light of the
the building and enfold the listening family; these
moon, provide the link, as exemplified by the loops
animated lines represent the seemingly magical
that intersect with and are embraced by the moon’s
travel of sound waves from station to living room,
outermost circular band, moments of merger that Circles
65
solidify the idea of an equivalency between the two.
and pencil study, entitled #4 Creek. Both feature
It is not clear whether Dove meant the horizontally
a series of radiating bands that press up from the
oriented, curvilinear strips of color in the lower por-
lower edge of the scene toward a half-moon shape
tion of the canvas to be solid earth or ocean waves
slightly above the center of the pictorial field. This
(or either of the two), but if he intended waves—an
half moon generates its own radiating bands, which
undated pencil study for the painting (fig. 56) sug-
are segmented by a series of vertical forms: lines
gests that this is indeed the case—Me and the Moon
in the sketch, tonally varied bands in the painting.
would wind up commingling not two but three
Because they are truncated by the upper border,
types of waves: those of light, sound, and water.
these bands appear to extend beyond the confines
Such an admixture points toward an interest
of the canvas, much as do the lower set of banded
on Dove’s part in drawing an analogy or suggest-
forms, which one imagines forming the upper half
ing an equivalency among wave types and also in
of a series of concentric ellipses, with the center
making the waveform, like the circle motif, a vital
located at the painting’s lower edge. In both cases,
and recurrent aspect of his figural and conceptual
the bands call to mind the turbulence created when
vocabulary. Dove’s Penetration (1924) presents an ex-
a solid object is inserted into a moving stream,
cellent example of this (fig. 57). In Penetration, Dove
here the parting of water around Dove’s legs as he
uses the motif he employs elsewhere for indicating
stood in the current as well as the water’s conver-
sunlight or moonlight to designate instead the rip-
gence after it passed around him and regrouped.
ples and waves formed by the movement of water.
Dove of course does not adhere precisely to the
In A Primer of Modern Art, the critic Sheldon Cheney
laws of fluid dynamics—there is no reason why he
reported that when he inquired about the origins
should—but both painting and sketch nonetheless
of the painting, Dove recalled creating the sketch
possess certain qualities of a schematic presenta-
for it “while knee-deep in flowing water, looking
tion of the physics of water flow. As such, both may
93
The painting var-
be associated with other diagrammatic images of
ies in composition only slightly from its charcoal
phenomena constituted by wave motion, including
downstream into the woods.”
Fig. 56 Arthur G. Dove, Me and the Moon, n.d., pencil on paper, 7 × 10 in. (17.78 × 25.4 cm), The Phillips Collection, Washington, DC, Gift of William E. O’Reilly in memory of Leland Bell and Lawrence Gowing, 1991. Any reproduction of this image shall not be made without written consent of The Phillips Collection, Washington, DC.
66
Chapter One
Fig. 57 Arthur G. Dove, Penetration, 1924, oil on board, Collection of Jan T. and Marica Vilcek, Promised gift to The Vilcek Foundation.
those belonging to science but also to popular cul-
space, and the stone- pond- ripple example fre-
ture, such as images of radio’s sound, and to Dove’s
quently served as the explanatory device. Draw-
own body of work, namely, his depictions of light
ing on Douglas’s analysis, Alexander Nemerov has
waves and sound waves by way of snaking lines or
described other contemporaneous associations
concentric circle motifs. The bright yellow-white
between radio and water, the ocean in particular. He
half moon at Penetration’s heart, itself composed
characterizes Edward Hopper’s Ground Swell (1939)
of banded semicircles, reinforces the connection
as embedded in a period discourse that linked ra-
Dove makes here and in paintings such as Me and
dio and the ocean, arguing that Hopper’s waves, the
the Moon among light, sound, and water, for this
“ground swell” of the painting’s title, in combina-
half-moon shape at once resembles a burst of light
tion with the bell buoy depicted in the work, visual-
at the end of a tunnel of trees, the ripple of sound
ize the radiating traverse of sound as evoked by the
through air, and the flow of water down a stream
explanatory rippling pond, with the lateral sweep
and around a solid form. What is more, a small
of the canvas a meditation on the surpassing range
circle just below the center point of the canvas com-
of wireless technology.94 Dove himself employed a
prising a white dot surrounded by a green circular
related wave metaphor in discussing his work:
band reflects in radically reduced form the configuration of the radiating mass of bands in the upper
The line still holds and the contrasting sizes. Ac-
half of the painting, also composed of a white core
tual size all the time, and as much as you need of
and a green perimeter. Such a pairing compares to
any size, so that all the things you feel are quite
the point-counterpoint relationship between large
real, the actual, and all the feelings can be con-
and small concentric circle motifs in Silver Sun and
trasted much the same as waves roll on a shore
Sunrise, Northport Harbor, but in emphasizing reflec-
and wash back against each other. It certainly
tion rather than reversal in its depiction of light
can be drawn through as fine as that. And as I
reflected in a stream, this coupling reinforces the
said before things can be of the same size and of
implied connection between waves of light and
different sizes at the same time. That is certainly
waves of water. The small circle also registers as an
true and covers both vision and feelings.95
object floating on or breaking the water’s surface,
68
as if a stone tossed in, its “plop” along with the im-
Here, the image of waves striking against a shore
plied murmur of the current adding sound to the
aids in elucidating Dove’s conception of the idea of
experience of the scene.
interrelationship and, in particular, his sense of the
When he utilized the metaphor of circular rip-
connections between things as produced by con-
ples produced by a stone thrown into a pond to de-
trast or juxtaposition. Dove posits multiple sizes,
scribe the waveforms of sound and light, Andrews
feelings, and perceptions as equally real by virtue
in Color and Its Application to Printing made the same
of the relationships and interactions among them.
connection among light, sound, and water as Dove
The encounter between a wave and the shore to-
does in Penetration, in which Dove’s own partially
gether with the intermingling backwash that re-
submerged body or the diminutive white and green
sults constitute a complex of material in motion,
circle form plays the role of the disrupting stone
for which relationality serves as the binding mech-
in that work. As the historian Susan Douglas has
anism. In similar fashion, as Dove indicates in his
pointed out, during the decades that Dove was at
remarks, diverse forms and cognitive states might
work, water was conceptually linked to radio, and
be understood as expressions of an ultimately col-
to sound more generally. Among other things, the
lective or composite entity or phenomenon, a brand
behavior of water was often used analogously to
of simultaneity that encompasses the potential for
explain the phenomenon of radio broadcasting,
one thing to be many things at once. In an unpub-
particularly the travel of radio waves in time and
lished series of verses, Dove described the breaking
Chapter One
of waves on the shore in terms that seem equally
generate a corresponding sense of commonality,
to describe natural phenomena and a painting of
encounter, or exchange, one that I take to be the
those phenomena, thereby positing another ver-
pictorial expression on Dove’s part of the procedures and effects of translation and communica-
sion of such simultaneity:
tion and the networks of relations that result (figs. The silver wisps of silver wills do moonlight slide
58, 59). Neither of these works features a straight-
on sands with grit and water so easily gifted with
forward concentric circle motif but, as in Me and
ease on a beach that washed its hands with soap
the Moon and Penetration, striated and processing
of sand and to my cods with out their fins or
bands produce effects similar to those generated by
bones and silver leaves laid one upon the other as
Dove’s circle suns and moons. And in both, Dove
waves overlay themselves on the shore and back
renders multiple types of waveforms pictorially
again to sea. To go gouge [?] a piece of moonlight
interchangeable so that the paintings wind up as
out and let it slip along the shore with the waves
narratives of translation as such and also, I would
that make the rise and fall of tide and slide over-
suggest, as approximations of the very devices that might facilitate such a translating procedure. In
96
hand to reach the shore more and more.
River Bottom, thickly encrusted paint that in places As one scholar has noted, the cadence of Dove’s 97
appears to have been applied with a palette knife
lines evoke the rhythmic lapping of waves. The
doubles as sediment unsettled by a rushing current,
conjured back- and- forth effect, in combination
and bulbous, blossoming forms evoke the bubbles
with the imagery of moonlight sliding along sand
and eddies formed by water as it moves across a
and silver fish scales accumulating as the waves
rocky riverbed. Ranging from the deep red of oxi-
break, also suggests the gravitational back- and-
dized blood to a cool silver-gray, the colors of the
forth between the moon and the earth as well
work call to mind everything from the russet-hued
as an artist laying down silver paint on canvas—
bark of waterlogged branches and the shiny brown
like that in Penetration and many other of Dove’s
of submerged, water-smoothed pebbles to the glint
works—with a push then pull of hand and wrist.
of the sun on the water’s surface and the scurry and
Here, water, moonlight, paint, and bodily motion
scuttle of silver-scaled fish. Dove does not distin-
collectively assume wavelike form, either figura-
guish between surface and depth in this work, for
tively or in a literal sense. This gives one to under-
the image simultaneously conjures the river’s bot-
stand the connections that Dove draws among var-
tom and the water that flows over it. In this way,
ious forms of waves in Penetration as belonging to a
he establishes the constitutive connection between
larger impulse within his practice that treated such
the two, a link iterated by the two curving lines
forms as not just analogous but conceptually inter-
than span the canvas’s vertical length and interlink
changeable. Dove expresses this interchangeability
all its parts as well as by the two ovoid forms that sit
by making these waveforms, through his concentric
in the picture’s upper third. Dove renders one of the
circles and banding motifs, visually cognate as well
ovoids in full; as it bisects a heavy horizontally flow-
as materially or physically of a piece, an effect sug-
ing line its colors change, from semicircular bands
gested by Dove’s breaking-wave metaphor and by
of pink, rose, and gray in the lower half to gray, sil-
the title of the work, Penetration, which connotes
ver, and black above. One sees only half of the other
intersection or intercourse, in the sense of some-
ovoid, or at least that is the effect; its upper portion
thing shared by or communicated between two or
appears to peek over the lip of the horizontal edge,
more entities or an encounter or exchange among
its bright-white center like a staring eye. In empha-
people or things.
sizing bisection by highlighting the boundary at
Other works, including River Bottom, Silver, Ochre,
which the ovoid forms are split between one side
Carmine, Green (1923) and Sea Gull Motive (1928),
and another, Dove produces a sense of above and Circles
69
Fig. 58 Arthur G. Dove, River Bottom, Silver, Ochre, Carmine, Green, 1923, oil on canvas, 24 × 18 in. (61 × 45.7 cm), Michael Scharf Family Collection.
below, but he does so only in order to establish the
alight on and illuminate the river’s surface (those
coexistence of surface and depth in the work. That
of light) and those that constitute its flow (those
is, by articulating spatial relations through the ren-
of water). A miniaturized concentric circle motif
dition of two-dimensional, bisected forms that fall
beneath the left ovoid comprising rings of black,
in step with the overall flatness of the composition
green, and white calls to mind the doubled circles
even as they seem to occupy various spatial strata,
in works such as Silver Sun and Sunrise, Northport
Dove signals that he wishes to convey surface and
Harbor. In River Bottom, this motif is its own double,
depth as coextensive, as aspects of the same plane
for alone it must stand for both radiating waves of
or continuum of space. Along with the silver paint,
light and their watery reflection. Like those in Pen-
which simultaneously calls to mind reflections at
etration, the curving semielliptical forms in River
the surface and fish swimming in the deep, such
Bottom that process from bottom to top also signify
an articulation of coextension—of the sameness
sound—the rustle and gulp of water as it proceeds
or interchangeability of multiple planes of space,
downstream—thus adding to the picture’s workings
one substituting for any other—works to express
yet another kind of wave. Here, then, Dove makes
not just an interconnectivity among materials
his colors and forms responsible for being multiple
and forms but the interchangeability of light and
things at once—bodies, water, light, and sound—
water, an equivalence between the waveforms that
and they slip in and out of each guise as we watch,
Fig. 59 Arthur G. Dove, Sea Gull Motive (Sea Thunder or The Wave), 1928, oil on wood panel, 26¼ × 20½ in. (66.7 × 52.1 cm), The Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco, museum purchase, Richard B. Gump Trust Fund, Museum Society Auxiliary, Museum Acquisition Fund, Peter and Kirsten Bedford, Mrs. George Hopper Fitch, Art Trust Fund, and by exchange of Foundation objects, 1990.19. Photography © Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco.
Circles
71
each transmutation a case study in encounter,
the waves a pictorial condensation of their serial,
translation, and exchange.
banded form, at once capturing their essence and
Various titles have graced Dove’s Sea Gull Motive
generating a graphic translation, shorthand-like, of
(fig. 59). Dove gave it the present label, but as early
their essential nature: two series of short, sturdy,
as 1929, it was listed in Stieglitz’s exhibition check-
vertical bands of the same hues used to depict the
list as Sea Gull Motif, and in subsequent exhibitions
waves, one dominated by gray tones, the other by
it was called The Wave or Sea Thunder. None of these
iterations of blue. That the waves are posited in
titles represent a stretch. The painting’s billowing
pictorial terms as about to reach their shorthand
and curving bands and ridges resemble surging
versions gives emphasis to the idea that the one is
ocean waves and, as Marc Simpson has pointed out,
a translation of the other, the graphic-like bands in
they can also suggest the shape of a bird or echoing
Reaching Waves that evoke the color spectrum dia-
98
72
waves of sound. As a result, Dove in the space of
grams in Andrews as well as anticipate present-day
a single image calls to mind the physical form of a
color separation charts being the thing in the paint-
bird, the motion of water, and the echoing sound
ing that results after the actual waves transmit and
of a storm at sea, which may explain the various
transmute. In this way, Dove effectively diagrams
monikers that have been attached to the painting.
the procedures he wishes to evoke through the form
In doing this, Dove suggests an equivalency among
and the idea of a wave, a result made all the more
multiple waveforms: those that constitute the
palpable by the elongated discs in Reaching Waves
motion of the sea; those of light, which make the
that shoot through, like arrows, the translating
physical world, including birds and ocean waves,
series of vertical bands, suggesting through their
available to the visual sense; those that constitute
action none other than Dove’s “see” arrow, itself a
sound, as in the sound of the surf or the roar of
graphic annotation designed to register movement
thunder; and those that are traced by the rhythmic
and traversal in time and space and the encounters
flapping of a bird’s wings as it flies. The term “mo-
that arose forthwith.
tive,” which can refer to a motif in a work of art, mu-
Dove’s shifting from one type of wave to an-
sic, or literature as well as to something that causes
other in paintings such as Me and the Moon, Sea Gull
or impels motion, was thus a perfect choice, for it
Motive, Penetration, River Bottom, and Reaching Waves
encompasses the multiple iterations of waves—
such that the one becomes the other—much as En-
radiant, sonic, mechanical— commingled in Sea
glish becomes French, say, or live sound becomes
Gull Motive. As with Penetration, River Bottom, and
audio signal through an act of sonic translation—
the range of paintings so far discussed, Dove with
recapitulates the manifold operations of transla-
this work suggests exchanges among multiple enti-
tion that Dove explored throughout his practice,
ties and processes by engendering communication
translating procedures within the confines of lan
and converse through a single, shared form, the
guage, as with shorthand or word-image doodles,
wave, which transmutes as it translates from one
but also translating operations of other sorts, those
incarnation to the next. Dove’s painting Reaching
of the phonograph, radio, or telegraphy or as per-
Waves (1929), which depicts a cluster of waves about
formed by Dove’s pantograph and by his recur-
to crash, literalizes this idea.99 Dove renders each
ring pictorial motifs. Waves, then, along with the
of the cresting waves as conjoined bands of color,
concentric circle motif, itself a visual iteration of
each one a progressing series of tones of white,
the waveform, provided Dove with a pictorial vo-
brown, gray, and blue, so as to suggest the process
cabulary by which to articulate his preoccupation
of transmutation and the ultimate exchange as the
with translation and communication, and they also
waves surge toward and eventually hit land. Dove
served as a means for enacting these operations
underscores his sense of the wave as the catchall
within the space of his pictures much as a meta-
signifier of such an effect by placing in advance of
phor rhetorically enacts a transfer or exchange
Chapter One
between two things (light and truth, say, or a house
tion are, technically speaking, crepuscular rays, the
of cards and a delusional existence). As analogous
term employed in atmospheric optics to describe
components within Dove’s visual language, circles
rays or columns of light that appear to descend
and waves designated the myriad transmissions
from breaks in masses of clouds. The title of Dove’s
and transmutations produced by translation and
work, Sun Drawing Water, borrowed the phrasing of
communication and demonstrated the encoun-
a mariner’s harbinger in which sun drawing water
ters, connections, and networks of relations that
from the sea portended stormy weather; the phrase
resulted.
itself originated in the mistaken belief that cre-
Yet Dove did not restrict his circles and waves
puscular rays were a form of evaporation, caused
to a purely metaphorical, symbolic, or performa-
by sunbeams drawing water into the sky.101 Chances
tive function, nor did he imagine that their picto-
are, then, that in naming the work thusly (and it was
rial nature—the fact of their being images only—
his title), Dove most likely had crepuscular rays in
confined their potential to the pictorial realm. His
mind, as did other nineteenth-century artists who
ambitions for them far exceeded this, a point I al-
employed the phrase when titling their work.102
luded to earlier when discussing the circle motif
And it could be that the wording of the phrase
as representing but also inducing connections and
“sun drawing water” struck Dove as a lovely play on
networks of relations in Dove’s works. This point is
words, one very much in tune with his various trans-
now worth underscoring for what it allows us to un-
positions and translations. Crepuscular rays are vis-
derstand about Dove’s project as a whole and, also,
ible to an observer because of the sun’s action as it
for what it tells us about Dove as a maker of things,
shines through clouds or mist and radiates airborne
but the idea requires elucidation. Dove articulated
particles. Sunlight, thus, in a sense, “draws,” gives
the operations of language, translation and com-
visible, seeable form to otherwise unseeable water
munication chief among them, through the forms
molecules suspended in air. Sun in Dove’s picture is
of his art, but he also envisaged that art as structur-
consequently an analog to paintbrush or pencil, and
ally capable of initiating and executing these pro-
also to phonograph needle, or even barometer, as it
cedures on its own, materially and actually as well
is the instrument that registers, renders, and trans-
as metaphorically, an action hinted at in my call-
lates one system of signs into another. Sun is also
ing the multiple and interchangeable waveforms
here a figure for photography, that pencil of nature
in paintings like Me and the Moon or Golden Sun
that draws forms with light and that, in the realms
approximations of the devices— wires, receivers,
of art and science both, has regularly been made to
amplifying horns, a straightedge—that could facil-
transfigure the simply seen into something else. In
itate just such an operation. By way of further ex-
the case of Stieglitz’s Equivalents series, for example,
planation, I return to Sun Drawing Water (fig. 2), the
photographs of cloud-filled skies become putative
painting with which this chapter began and which,
mindscapes of music and spirit or, in the case of pe-
like many of Dove’s works, aims to surpass material
riod meteorological photography, a weather event
limits and show what the eye cannot see. But Sun
such as lightning is made over into scientifically
Drawing Water wishes to do much more than simply
scrutinizable evidence.103 The chutes of water in Sun
show. It seeks to act, to behave as if an instrument
Drawing Water, then, show a natural phenomenon
or an instrumental operation. It consists of a view
but also diagram the very act of this showing: the
of things but also a way of proceeding or function-
act of representing, or translating, itself.
ing, a noun, one might say, but also a verb, the idea
As a painting, Sun Drawing Water thus demon-
of instrument here connoting a tool that operates,
strates its own and, to Dove’s mind, its radical po-
100
The two
tential: its capacity as a work of art to model but
cylinders at the center of Sun Drawing Water that
also to make materially manifest through acts of
give visual form to the unseen processes of evapora-
translation a series of interchanges among all man-
performs, transforms, and generates.
Circles
73
74
ner of entities. Sun Drawing Water proffers itself as
sections, those circular and elliptical forms that
an instrument and makes a claim on instrumental
he described as expressive of the essence of nature
work. Assembling through its operations a com-
and that served as fundamental and constant mo-
plex of matter, phenomena, cognitive operations
tifs in his work. The curving line that divides the
and, by extension, perceiving beings, the painting
light-blue tip of the left cylinder from the darker
brings these things into relation much as a picture
gray-blue beneath it looks especially like its coun-
created while listening to a record amasses a cluster
terpart would in a diagram depicting the curve that
of interrelated sounds, instruments, machines, and
results when a plane intersects a cone and outlines
bodies that together constitute the very nature of
a circle or an ellipse. At once an atmospheric ef-
that painting’s being. Put another way, Sun Drawing
fect and a mathematical construct, the cylindrical
Water at once represents these interchanges and
forms in Sun Drawing Water oscillate between these
makes them possible, instantiates them, in the first
two states, each of which calls to mind a constitu-
place; the very fact of the painting existing gener-
tive component of Dove’s pictorial and conceptual
ates the relationships demonstrated therein. The
vocabulary—his circles, water, and waves and also
photographer and critic Paul Haviland described
his distilled, abstract forms—with oscillation itself
such a combinatory entity in an issue of the little
figuring the transmutations and exchanges ren-
magazine 291. He described the work of photogra-
dered and registered in Dove’s images of sky, sea,
phy as an ideal merger among man, machine, and
and land.
art, a “new trinity” in which each activates and sus-
It goes without saying that Sun Drawing Water
tains the others through the mutual exchange of
is a picture of waves—ocean waves, but also those
actions, thought, and media.104 Sun Drawing Water,
of light, as represented by yellow paint and the
as a painting-cum-instrument, constitutes an anal-
streaming ribbon forms. The sky-blue cloud that
ogous aggregated unit. Following this, one may
toward the left edge of the canvas assumes the form
describe Sun Drawing Water as a summary image,
of a cresting wave just about to break establishes,
a painting that gathers together aspects from the
as do the cylinders / crepuscular rays, a connection
whole of Dove’s exploratory work—his art making
between the two kinds. Clouds consist of clusters
but also his other activities, from weather watch-
of water droplets or ice crystals made visible by re-
ing and radio listening to letter writing and diary
flecting light, and they form partly as an effect of
keeping—and narrates but also enacts that labor
the sun heating the earth and causing water vapor
by means of constructing a single virtuoso array:
to rise and condense. Clouds thus arise from the
sun, light, water, waves, clouds, wind, birds, kites,
transmutation of one substance into another and
land, ships, storms, metal, meteorology, photog-
through an encounter and exchange between sur-
raphy, train travel, meandering rivers, the earth’s
face and atmosphere. By now it should be clear that
atmosphere, letters, words, writing, paint, artist,
Dove’s choice in Sun Drawing Water of a waveform to
art. Although Sun Drawing Water does not feature
represent a cloud at the middle point between water
a concentric circle motif, the tonal striations that
and sun signals his investment in the waveform
connote wind whipping across the grass-covered
as a notice of translation and communication for
slope as well as the upward press of a series of semi-
use across his body of work. But it also announces
circular forms—waves, hills, clouds, sky—resemble
his wish to surpass the emblematic by transform-
similar banding and pressing effects in Me and the
ing his paintings and assemblages into machines
Moon, Penetration, River Bottom, and other of Dove’s
or mechanisms of translation and communication
works, transforming Dove’s seaside scene into a
themselves, devices that show but also activate and
stacked sequence of watery swells. The cylinders at
embody these operations, as a phonograph appara-
center, intersected as they are by various lines and
tus activates and embodies—literally constitutes—
planes, call to mind Dove’s devotion to the conic
the translation of live into recorded sound, or as a
Chapter One
camera activates and embodies the translation of
beating against masses of air as seagulls propel
light into an image of the world.
themselves through the sky. In 1928, the same year
A most basic element of human language, the
Dove painted Seagull Motif (Violet and Green), the art-
formation of words, also features in this painting’s
ist Florine Stettheimer created a group portrait of
synthesizing summary array: individual letters that
members of the Stieglitz cohort in which she regis-
when clustered together create words condense in
tered exactly these pictorial and linguistic concur-
their actions the whole of Dove’s pan-oeuvre lan-
rences (fig. 60). In the picture, Stieglitz takes center
guage play. Dove’s signature sits in the trough of a
stage surrounded by representations of habitués of
wave and echoes in the arc and flow of its contig-
the Intimate Gallery, which serves as the setting of
uous “v” and “e” both the swells that surround it
the scene. Stettheimer provides relatively straight-
and the cloud form in the upper left of the painting
forward portraits of some of these figures. Baron
that resembles a wave. In mimicking through the
Adolph de Meyer enters, royally clad, at the right;
manipulation of letters the look of a wave, Dove
Charles Demuth comes in from the left, his gloved
creates here a word-image hybrid akin to those
hand holding a cane, the sharp end of which nar-
that peopled his correspondence, including the
rowly misses one of Stieglitz’s cloud photographs
doubled “Sweets” in his letter to Torr, in which lan-
lying faceup on the floor; the critic Henry McBride
guage constitutes simultaneously picture and text.
leans against the wall; and either Francis Picabia
He also fashions letters into a suggestion of sound.
or Randolph Bourne (portrayed posthumously) sits
The eloquent incline of the neck of the “d” and the
on a low stool, looking at Stieglitz.106 Other figures
abrupt downward tilt of its top together remind
receive more indirect treatment. John Marin joins
one of the posture of a body about to spring into a
the group in the form of his watercolors on the wall
dive, the moment of stillness and contraction prior
at left, and O’Keeffe’s face in profile appears on the
to an upward leap followed by a downward, water-
wall behind Stieglitz, accompanied by the letters of
bound plunge. Farfetched, perhaps, but the idea be-
her name rendered in reverse. Three panels at left
comes less so when one notes that “Dove” can be a
feature the names of Marsden Hartley, Arthur Dove,
proper noun but is also, in lowercase form, as in the
and Paul Strand, each one spelled out with custom-
painting, a verb: “dove,” as in the past tense of “to
ized lettering. In the Dove panel, Stettheimer ren-
dive.” With his signature here, Dove has fun with a
ders Dove’s name so that it assumes the form of a
particular linguistic form, the homograph, a word
bird in flight. The slightly tipped “D” serves as the
that shares its spelling with another but boasts a
bird’s inclining head, the “O” as its body, the “V” as
different meaning. He also toys with language’s
its wings, and the “E,” also tipped, as its feet. Here,
spoken sounds, toggling back and forth between
Dove is simultaneously a person, a bird, a paint-
“Dove” with a short “u” vowel sound and “dove”
ing, and a string of letters, fitting for Stettheimer’s
with a long “o,” experimenting with language’s ca-
work, which registers identity in myriad forms, and
pacities by imagining restoring sound to reading
a telling parallel to Dove’s own play with his lin-
and making coincident within writing two usually
guistically agile name and signature. Stettheimer’s
distinct registers, the sonic and the graphic.105 Of
punning jibes with Charles Demuth’s poster por-
course, “dove” is also a type of bird, and it is worth
trait of Dove, from 1924, which arrays the letters
noting that the swing and sway of Dove’s letters
of his name in all white against a clear blue sky, as
echoes the lilt of the airborne twining ribbons in
if to suggest a bird in flight—Demuth cropped the
Sun Drawing Water that indicate light and wind but
“V” at its base so that it looks like a pair of raised
also chart the flight of birds in a manner similar to
and flapping wings. One thinks also of Elizabeth
the looping, spiraling lines of Seagull Motif (Violet
McCausland’s description of Dove’s 1939 retrospec-
and Green) (fig. 3) that call to mind the coiling tra-
tive exhibition as offering a “dove’s-eye-view” of his
jectory but also the whoosh and thump of wings
work.107 Circles
75
Fig. 60 Florine Stettheimer, Portrait of Alfred Stieglitz, 1928, oil on canvas, 38 × 26¼ in. (96.5 × 66.7 cm), Alfred Stieglitz Collection, Co-owned by Fisk University, Nashville, Tennessee, and Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art, Bentonville, Arkansas. Photography by Edward C. Robison III.
76
Now consider the weaving and plunging ribbon
sketched the essential compositional elements of
forms in both Sun Drawing Water and Seagull Motif
Seagull Motif (Violet and Green), emphasizing above
(Violet and Green) in light of Dove’s proliferating lan-
all the approximate contours of the semielliptical
guage play (as well as the verbal and visual “Dove”
bands that form the background, the waves at the
puns of his associates and friends). Diagram-like
painting’s base, and the weaving, bobbing, and spi-
visualizations of atmospheric phenomena and
raling lines in the sky. The resemblance between
avian bodies in motion, these curving, looping, and
this sketch and another composition of Dove’s, this
switchbacking streams also call to mind the charac-
one undated, is startling (fig. 62).108 Dove included
ters of Gregg shorthand (fig. 19), the stenographic
the undated composition at the end of a series of
form that Dove studied in which combinations of
remarks, collectively titled “Abstraction,” that he
curving lines and other types of marks substitute
wrote by hand on a pad of notepaper. In the compo-
for the sounds of speech. In a letter to Dove, Ed-
sition, he configured a series of written comments
ward Alden Jewell expressed his deep appreciation
that continued the remarks of the previous page
of Dove’s Orange Grove in California, by Irving Berlin
into a form that recapitulates the combination of
(1927) (fig. 102), which Stieglitz had presented to
funnel, shore, and waves in both Seagull painting
Jewell in 1928 after its exhibition at the Intimate
and sketch. One of Dove’s phrases—not all of them
Gallery. On the reverse of this letter (fig. 61), Dove
are legible—begins at the upper left of the com-
Chapter One
Fig. 61 Above, a drawing on the back of a letter from Edward Alden Jewell to Arthur Garfield Dove dated Jan. 25, 19–. Arthur and Helen Torr Dove Papers, 1905–1974, Archives of American Art, Smithsonian Institution, 2:1:19, image #39. Fig. 62 Right, a page from Arthur Garfield Dove’s “Abstraction” essay, n.d. Arthur and Helen Torr Dove Papers, 1905–1974, Archives of American Art, Smithsonian Institution, 3:2:19, image #6.
position, plunging diagonally downward before it
the two images, painting and sketch, that it appears
changes course and rises again, then looping back
to mimic or foretell. But one can note the similar-
leftward to rejoin its point of origin: “If one could
ity and speculate that the composition consists of
only get a jar for thoughts and a cover to hold them
yet another instance where Dove explored the rela-
in.” A line that contains the phrase “like rocks to
tionship between image and word by making them
build upon would hold them in” occupies a loca-
of a piece, as he had in the word-image hybrids
tion that matches that of the rocky shore in the
featured in his letters to Torr. One might also see
painting.
in this composition support for the idea that the
Without an exact date or a precise sense of the
ribbons in Seagull Motif (Violet and Green) and Sun
circumstances of this word doodle’s creation, one
Drawing Water count as allusions to written nota-
cannot assume a direct relationship between it and
tion, and to Gregg shorthand in particular, with the Circles
77
latter present in those works in transmuted, picto-
function for the curving lines and, perhaps, their
rial form. The cursive “L” that in both the Seagull
ultimate failure to describe or denote weather as
Motif (Violet and Green) painting and sketch initiates
successfully and efficiently as did words. In a list of
the upward looping flow of the bird flight / cyclone
“ideas,” recorded on the final page of his 1924 diary,
form is so close in appearance to the looping char-
Dove wrote the following: “Sea gulls—feathers—
acters of Gregg word-signs that the possibility of
line.”110 The progressive translation in this phrase
such a script-picture interchange is impossible to
from living creature to linear form verbally en-
dismiss. Both Gregg characters and the loops of
capsulates the operations of the ribbon forms in
the Seagull Motif (Violet and Green) series of images
Seagull Motif (Violet and Green) and further cements
also resemble notations that Dove made in the up-
the interrelationship of the verbal and visual man-
per right-hand corner of a number of his 1942 di-
ifest across Dove’s practice, as exemplified by the
ary entries. What these notations signify remains
suite of seagull images.
unclear, but they probably indicate weather, per-
The resemblance among Dove’s shorthand, the
haps wind direction or speed, because they share
ribbon motifs in his paintings and in his seagull
the space at the top of the diary pages that Dove
sketch, and his weather notes— a threefold ex-
reserved for recording prevailing conditions. The
change among forms—underscores his fascination
entries for March 31 and April 1 are exemplary (fig.
with notational substitution and interchange. It
63). In each, a looping line or combination of lines
also suggests an attempt to incarnate the proper-
accompanies Dove’s record of temperature and
ties but also the capacities of language within a
109
In subsequent entries, in-
work of art, making paintings and assemblages not
cluding those for May and June, Dove replaced the
just language-like but themselves a form of lan-
shorthand-like notations with verbal descriptions
guage—a novel one, to be sure, and one that ges-
of conditions, further suggesting a meteorological
tures toward a radical reformulation of the nature
barometric pressure.
Fig. 63 Arthur Garfield Dove diary pages dated Mar. 31 and Apr. 1, 1942. Arthur and Helen Torr Dove Papers, 1905–1974, Archives of American Art, Smithsonian Institution, 3:2:13, image #49.
78
Chapter One
and limits of not just language but also pictorial
Dove’s signature in Golden Sun (fig. 9) takes on an
art. Like his signature, Dove’s lines in Sun Drawing
analogous role. Placed at the base, in the center,
Water and Seagull Motif (Violet and Green) articulate
just beneath a curving band of black, but with the
his profound investment as an artist in manifold
arc of the “d” crossing over into the space of the
expressive systems, from written language to trans-
band, “dove” appears to support the configuration
lated and transmitted sound, and this articulation
of forms above it, an array of circles, bands, and
comes in the form of a motif, the ribbon, that reg-
lines that represents the natural world but also
isters within the paintings as a sequence of waves.
resembles a stack of stuff, an amassing of objects
This registration, in turn, along with the toggling
one on top of the other, the whole bound together
among script (shorthand or words), pictorial sign
by a tautly pulled string or tightly stitched thread.
(ribbon), and symbol (weather notes)—in a single
The tail of the “v,” which makes contact with the
image or between two different ones—bears out
strip of black and calls to mind a hand or shoulder,
the suggestion that Dove wanted his pictures to
appears bent by the weight of the objects it holds
translate and communicate, imagining them at one
aloft. In both Sun Drawing Water and Golden Sun,
and the same time as inanimate, material entities,
then, Dove’s signature plays a triple role. The signed
as if instruments, and motile, maneuvering expres-
name marks the works as his, but it also serves to
sive form, like language. Mediums in both senses
signal his intention to highlight the operations,
of the word, his pictures simultaneously assume
pictorial and material, that constitute the scene
the guise of the vehicle or medium of transmission
and that might unfold apart from him, even if at his
(paintbrush, phonograph, body) and that of the en-
behest. The signature thus suggests a constitutive
tity transmitted or the medium itself (paint, sound
connection between Dove the painter and the work
waves, speech). The fact that Dove painted Seagull
he produced, not unlike all artists’ signatures, to be
Motif (Violet and Green) on a metal ground, suggest-
sure. But Dove’s “dove” does more than announce
ing waveforms traveling through an amplifier or
“I was here, I made this.” Marcia Brennan has de-
across a conducting wire, reinforces the idea that
scribed how Dove’s paintings were characterized by
he wished his production to articulate but also em-
Stieglitz and the critics in his cohort to be invested
body the properties and effects of conduction and
with Dove’s corporeal presence. I too conceive of a
communication, that he wished to depict transla-
relationship between painting and maker that boils
tion and converse but, also, that he hoped to incar-
down to a relation between bodies and material
nate these things in and through his work.
objects.111 But rather than immersion or projection,
By placing his signature at the bottom center
for me, equivalency and substitution constitute the
of Sun Drawing Water, with the neck of the diving
mechanisms of such a relation. By placing “him-
“d” seeming to bend under the weight of the com-
self” by way of his signature inside his scenes as
position, Dove signals the presence of an entity
if materially interacting with them—holding up or
responsible for rendering but also triggering the
setting into motion their forms—Dove suggests an
machinery of the scene, one that installs and then
equivalency between his material presence and his
activates the operations that are depicted therein,
actions as an artist and the material presence and
an authorial hand that flips the switch and sets
actions of the work, signaling that his paintings and
the picture’s myriad translations and interchanges
assemblages should be taken as operating within a
into motion, one after another as if a sequence of
class of objects or entities that includes the human
waves generated by the tossing of a stone into a
body as well as mechanical devices, instruments, or
still pond. Fulcrum-like, the signature offers itself
machines. Dove activates the apparatus, and then
as the thing on which the entire scene pivots, the
he assumes a less dominant role, collaborating with
outward stretch of the “d” and the “v” resembling
rather than directing his creation, learning from
arms extended to support and activate the whole.
his picture in addition to showing it what to do. Circles
79
80
The razor-neat lines fashioned with a straightedge
medium much in the same way he experimented
in Golden Sun and the metal plate in Seagull Motif
with pigments, binders, and grounds. But this is
(Violet and Green), along with analogous motifs
what I believe is happening in Dove’s work. Dove’s
and media in other works, prompt categorization
allusion in Sun Drawing Water to a diagram of a
within the realm of bodies and things, rather than
conic section from the realm of geometry rein-
within the domain of “representation” or “image”
forces the idea that he wished for this picture, and
strictly speaking, even as such works intimate and
for all his paintings, to serve as propositions and
visualize a world beyond the material and mechan-
also as demonstrations, proofs of the operational
ical sphere. In this way Dove underscores what he
potential of art akin to the validating sequences of
envisages as the instrumental nature and potential
steps within mathematics but that have gone on
of his paintings and assemblages, their status as
to assume both visual and material form. Because
pictures of something as well as pictures that have
they are at once the product of human thought and
something to do. Of course, a painting such as Sun
proclaimed as self-operating given their associa-
Drawing Water does not in a literal sense do any-
tion within mathematics with absolute, essential
thing. It does not move, speak, or act. But its collec-
truth, the conic sections stand as a fitting emblem
tive features venture the proposition that a work of
for Dove’s explorations of what it might mean to
art can be more than a “painting” or a “sculpture,”
make a painting over into language and its prop-
period, the end, fathoming through their effects
erties and an artist over into art or device while
the possibility of action, the potential for a work of
underscoring the fundamentally collaborative, re-
art to embody the very procedures and operations
lational nature of these transfers and translations.
through which it came into being, the looking,
Again, Dove’s works do not really operate, of course;
thinking, speaking, hearing, and touching that add
they are not instruments that register or transmit
up to the creation of it as a material entity. Dove,
as do barometers, pantographs, phonographs, or ra-
on the literal outside of his pictures during the
dios, and of course Dove remains on their outside.
course of their creation, triggers these processes; he
But the works exist in a continuum of actions as
is the one that thinks, hears, speaks, and touches
do such machines, and it is this continuum among
or prompts other things to act or execute accord-
objects and translating acts, among the work itself
ingly. But then he puts himself inside, through
but also everything involved in the process of its
the device of his signature, thus reinstalling him-
creation, that Dove’s paintings and assemblages
self, as trigger, as one of a given painting’s many
seek to incarnate—not just allude to, but materially
procedures and parts. In so doing he articulates a
install—in the final product. One grasps all aspects
transfer of his agency into the aptitude of the work,
of Dove’s practice as part of this effort, as a collec-
utilizing the figure of the artist-as-activator as he
tion of gestures toward establishing his creations
would any other material or medium, like paint or
as endowed with the properties of animated or op-
a metal clock spring. Through this figure’s applica-
erational entities or beings: his subject matter, in-
tion and use the painting becomes then both ve-
cluding natural processes or systems such as photo-
hicle and medium, maker and made, speaker and
synthesis, evaporation, and solar radiation as well
spoken, a mutual and simultaneous substitution
as mechanical operations such as photography; his
that postulates the notion, implausible as it seems,
motifs of translation, contact, converse, and com-
that a work of art as well as its artist can be made
munication; his materials, metal especially, includ-
over as a device. The conventional categorical dis-
ing metallic paint and actual metal parts such as
tance between “artist” and “work of art” makes it
clock springs, staples, and nails; and his methods
hard to wrap one’s head around the idea that an
of making, including pantography, phonograph
artist might himself be the literal material of his
listening, and the use of a draughtsman’s or car-
own artistic work, experimenting with himself as
penter’s tool.
Chapter One
Circles, Waves, and Weather
sensory data, or matter between sites and states: the transmission of words or musical sound between
The circles that appear across Dove’s pictorial out-
radio station and listener, say, or the transmission
put with abiding regularity have a specific job to do:
of sound waves, electromagnetic radiation, or water
they register phenomena (visible and otherwise),
molecules through air. Not all the transmissions
but they also provide a vocabulary for narrating,
that Dove evokes in his paintings transpire by way
exploring, and embodying the properties and pro-
of waveform, but the majority of them do. The con-
cedures of translation and communication. They
nections he draws among various forms of motion,
show us things transmitting, transmuting, and in-
traversal, and motility—from the spin of a phono-
teracting, and they do these things on their own,
graph record to the surge and flow of water at the
and they step back and consider the nature of these
shore—suggest that, for him, the idea of a “wave”
processes. Through Dove’s circles we learn that the
served as conceptual shorthand for transmissions
operations of translation and communication un
and encounters of all kinds, and that along with the
fold across and between media, that they produce
concentric circle motif, waves came to be pictorial
networks or webs of relations, and that they estab-
shorthand for these selfsame transmissions and for
lish connective tissues among disparate and dis-
the interrelation of the entities involved in them. If
persed things and beings, including sound and
Dove’s circles represented a work of art-cum-device,
graphic mark, moon and earth’s crust, human and
Dove’s waves represented that device’s circuitry,
machine. We also learn that Dove’s devotion to
the connections among component parts that gave
building such networks, connective tissues, and
that device the potential to spark into life.
webs in the act of making and then incarnating
As a summary image, Sun Drawing Water collects
them in the appearance and effects of his works
within its confines these myriad aspects of Dove’s
suggests a preoccupation on his part with investing
practice and encapsulates the effects and opera-
his creations with the attributes of an instrument
tions that Dove activated throughout his work, as
or machine, with the ability not just to show but to
signified by his circles and his waves as well as by his
accomplish a task, in this case the job of building
persistent articulation of the interchangeability of
itself, of fostering the connections demonstrated in
the two. In so doing, Sun Drawing Water models the
his art and essential to the workings of any gener-
instrumentality that Dove desired to install in his
ative device. Dove’s act of making, then, modeled
creations, making them equally images and things,
what he wished his paintings and assemblages
pictures and picture-bound machinery. Sun Drawing
would ultimately see to on their own.
Water also reports on the weather, presenting the
those that form in water as well as Waves—
viewer with clouds, haze, wind, evaporation, and
those that travel in air, including the waveforms of
crepuscular rays, conditions that cause and consti-
light, sound, and radio—tell a similar story. Dove
tute atmospheric phenomena described and ana-
spent the majority of his mature artistic career
lyzed by the science of meteorology. The painting
oceanside—living directly on the water in his boat
thus comprises all three aspects of the tripartite
or in quarters proximate to the Long Island shore,
schema to which I briefly alluded at the beginning
in borrowed rooms in a yacht club or in a converted
of this chapter—a geography of circles, waves, and
post office at the water’s edge. It thus makes sense
weather—and to which I will return in the chap-
that Dove established waves as a presiding sub-
ter that follows, having so far elucidated the sta-
ject of his art and that waves not only prompted
tus and function in Dove’s works of the first two
a consideration of translation and communication
terms in that equation, circles and waves. In this
but also served as a motif for use in exploring the
next chapter, through a consideration of the third
specific phenomenon of transmission—that is, the
term, weather, I address one of the most pressing
very mechanics of the migration of information,
questions raised by my discussion up to this point: Circles
81
82
Why? Why was Dove preoccupied with translation
conceptual, for achieving the work he wished ul-
and communication, with various and diverse sys-
timately to do. If Dove, in exploring and enacting
tems of expression, interrelation, and exchange?
translation and communication, was after connec-
And what in particular did he mean to achieve
tion and converse, with circles and waves providing
when he set about materializing these systems and
the necessary machinery, then it was weather, un-
their effects within his paintings and assemblages?
derstood both as a phenomenon and as a concept,
Weather provides part of the answer to these que-
that provided the joinery and the conducting sys-
ries, as does meteorology, the science of weather,
tem. Weather proved the medium through which
both of which furnished Dove not just with a means
exchange among parts would occur, like electricity
to articulate and incarnate his chief interests, as was
traveling among circuits, tendering the activating
the case with his circles and waves, but also with a
material needed to transform a cluster of compo-
template or a topographical map, visual as well as
nents into a living, breathing whole.
Chapter One
2
Weather Intersubjectivity So just what did Dove think he could accomplish by creating paintings and sculptures under the sign of language, and what might it have meant for Dove to turn to the properties, procedures, and effects of language, relationality chief among them, as models for his art in the early decades of the twentieth century in the United States? If circles and waves served as emblems and instruments, what, ultimately, were they meant to articulate and produce? And what about the weather, the third term alongside circles and waves in what I am calling the geography of Dove’s art? There is a lot of all three of these things—circles, waves, and weather—in Dove’s work and each proliferates for a reason. Consequently, weather talk abounds in this chapter, and I will argue that it was weather as well as the language of weather that provided an essential and fundamental paradigm for both the instrumentality and the desired outcome of Dove’s art. Regarding that outcome, this chapter characterizes how Dove’s preoccupation with language, translation, communication, and connection constituted an investment in intersubjectivity. Defined most basically as the sharing of subjective states among two or more individuals, intersubjectivity was also approached by Dove as a condition whereby information migrated among entities, human and otherwise, by way of various systems of signs, with the ul83
timate aim of establishing pictorial art’s capacity
and coherently expressed credo or doctrine, and
for rendering new forms of interchange and thus
when I first encountered the range of his commen-
profoundly reorienting human expression and in-
tary, I was hard-pressed to discern any significant
teraction. For Dove, intersubjectivity entailed inter-
patterns or trends of thinking among his musings.
connections among combinations of entities more
But as I began to note and document Dove’s preoc-
so than it did a condition of unification or oneness.
cupation with systems of expression, translation,
Intersubjectivity, through processes like exchange
and communication and, also, to realize that I had
or projection, collected and aggregated, rather
on my hands not a shrinking, nature-besotted vi-
than producing indivisible, gestalt- like wholes.
olet but a vigorously social individual, I began to
Dove’s rearticulation of Kandinsky in “An Idea”
recognize that certain of Dove’s most pithy and
announced his investment in relations as formed
intriguing statements hovered around the con-
by both encounter and aggregation as well as, cru-
cepts of connection, continuity, interrelation, and
cially, exchange: “As the point moves it becomes a
interchange—“hovered” because Dove never stated
line, as the line moves it becomes a plane, as the
directly and straightforwardly that these were his
plane moves it becomes a solid, as the solid moves,
chief interests, yet close attention to his words re-
it becomes life and as life moves, it becomes the
veals them migrating toward this cluster of con-
present.”1 But this reworking also reveals what was
cepts time and time again. Taken together, these
at stake in the formation of such relations as Dove
statements, considered in combination with Dove’s
envisioned them, and these stakes were anything
sustained exploration of expressive systems across
but low. Life itself somehow stood in the balance,
his practice as well as the material characteristics
and Dove in his art calibrated accordingly, creating
and effects of his production, including the prolif-
works that would rise to the occasion, their capabil-
erating concentric circle motif, the pervasive waves,
ities commensurate with what he felt to be the task
and the instrumental or device-like qualities of his
at hand. The language of weather, particularly as
work, directed me toward the idea of intersubjectiv-
manifest in period meteorology, guided this effort.
ity, suggesting it as a viable term through which to
I remind the reader that “intersubjectivity” is
84
understand and describe his art.
my term, not Dove’s. I have selected it because it
In an essay of his that he sent to Stieglitz in 1931
efficiently and accurately encapsulates the condi-
entitled “The 20th Century Limited or The Train
tion or state that, as I see it, Dove sought to ap-
Left Without Them,” Dove reflected on people who
proximate through the array of investments, forms,
rejected new ideas in favor of the comfort and fa-
and techniques that constituted his wide-ranging
miliarity of the past, and he attempted to char-
artistic practice. Like his attention to language and
acterize the spirit underpinning the modern and
its operations, Dove’s investment in intersubjectiv-
the new.2 “They accept Bach, understand his idea,
ity was not that of the expert or the academic, nor
and refuse Marin and Klee,” he wrote, intimating
did it arise from conversance with period literature
throughout the essay that the most alive and the
from the realms of psychology or sociology. Rather,
most promising work would bypass naysayers and
it constituted a cobbled-together and at times un-
leave them regretting their blind obstinacy. At sev-
systematic philosophy of being, one shaped by an
eral points in his essay, Dove describes the spirit of
assortment of outside sources and ideas but also
this modern, animate art. Calling the shared genius
forged in the very act of making. Dove, clearly, had a
of Bach, Marin, and Klee “the same love”—a phrase
great deal to say about his art and about the creative
that embodies the idea of relational interchange—
act more generally, and many of his statements re-
Dove characterized their efforts as stopping just
sist easy interpretation. Certain of his remarks are
short of a oneness or unanimity of expression,
downright baffling. His various articulations by no
which for him constituted the “perfect thing.” “One
means amount, collectively, to a deliberately crafted
in his own realm of sound,” he wrote, “one in his
Chapter Two
own sensation of space, and one in a colored mea-
rangement,” which connotes an organized group or
surement of life trying to combine the other two.
array but not necessarily the establishing of an es-
They seem to be held just at the point where all the
sential relationship among components, conveys a
arts become identical.” Dove further explored this
concern for the idea of an image as a system, a whole
notion of identity among disparate entities when
made up of interrelated entities. The term “forma-
he hypothesized in the essay “a line so pure, so that
tion,” regularly employed by Dove in his writing to
the shortest distance is the same to one mind as an-
characterize the nature of his imagery, for him also
other.” Such a proposition posits shared experience
connoted interconnection. In a 1933 letter to his
as an ideal state, for purity of line affords in-kind
friend, the critic Elizabeth McCausland, he equated
connections to multiple minds, creating the arma-
formation with rhythm, using the idea of a recur-
ture for intersubjective exchange, here imagined as
ring pattern formed by interrelated beats indicated
an artist creating a common pathway of thought.
by the term to describe his artistic vocabulary. “Just
At points in the text, Dove equated the spirit of the
at present,” he wrote, “I have come to the conclusion
avant-garde with being itself. “The one thing,” he
that one must have a flexible form or formation
wrote, “that seems so far to me to remain is the con-
that is governed by some definite rythmic [sic] sense
dition of existence which can be followed through
beyond mere geometrical repetition, to express and
any further existence by knowing definitely the
put in space an idea so that those with sensitive
other existences that have had their influence upon
instruments can pick it up, and further that means
it. We can blow up a rubber band with dynamite &
of expression has to have grown long enough to es-
they both continue with their residues which could
tablish itself as an automatic force.”5 Dove’s priv-
be traced back or unblown so to speak.—That seems
ileging of rhythm, which connotes essential rela-
to me to be the answer to this so-called infinite
tions among parts, over repetition underscores his
3
thing.” Dove’s exact meaning here is hard to pin
investment in interconnection as does his sense
down. But a general picture of connected and mu-
that a formation governed by rhythm could serve
tually knowing and influencing existences emerges
as a means of communication between artist and
clearly enough, while Dove’s reformulation of cause
audience, here figured as the expression and trans-
and effect (explosion and residue) as unfolding bidi-
mission of an idea in space, akin to the traverse of
rectionally, as a back-and-forth exchange between
a radio signal or sound wave. Dove used the phrase
entities rather than one active thing acting on a
“sensitive instrument,” which combined period dis-
passive other thing, reinforces the idea that a form
course on radio broadcasting with occult rhetoric,
of integrated unity among parts and persons struck
particularly that associated with mental telepathy,
Dove as an ideal condition or state.
in order to refer to the heightened sensory powers
The statement Dove provided for the pamphlet
of certain individuals, Stieglitz among them (I will
that accompanied his exhibition at An American
say much more about this in chapter 3). In the letter
Place in 1940 expressed a similar concern for unity
to McCausland, his evocation of telepathic human
among parts, for stitching together—in this case,
receivers thus suggests not mere viewing but the
in the space of art—disparate things: “As I see from
transmission of ideas between minds, something
one point in space to another, from the top of the
like a condition of shared mental states.
tree to the top of the sun, from right or left, or up, or
Dove put a good deal of store in the capacity
down, these are drawn as any line around a thing to
of rhythm to abet such transfer and translation.
give the colored stuff of it, to weave the whole into
As a variety of connective tissue, rhythm served
a sequence of formations rather than to form an
for him as a template for making. He often char-
4
arrangement of facts.” Dove’s favoring of the word
acterized his work as proceeding in terms of musi-
“sequence,” which by definition entails intentional
cal tempo, describing in his diary painting in “2⁄4,”
and particular connections between parts, over “ar-
“1/2,” and “3/4” time.6 Dove’s use of time signatures to Weather
85
describe the character of his working suggests that
as interlinked in a manner similar to individual
he envisioned the act of painting as itself a kind of
measures within a musical staff. As has been noted
formation, one stitched together and essentially in-
in the literature, Dove often painted in series, and
terlinked by a common tempo. A conventional form
the three-part series of paintings he created in 1942
of musical notation, a time signature includes two
and 1943 comprising Formation I, Formation II, and
numbers; the top number indicates the number of
Formation III (Green Landscape) serves well as an ex-
beats per bar and the bottom number designates
ample of the articulation of such a condition of in-
the type of note that stands for a single beat. The
terconnection. This is the case for several reasons:
time signature of a musical score thus announces
because of the series title; because as with any series
properties shared among all the notes and measures
one is meant to imagine the components of this one
of that score. In similar fashion, Dove’s evocation of
as a sequence and in dialogue with one another; and
tempo posits his sense that all the actions involved
because Dove’s use of the series format implies a
in the creation of a picture, like his pictorial forms,
wish to explore an idea or set of ideas among several
existed as a kind of spatiotemporal system of in-
paintings, so that the three pictures might be imag-
terconnected parts, the three-dimensional, motile
ined as sharing or passing along similar thoughts.7
equivalent of a metered musical score. Dove’s time
As part of a series, the paintings resonate power-
signatures also suggest that he construed paint-
fully with one another, compelling the viewer to ex-
ings not as self-contained, autonomous units but
perience them collectively as an unfolding and con-
Fig. 64 Arthur G. Dove, Formation I, 1943, oil and wax emulsion on canvas, museum purchase with funds from the Helen M. Towle Bequest, The San Diego Museum of Art, 1972.189, www.sdmart.org.
86
Chapter Two
tinuous rhythm of color and form, one that evokes
paintings in the series, however, Formation I springs
the rhythmic cadence of musical sound.
to life, its forms activated by their echoes in the
Like many of Dove’s paintings from the 1940s,
other two canvases and by the implied movement
Formation I (1943) (fig. 64) abandons variegated and
and serial transformation among the three. A sense
intersecting colors and forms for greater empha-
of masses butting heads and left sides of canvases
sis on the picture plane along with spare, discrete,
braced against right provides a connecting thread
and bluntly distilled shapes. On its own, the work
among the three even though the massed forms
stands bereft of the transmutations and trans-
in question take on distinct shapes in each. Dove’s
lations that characterized Dove’s earlier produc-
brushwork in areas of Formation III (ca. 1942) (fig.
tion. Dove meticulously maintains the boundaries
65) is far rougher and more obviously worked than
between shapes. There exists only the slightest hint
that in the other two, suggesting transmutation
of overlap or intermingling in the upper right-hand
not within a single work but from one to another
corner, where a triangle of mauve-pink creeps into
and then to the third. Banding effects in the lower
areas of green and lavender-gray. Braced against the
left of Formation III announce a kinship among the
central yellow form, the V-shaped section of green
three works in the series and, also, with similar mo-
appears to hold all pieces tautly in place, propping
tifs of Dove’s earlier works, as do the red squiggles
up the left of the canvas so its parts do not shift in
in the upper right, putting the series in dialogue
space or topple. In the company of the other two
with Dove’s larger oeuvre. Dove created another
Fig. 65 Arthur G. Dove, Formation III (Green Landscape), ca. 1942, oil and wax on canvas, reverse of Abstract Composition (oil on canvas), 50.8 × 71.44 cm (20 × 281⁄8 in.), Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, Gift of the William H. Lane Foundation, 1983.385a. Photograph © 2016 Museum of Fine Arts, Boston.
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87
88
composition on the reverse of Formation III, one
nection, a continuum among all things in life, from
that includes bold semicircular banding effects
the smallest point to the whole of the cosmos, as it
and bisected half circles and horizontal strips, one
is about the representation and translation of geo-
of them assuming the form of a wave. Overall, this
metric forms.8 The Formation series, which strikes
composition resonates with the other Formation
up a conversation across thirty years’ worth of artis-
pictures. It also bears a close resemblance to the
tic work, exemplifies just such an all-encompassing
emphatic, slicing geometries of Dove’s early pastels,
system, with the diminutive circles of paint that dot
thus connecting this painting and the series as a
the surface of Formation III representing the point
whole to prominent aspects of Dove’s larger body of
on a continuum that passes through lines, planes,
work. The very fabric of the canvas support of For-
and solids so as to arrive at and vigorously partake
mation III, because painted on both sides, serves as
in life. This calls forth a capacity for painting be-
a medium of translation or transmission between
yond its usual constitution—not just pictorial form
recto and verso, producing the effect of a rhythmic
but material and motile formation—as well as a
point and counterpoint and calling to mind and
new mode of relationality for humans who, within
condensing into a single object the translations
such a system, enter into substantial relations with
that occur across Dove’s practice.
the human and the nonhuman alike.
As a cluster of pan-oeuvre citations, the Forma-
Dove’s diary entry for August 12, 1939, confirms
tion series, which includes a 3″ × 4″ watercolor study
this hypothesis. “To locate in space, expr. by line?”
dated July 8, 1942, now in the collection of the
he wrote. “Not static planes in space. Not form but
Wichita Art Museum, that sketches out the basic
formation. To set planes in motion. Einstein. ‘Most
composition of Formation I, embodies the lines of
degenerate form of imagination—pathological in-
connection that Dove intended the term “forma-
dividualism.’ ”9 The final phrase of this note comes
tion” to describe. In the McCausland letter, Dove
from a 1928 novel by S. S. Van Dine, The Bishop Mur-
paired the idea that his motifs constituted signals
der Case, that featured the detective Philo Vance.
for use in human interchange with the suggestion
S. S. Van Dine was the penname of the critic Willard
that these motifs also amounted to an “automatic
Huntington Wright, brother to the Synchromist
force,” one freed from the hand and will of the
painter Stanton MacDonald-Wright, who in addi-
artist as if a physical law, a principle that under-
tion to his art-critical writing, authored a series of
pinned and unified the entirety of existence and
best-selling Vance novels in the 1920s.10 Vance cites
was thus analogous in its interconnecting capacity
the phrase, attributing it to Einstein, in a chapter
to thoughts transmitted in space. Dove’s reformu-
entitled “Mathematics and Murder,” in which he
lation of Kandinsky’s geometric translations—“as
details the pathology of the novel’s villain, includ-
the point moves it becomes a line, as the line moves
ing his asocial nature and his complete withdrawal
it becomes a plane, as the plane moves it becomes
from society as caused by the “fictions of thought”
a solid, as the solid moves, it becomes life and as
of modern mathematics.11 Replete with references
life moves, it becomes the present”—posited exis-
to the signal ideas of contemporaneous mathemat-
tence as a series of essentially interconnected parts.
ics and theoretical physics as well as allusions to
When considered in relation to Dove’s claim for
esoteric interpretations of non-Euclidean geome-
art as a flexible form or force that travels in space
try, courtesy of the erudite Vance, the novel—along
and time, the latter as suggested by Dove’s refer-
with the movie released by Metro-Goldwyn-Meyer
ence to rhythm, and also in light of his admiration
in 1930 and starring Basil Rathbone— urged its
of Einstein, whose special theory of relativity de-
readers to choose sociability over “pathological in
scribed the space-time continuum, this revision of
dividualism” and to avoid the abyss of “abstraction”
Kandinsky may be understood to be as much about
as well as any obsession with abstruse theories at
the intimation of a form of monumental intercon-
the expense of normal participation in society,
Chapter Two
cautionary notes that clearly resonated for Dove.12
another. A statement published in the 1929 catalog
Dove’s insistent rejection of the term “abstraction”
for Dove’s exhibition at the Intimate Gallery fore-
for use in describing his own art—“there is no such
shadows his articulation of this idea for Kootz. “Just
thing as abstraction,” he wrote—in favor of other
now,” he wrote, “I am trying to put a line around,
terms, including “formation” but also “extraction,”
in, and through an idea. After that, or at the same
stemmed from an analogous belief that one’s work
time, to thoroughly grasp or sense the light condi-
must always engage in and activate the material of
tion in which the idea exists.”17 Here posited as the
life, the opposite of pathological individualism, if
situating context for an idea, the condition of light
not necessarily by depicting it outright.13
becomes known by activating it with line, the very
In 1929 and 1930, Dove made a series of state-
thing Dove had deemed essential to the creation of
ments about something he called a “condition of
“a sequence of formations” rather than “an arrange-
light,” a concept that was clearly very important to
ment of facts” and that he had posited as the ideal
him. The most frequently cited remark comes from
medium of connection among multiple parts.
the letter that Samuel Kootz included in his Modern American Painters, published in 1930:
In his letter to Kootz, Dove also made clear that he understood the condition of light after which he sought as a property or quality of color, an ele-
There was a long period of searching for a some-
ment of design that he assiduously explored in his
thing in color which I then called “a condition of
reading, writing, and painting. His son, William,
light.” It applied to all objects in nature, flowers,
indicated that Dove’s reference to visits to the Mu-
trees, people, apples, cows. These all have their
seum of Natural History related to his mixing and
certain condition of light, which establishes
experimenting with pigments.18 In the “Notes” sec-
them to the eye, to each other, and to the under-
tion of his copy of Andrews’s Color and Its Application
standing. To understand that clearly go to nature,
to Printing, Dove assembled circle-shaped samples
or to the Museum of Natural History and see the
of pigment into arrays that look like experiments
butterflies. Each has its own orange, blue, black;
with color or postexperimental demonstrations of
white, yellow, brown, green, and black, all care-
results. In one particularly captivating example (fig.
fully chosen to fit the character of the life going
66), he drew a series of lines among these samples, connecting the dots vertically, horizontally, and, for
14
on in that individual entity.
a selection of them, diagonally, fashioning a sort of Equal in complexity to other of Dove’s remarks,
color diagram, complete with capital-letter anno-
this statement has been variously interpreted, most
tations to indicate hue. It is difficult to determine
often as reflecting a search on Dove’s part for the
what information, exactly, Dove wished to express
fundamental properties or essences of things.15 Un-
by way of this diagram, but the network of lines
derstood in this way, “a condition of light” would
that interconnects the color blots, transforming a
refer to a quality particular to an individual being or
page of individual samples into a constellation-like
object, a unique character not shared by anyone or
system, suggests to me that color and connectivity
anything else. As Dove elsewhere stated, “Every ob-
were to his mind of a piece and that he intended the
ject in nature has it . . . can’t get away from it. Leaves,
phrase “a condition of light,” which he used in refer-
16
trees, animals, all have it, a condition of light.” But
ence to both color and interconnection, to capture
Dove also made clear that this “condition of light”
and convey this essential relationship. If nothing
served as the medium or vehicle by which connec-
else, the act of suspending dots of color in a web of
tions among individuals were made; for, as he ex-
lines propelled them into the realm of space, sup-
plained in his letter to Kootz, it is through this con-
porting the idea that Dove imagined art as a forma-
dition that one perceives objects in nature, and it is
tion of networked parts that existed and acted in
also how these objects see or make contact with one
essential relation to their surround—that is, within Weather
89
Fig. 66 Arthur G. Dove, “Notes,” annotated page of E. C. Andrews, Color and Its Application to Printing (Chicago: The Inland Printer Company, 1911), from the collection of The Heckscher Museum of Art and the Newsday Center for Dove / Torr Studies, Huntington, NY.
90
space but also, by extension, in relation to time.19
apart to show the color ran all the way through,” a
The color diagrams created by Andrews without a
gesture that would have highlighted color’s status
doubt inspired Dove’s own, but probably not any
as a binding medium, an entity akin to line that suf-
more than did Andrews’s emphasis on color as an
fused and unified multiple parts: in this case, the
entity governed by combinations and relationships,
surfaces and interior structures of a petal.20
a claim characteristic of color theory in general; it
Dove provided his most detailed description
was likely such attention to the relational aspects
of the “condition of light” in a text he called “Pen-
of color had a hand in encouraging Dove to sup-
cil Notes Made on a Boat,” written and mailed to
plement his version of the diagram featured in the
Stieglitz in 1930, which outlined, as he put it, “some
manual with a network of interconnecting lines.
theories about ‘form’ and ‘color.’” He introduced the
The idea that color by its very nature existed as part
text by stating that he had “come to the conclusion
of a series or sequence of relations, that its essential
that there is one form and one color.” The form, he
condition was a continuum—as part of the electro-
explained, is the cone, from which one derives the
magnetic spectrum or as configured by the spokes
conic sections, which for Dove served as fundamen-
or sections of a color wheel—allowed Dove to imag-
tal forms, but also the spiral and the straight line,
ine color as a connective tissue in its own right. Wil-
which in turn generated the sphere, the cylinder,
liam described Dove “pulling the petals of flowers
and the cube. The one color, he wrote, “is White
Chapter Two
Light.”21 We know that Dove’s sense of the capacity
state of interconnection. Dove’s references to white
of the conic drew inspiration from classical math-
light and the aura, including a note to Stieglitz in
ematics, and he would have encountered in books
which Dove described his attempt to capture the
such as Color and Its Application to Printing a discus-
photographer’s aura in his assemblage portrait of
sion of white light as the admixture of all colors, or
him, make clear that it was the relational aspect of
light wavelengths, in the visible spectrum. But as
these theosophist notions that attracted Dove and
Sherrye Cohn has pointed out, Dove’s understand-
that the idea of pervasively radiating and intercon-
ing of white light and the cone as singular forms
necting fields of energy provided a model for craft-
was also inspired by his reading in the literature of
ing a condition of intersubjectivity in his own art.26
theosophy, popular among artistic and literary cir-
Dove’s characterization of “a condition of light”
22
cles in the United States at the time. In all three
in the Kootz letter as the quality that differentiates
contexts (mathematics, color theory, and the oc-
between things and beings even as it interconnects
cult), white light figures as an all-encompassing
them jibes well with theosophist belief, as does the
admixture of parts: of visible wavelengths or, in the
statement that follows his identification of white
case of theosophy, of all colors as well as all forms
light as the one color in his “Pencil Notes” text, in
of knowledge and being. According to proponents
which he evokes the shift from white to another,
of theosophy, white light constituted eternal truth,
particularized hue. “The over balance of one color or
cosmic love, and the essence of life; variety in the
the insufficiency of another,” he wrote, “will bring
world, from the colors of flowers to forms of hu-
all of the most subtle ‘conditions of light.’” The fact
man worship, existed as a function of white light,
that Dove went on to describe white light as anal-
which illuminated and suffused all things but as-
ogous to space, rather than form, makes clear that
sumed different forms according to the nature of
in describing the condition of light he had both
the entity it encountered and entered. Humans and
theosophy and physics, especially Einstein’s space-
things were thus “colorations” of this white light,
time continuum, in mind.27 Dove’s further elabora-
the latter being the “life-force” that refracted into
tion of the concept underlines his understanding of
23
a condition of light as simultaneously essence and
Dove alluded to this very idea in an undated hand-
interconnection, as defining the nature of an en-
written note: “The greatest Light is where the great-
tity while setting all things and beings, through the
est contrasts are. Form & Color the same.”24 As Cohn
unceasing movement of line, into relation within
has suggested, Dove’s musings about color and light
a cosmic continuum or system: “I’ve always had
also drew on the theosophist notion of the aura, a
the feeling that the condition of light was directly
vibrating cloud-like shimmer of color and light that
related to the line motif in form and color and all
encompassed every living being, emanating from a
the other senses. . . . The color condition is closely
person’s life force in response to thought or emotion
related to the principle in line upon which that
and interacting with the surrounding atmosphere,
object’s growth is built.” All things, Dove said, “cut
the “manifold and multi-colored forms of life.”
25
The
the color cone with their own individual curve.”28
particular vibrations and colors of an aura allowed
In other words, all things have a condition of light,
knowledge of a person’s inner state, and theoso-
and this condition, like Dove’s interconnected blots
phists developed categories and keys for decoding
of color in his copy of the Andrews manual, com-
an aura’s appearance. The ability to discern the in-
prises singularity and system simultaneously. And
teriority of another implied not just perception but
Dove’s “cut” calls to mind intersecting and thus
also participation, for the aura formed part of the
interlinked geometric figures, their cutting into
field that sustained all people and things. Appre-
one another proffering the inaugural gesture in the
hending a person’s aura thus entailed an exchange
creation of a geometry-inspired schema depicting a
across bodily borders that revealed an essential
vast network, an immense system or complex con-
which shaped its appearance and motion.
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91
stituted not by mere coexistence, but by converse
its operations, structures, and forms would bring
and interchange among multitudinous parts. Else-
into being a novel mode of relationality, one that
where Dove described the creation of such an all-
embraces and envelops everything that is.
encompassing complex in similar terms. “The thing
The interlocking shapes and pattern-like de-
has never been done that I should like to do,” he
signs of Dove’s early work, especially the series of
wrote. “It must contain all of nature,” he continued,
pastels that he produced in 1911–1912 now known
“built on and enveloped in a precisely pure math-
as “The Ten Commandments,” fall in step with this
ematical dream, wherein the tones and lines and
vision of an interlinking network initiated by a
spirit create a form in themselves, as one would add,
geometric gesture and sustained by mathematical
multiply, subtract, and divide whole conditions of
operations and interconnected facets of life. The
existence, the sum of two or three motives, curves
pastels were exhibited first at Stieglitz’s 291 in Feb-
so to speak, representing instincts from all of
ruary and March of 1912 and then in Chicago, at the
life.”29 Here, Dove envisions an aggregate of calcu-
W. Scott Thurber Galleries, also in March.30 In Sails
lation, mental operations, and spiritual states that
(1911–1912) (fig. 67), for instance, the central sail that
amounts to an unprecedented entity that through
stretches its tip past the upper edge of the support
Fig. 67 Arthur G. Dove, Sails, 1911–1912, part of “The Ten Commandments” series, pastel on composition board mounted on panel, 177⁄8 × 21½ in. Daniel J. Terra Collection, 1993.10, Terra Foundation for American Art, Chicago, IL, USA. Photo Credit: Terra Foundation for American Art, Chicago / Art Resource, NY.
92
Chapter Two
conjures an originating curve or cut, one replicated
work appear to be an animate entity, a motile if not
in the two sails adjacent to it and in similar forms
living body operating as a system, an assembly of
that multiply and mutate throughout the scene.
component pieces with a common purpose or goal.
The repeated triangular shape stitches pieces to-
Although for the most part smoothly and precisely
gether so as to create a spatial whole, an effect rein-
worked, Dove applies his pastel medium bluntly
forced by the ballooning fields of green, brown, and
and coarsely in certain sections of Team of Horses
blue that like a viscous binding medium conjoin
and Sails: in the upper right-hand corner of Sails, for
the myriad parts. In Team of Horses (1911 or 1912) (fig.
instance, where yellow and orange strokes resemble
68), ellipses proliferate. Some stretch, others bulge,
crumbling stucco or rusting metal, and across the
and yet others sprout sawteeth at their edges; all
bottom third of Team of Horses, where evenly distrib-
press leftward, as if compelled to move by a single,
uted yellow-white morphs into ragged and stutter-
unvarying force, the implied rotation of the saw
ing streaks of the same hue before dissipating into
blades compounding this unanimous, nondistilled
a pool of milky pinks and grays. The combination
push. The force generated by the concerted action
of fluid, continuous color and broken, textured sur-
of every part dynamizes both scenes, making each
face compounds the dynamism of the scenes while
Fig. 68 Arthur G. Dove, Team of Horses, 1911 or 1912, pastel on paper fiberboard mounted to plywood, Amon Carter Museum of American Art, Fort Worth, Texas, 1984.29.
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93
drawing attention to the medium itself, suggesting
the planes on the sides of the trees, and three
an analogy between the systemic behavior of Dove’s
colors, and black and white. From these was
geomorphic forms and the nature of pastel, where
made a rhythmic painting which expressed the
individual granules of powdered pigment combine
spirit of the whole thing. The colors were chosen
with a binder so as to form a single instrument, the
to express the substances of those objects and
pastel crayon or stick, that then operated in abso-
the sky. . . . These colors were made into pastels
lute concert with the artist’s moving and pigment-
carefully weighed out and graded with black and
scattering limb. In characterizing the origin of his
white into an instrument to be used in making
pastel series in his letter to Kootz, in particular the
that certain painting. There were nine others,
genesis of Nature Symbolized No. 2 (ca. 1911) (fig. 69),
each with its own different motive.31
also called Wind on Hillside, Dove described his medium in just such terms:
In describing here his careful translation of color into the medium of pastel, whereby he carefully cal-
Then one day I made a drawing of a hillside.
ibrated the admixture of hues, Dove describes pas-
The wind was blowing. I chose three forms from
tel as an “instrument” for use in bringing a draw-
Fig. 69 Arthur G. Dove, Nature Symbolized No. 2, ca. 1911, pastel on paper, 458 × 550 mm, Alfred Stieglitz Collection, 1949.533, The Art Institute of Chicago.
94
Chapter Two
ing into being, and he characterizes that resulting
state of comprehensive interconnection, the very
drawing as an instrument by which a painting
condition depicted in the pastel works, including
based on its preliminary forms might be created.
Nature Symbolized No. 2, with its buoyant and rever-
In so doing, Dove characterizes the act of making
berating comma forms and the sail-like slices that
a picture as a collaboration between himself and
fan out across the surface and plunge into the im-
his medium- as- device, which together delineate
age’s depths. At once a chaos of rotational motion
the “motive” of a given work, establishing through
and billowing form and a precisely calibrated and
both observation and the pastel device’s operation
meticulously organized design, Nature Symbolized
the work’s predominant theme, and also in concert
No. 2, like Sails and Team of Horses, embodies the nec-
generate the rhythmic force that would activate the
essary pairing of precision and brute force within
synchronized motions or operations of the whole.
a well- made, generative machine, exemplifying
Like his paintings and assemblages, which he en-
the aggregate of connections, encounters, and ex-
visioned as incarnating the operations of everyday
changes for which such a machine, or “instrument,”
instruments such as phonographs, cameras, and
served Dove as a model system or network in his
radios, the medium of pastel for Dove afforded an
formulation of the desired condition of light, his
instrumental capacity for use in the creation of a
theorized condition of systemic and all-embracing
Fig. 70 Arthur G. Dove, Cows in Pasture, 1935, wax emulsion on canvas, 20 × 28 in. (50.8 × 71.12 cm), The Phillips Collection, Washington, DC, acquired 1936. Any reproduction of this image shall not be made without written consent of The Phillips Collection, Washington, DC.
Weather
95
intersubjectivity. In his 1924 Port of New York, Paul
did in that art, one can confirm that it was unity if
Rosenfeld made an explicit connection between
not homogeneity among parts that stood for Dove
Dove’s use of pastels and “those very conditions of
as the ultimate and ideal form of contact and con-
light recurrently established by his subject-matters,”
nection. Dove understood such a condition in for-
suggesting an insider’s knowledge of Dove’s concept
mal terms, fashioning essential interconnection as
and confirming the relationship between this con-
a criterion for his pictorial work, but it should be
cept and “The Ten Commandments” for which I am
clear by now that he also imagined this condition
32
96
arguing here. Of course, Dove’s exploration and ex-
as unfolding in a broader context, that of everyday
pression of the idea of a condition of light unfolded
life, such that art wound up the thing that, through
across the entirety of his production, from the inter-
the mechanisms of translation and communica-
weaving lines and formal rhythms of works such as
tion, construed all existence as a web of vital rela-
Seagull Motif (Violet and Green), Me and the Moon, and
tions, with myriad objects, beings, and phenomena
the Formation series to the puzzle-piece and inter-
set into relation and interconnected much as the
stitched patchwork compositions of Cows in Pasture
color of a flower blossom essentially interrelated
(1935), Sand and Sea (1943), and Another Arrangement
its constituent parts. It was the desire for vitality—
(1944) (figs. 70, 87, 39). But consideration of the pas-
for rhythmic, mobile, animated connections rather
tel series demonstrates how fundamental the idea
than a mere piling up of components—along with
was for Dove even in the early years of his career.
Dove’s wish to forge bonds among human and non-
The terms I have been using to elucidate the
human entities that pushed his vision past a desid-
basic themes or precepts of Dove’s artistic theory—
eratum for formal coherence or for a metaphorical
connection, interrelation, continuum, exchange—
correspondence between image and world (what
are not seamlessly interchangeable (nor was this
would wind up merely an elaborate, overwrought
“theory” all that vigorously theorized). These terms
version of imitation) and toward a hypothesized
mean different things and the histories of their use
state of actual transfer and exchange among all
are varied and diverse. In employing them, I do not
things. Hence my use of the term “intersubjectivity”
aim for definitional or etymological precision, pe-
instead of simply “unity” or “harmony.” Intersubjec-
riod or otherwise. Rather, I wish these terms as a
tivity for Dove operated on multiple levels—artistic
cluster to give some sense of what motivated Dove’s
but also material (as in material life), phenomenal,
constant exploration of the nature and properties
mental, and cosmic—and in each case Dove imag-
of expressive systems in his practice. As terms, they
ined that the instrument that compelled inter-
emerge from close attention to what Dove himself
subjective interchange, or that at least articulated
said about his art, and collectively, they indicate his
through modeling the potential for such a state,
devotion as expressed throughout his various ar-
would be a work of art.
ticulations to establishing connections, to forging
It should also be clear by now that Dove, long
links between entities. This could occur by way of
described as a bit of a loner whose practice con-
literal translation (sound into musical notation, or
sisted mainly of an attempt to register subjective
speech into shorthand), through encounter or use
experience through the rendition of nature’s es-
(as with the connections established among vari-
sential forces and truths, with no especial concern
ous entities—bodies, machines, and sensations—
for everyday matters, the material world, or the
activated when one listens to a record on a phono-
manner in which his work was received by others
graph), or as the result of analogy or equivalency
once it left his hands, was an artist quite other than
(light and water as linked through a shared wave-
this.33 Even without the preceding account of the
form, for instance, or the connective capacity com-
extensive evidence of his interest in communica-
mon to both line and color). Above all, given what
tion and conveyance—from his engagement with
he had to say about his art, together with what he
experimental literature, sound technology, and
Chapter Two
theosophy to his constant wordplay and explora-
and his dedication to the everyday, human activi-
tion of shorthand and musical notation—the case
ties associated with and through which he explored
for Dove’s investment in connection, as opposed
these things. As characterized in the early twenti-
to singularity and isolation, would be watertight.
eth century by Georg Simmel, sociability refers
To start, he lived a life dedicated to exchange with
to “the free-playing, interacting interdependence
others. He corresponded widely and recurrently
of individuals,” a condition of “togetherness” and
with many people, including family and friends
“union with others” resulting from the predomi-
and prominent members of the New York art world.
nance, albeit contingent and transitory, of associ-
The sheer number of surviving letters from Dove
ation over “the solitariness of the individual.” Ac-
to others, including hundreds he wrote to Stieglitz
cording to Simmel, such sociability results from the
and O’Keeffe, testifies to his investment in estab-
distillation of “the pure essence of association”—
lishing and maintaining relationships and to the
association in and of itself as a value or source of
importance he accorded his friendships as part of
from societal unions motivated by satisfaction—
his daily life but also in regard to his artistic work.
interests, economic, religious, or otherwise.34 Dove’s
That these letters were often quite long and writ-
articulation of intersubjectivity—its nature, opera-
ten with great care, sometimes over the course of
tions, and upshot—diverges from the sociologist’s
several days and drafts, underscores this commit-
account of sociability, of course. Simmel described
ment. Dove also willingly exchanged letters with
sociability as already resident within human
people he did not know, individuals who wrote to
groups, whereas Dove believed his desired form of
him asking about his work or soliciting his partici-
intersubjectivity to be not yet extant—this is a key
pation in a project, exhibition, or event. He traveled
point. What Simmel characterized as one condition
frequently to New York from his homes in Geneva
among many possible conditions in human society
and on Long Island to see exhibitions and to make
Dove postulated as the condition, if unrealized. And
social calls, describing these encounters with detail
what for Simmel accounted for relations among
and care in his diaries and letters. The diaries kept
humans for Dove served to hypothesize relations
by him and Torr document a constant stream of
among humans and everything else. But Simmel’s
friends visiting or staying at their home, and they
utopian premise that sociability was or should be
record many occasions of communal music making
fundamental to human intercourse provides the
or music listening, fishing trips, drinks, and din-
conceptual means for understanding the essential
ners out. Indeed, these accounts occupy as much
sociality of Dove’s formulation of intersubjectivity,
space in the diary as do discussions of Dove’s art,
and it aids one in fully grasping the extent of Dove’s
indicating the significance Dove and Torr accorded
ambition to produce a novel form of lived reality.35
to them as part of their lives. The diary itself, be-
Take for example Dove’s privileged place in
cause it was kept in collaboration with Torr, while
Stieglitz’s circle of artists as well as Dove’s oft-
private, still reflects, embodies even, a dedication
expressed devotion to Stieglitz and his enterprise.
to dialogue, to the passage of information between
Although my account of Dove aims to dislodge him
parties (each read the other’s entries) and to the
from the confines of Stieglitz-centered interpreta-
shared experience that arose as a result.
tions, Dove’s investment in connection and, I will
Dove’s sociability looms quite small in the art-
now officially add, sociability, his efforts to make
historical literature, but it matters a great deal—
wholes out of parts, be those parts inanimate or
not just because acknowledging it sets the record
living, must be understood in the context of Stieg-
straight, but also because sociability as a term or
litz’s own beliefs about the power and potential
idea cannot justifiably be left out of considerations
of the group. Without discounting Stieglitz’s self-
of Dove’s project, given his investment in language,
importance, as exemplified by his less than modest
translation, communication, and interconnection
autobiographical essay “The Origin of the Photo- Weather
97
Secession and How It Became 291,” or the cult of
tential pedagogical, social, and political use-value
personality that arose around him, one can point
of art. Examples include Robert Henri’s conviction
to a strain of collectivism in his ventures and in un-
that art should integrate with life and expand the
dertakings associated with him or, at a minimum,
consciousness of the public, the John Reed Club’s
to a Whitman-inspired rhetoric of common cause
politically minded artists’ forums, Aaron Douglas’s
and the social good that attached itself to his proj-
activist and utopian images of racial uplift and
36
Typical are Paul Rosenfeld’s rhapsodic de-
equality, the antilynching exhibitions staged by
scription of Stieglitz as a harbinger of artistic and
the American Communist Party and by the NAACP
social revolution in his 1916 essay “291 Fifth Avenue”
(the latter organized in collaboration with the
and Harold Rugg’s valorizing of Stieglitz as a cata-
College Art Association), the Federal Arts Project,
lyst and model for social reconstruction and the
John Dewey’s advocacy in Art as Experience (1934)
formation of a cooperative community in his con-
for art as a tool of democracy, and the Museum of
tribution to the 1934 publication America and Alfred
Modern Art’s emphasis on democratic culture and
Stieglitz: A Collective Portrait. Equally characteristic
consumption.40 Whether Stieglitz really was a man
are the publications produced in honor of Stieglitz
of the people or wholeheartedly subscribed to the
or with his support, among them Camera Work and
notion of the primacy of the collective or what Clur-
291, in addition to America and Alfred Stieglitz, all of
man called the “group idea” is irrelevant here. What
which insisted on collective authorship and the
matters is Dove’s regular exposure to the collectivist
ects.
37
representation of multiple perspectives. Usually
rhetoric generated by and associated with Stieglitz
associated with radical individualism and the pri-
and others and the impact the idea of collectivity
macy of the subjective self, Stieglitz was during his
on its own would have had on him. That impact, I
lifetime often described in very different terms. “In
would argue, was significant, and the Stieglitz mi-
a word,” wrote Harold Clurman, “Stieglitz’s whole
lieu provided an important context for Dove’s own
work, from his photographs to his conversations,
articulation of connection and sociability.
clearly reveals that classic conception of art that
The same might be said for theosophy, with its
today we call collective.” Stieglitz, Clurman argued,
emphasis on cosmic unity and the oneness of all be-
citing his “innate understanding of the interdepen-
ings, and also for various strains of utopian thought
dence of all things and of all beings,” provides an ex-
circulating in the late nineteenth and early twenti-
ample of how art might “change the world,” thereby
eth century, including those that posited new com-
demonstrating the potential for the fruitful coexis-
munication technologies such as the telegraph, tele-
38
photograph, telephone, and radio as mechanisms by
The cohort known as the “Young Americans,” which
which the ideal of a transnational, universal human
overlapped with Stieglitz’s camp and included
community, borne of universal communication net-
Randolph Bourne, Van Wyck Brooks, Waldo Frank,
works, might be attained.41 Period discourse linked
James Oppenheim, Paul Rosenfeld, Hart Crane, and
Dove to this technological context and the utopia-
Sherwood Anderson, also formed part of Dove’s in-
nism (and sometimes occultism) associated with it.
tellectual and social milieu, especially during his
In an article that appeared in Camera Work in 1913,
years in Westport, Connecticut, which was a locus
Maurice Aisen analyzed the innovations of Picabia
for this group. Associated with the journal Seven
in the context of broader transformations in the do-
Arts, the “Young Americans” explored frequently in
mains of art, philosophy, and science. He identified
their work the relationship between the individual
Dove as sharing Picabia’s outlook and intentions,
and the communal, the experience of social contact
including Picabia’s quest for “a new nomenclature,”
and exchange, and the capacity of art to have a col-
parallel to the new vocabularies of scientific inquiry
tence of artistic independence and collaboration.
39
98
lective influence. They did so alongside Stieglitz’s
and capable of expressing new worlds of knowledge
collectivism at a moment that took seriously the po-
and insight. Aisen situated this new nomenclature
Chapter Two
as the latest manifestation in a genealogy of the
remarks to Hapgood allude to and draw connections
various languages “for inter-communication” that
among his abstract vocabulary, his concept of the
societies have developed over time and that be-
condition of light, the prospect of profound inter-
come obsolete with succeeding generations. “Our
connection, and the sociopolitical, suggesting that
words,” he wrote, “communicate at first through
as early as 1912 he would have been primed to imag-
the atmosphere and in personal contact. When we
ine his practice as an artist and the properties and
first talked, we communicated through the air, later
procedures deployed or generated within his work as
through signs, still later through writing, afterwards
definitely oriented toward the sphere of human rela-
through telegraph, telephone, till today through
tions. As Dove himself makes clear in his comments,
wireless telegraphy and telephone.” To his mind,
the sociability and the essentially collective nature
Picabia and Dove pushed this genealogy forward
of that sphere corresponded to and took visual form
by materializing in their art a new medium of in-
in the connections fostered by his art. It follows that
tercommunication, one that like new technologies
the pictorial and material manifestations of trans-
of communication “increases extraordinarily the
lation and communication in Dove’s paintings and
perception and interchange of the five senses,” but
assemblages existed to explore and, ideally, compel
much more radically so, in the form of a “psychic
intersubjectivity, understood by Dove both as an ar-
sense.”42
tistic method and an artistic goal.
Dove himself understood individual artistic pur-
My point here is that Dove, that putative re-
suit to be bound up with the social, collective sphere.
cluse who left the city for the countryside because
On the occasion of the exhibition of “The Ten Com-
he thought modernity was objectionable and found
mandments,” the journalist and anarchist Hutchins
people annoying—and whose abstraction has been
Hapgood reported Dove’s comments on the affinity
understood as the pictorial equivalent of this re-
between his art and radical politics. Hapgood’s ar-
treat, a withdrawal from the material and the messy
ticle began with a discussion of labor reform and an
into the domains of the essential, the subjective,
account of a strike supported by the labor organiza-
and purity of form—such a Dove must be under-
tion Industrial Workers of the World before turning
stood in very different terms. His work may look
to a characterization of the relationship between
radically individual, but it existed to connect, bear-
politics and social matters as exemplified by Dove’s
ing the intent to function as a thread whose stitch
abstraction. “In politics and all human affairs,” Dove
and weave gathered and grouped. Period discourse,
told Hapgood, “advanced workers are trying to re-
which drew no hard and fast distinction between
duce things to the simplest.” All pursuits, Dove said,
allegiance to individualism and subscription to a
as they increase in intensity, tend “to assume the
collective model—and which understood the very
essentials of form,” including the labor movement’s
possibility of individualism as arising from the
drive toward simplifying “the conception of classes”
group—allowed for this, setting the stage for mak-
as well as the simplification of the relation “between
ing art that appeared to turn away from the mate-
the will of the people and governmental and legis-
rial world even as it remained squarely within it and
lative forms.” According to Dove, because “the same
desirous of engaging all its parts. When considered
intense and simplifying process goes through all
alongside his sustained exploration of systems of
human activities and one thing throws light on
expression and his theorization of a condition of in-
everything else,” an artist, to remain vital, must
tersubjectivity, including his postulated “condition
not “cut himself away from the labor movement or
of light,” Dove’s little acknowledged investment in
other movements.” “If I could work out a simple so-
sociability and the social—the fact that he was a
cial proposition,” Dove said, “it would be as beautiful
social being who thoroughly enjoyed forging con-
and as esthetic as any color, or form harmony that
nections with others and believed heartily in uto-
the fire of my imagination might compose.”43 Dove’s
pian visions of human, even cosmic collectivity— Weather
99
demands that one understand his art in just these
gled in the material, phenomenal, and social do-
terms.
mains. Dove’s vision was a utopian one, to be sure,
In sum, Dove’s intersubjectivity hypothesis en-
but any vision that posits art as somehow prepared
tailed a preoccupation with effects of connection
to change the world—in this case, through a radi-
or communication as produced by operations of
cal form of collectivity or community wrought by a
transmission or translation: in rhythms, sequences,
pictorial reconfiguration of relationality—can be of
formations, and lines that conveyed ideas from one
course nothing else. This was a project experimen-
mind to the next; in a condition of light that forged
tal in nature and wildly ambitious in aim, and Dove
bonds between forms and colors in a painting and
knew it. “What is your artist credo, or your concep-
among entities in the world, human and other-
tion of what it is the artist undertakes to do?” he
wise; in things moving through air and producing
was asked in 1938 by an author preparing a book on
effects across vast expanses of space (as with the
contemporary painting and sculpture. Dove’s reply,
sun illuminating the earth’s surface or the moon
exuberantly expressed in sweeping pencil strokes
producing the tides); in spatially dispersed humans
scrawled beneath the neatly typed question: “The
sharing sonic experience by way of a technology
impossible.”44
like radio; in the supernatural and simultaneous sharing of thought associated with mental telepathy; or in the sonic continuum produced among
100
Weather
performer, sound recording, playback apparatus,
But what does this talk of translation, communi-
painter, and painting in the act of creating a picture
cation, connection, and intersubjective complexes
while listening to a record on a phonograph. Such
have to do with the weather, one of the terms in
an investment on Dove’s part in contact and trans-
my tripartite schema of Dove’s practice that I have
mission across a series or set of relations added up
dubbed a geography of circles, waves, and weather?
to a fantasy of connectivity, a vision of the disso-
It goes without saying that there is a lot of
lution of boundaries between the animate and the
weather in Dove’s paintings and assemblages:
inanimate, humans and machines, the heavens and
sunshine, rain, snow, wind, fog, clouds, h umidity,
the earth, sight and touch, seeing and hearing, with
lightning, thunder, storms, and cyclones. In the
art posited as the connective tissue—the medium
assemblage Rain (fig. 25), Dove sandwiched a clus-
of communication and converse—among all these
ter of twigs between two panes of glass; he ap-
things, the apparatus that could engineer, through
plied rubber cement to the reverse of the top pane,
its imagining of novel modes and models of inter-
dabbing and pulling the glue so that it resembles
change, just such a desired state of profound and
drops and stringy streaks of rain, an effect rein-
proliferative interconnection, a simultaneity of ex-
forced by the downward sloping pattern of paint
change, borne of translation, among objects, phe-
streaks or scratches in the metal ground on which
nomena, and beings. It was for this reason that Dove
the whole configuration sits. The twigs, which in-
fashioned his paintings and sculptures as simulta-
tersect the top edge of the assemblage but not the
neously images and instruments, affirming their
bottom and appear oriented upside down relative
instrumental potential by imbuing them with the
to natural growth, their tips pointing to the earth
materials, vocabularies, and operations of various
rather than stretching skyward, double as sleeting
expressive and transmission systems or forms—
rain. Storms were a favorite of Dove’s, featured in
from metal paint and script-like lines to circles and
works such as Seagull Motif (Violet and Green), Thun-
waves—and by making sure that through this pic-
der Shower, Thunderstorm (1921), After the Storm, Silver
torial and substantial incarnation of the being and
and Green (Vault Sky) (ca. 1923), Golden Storm (1925),
behavior of such systems and forms, these works
Storm Clouds (1935), Electric Peach Orchard (1935), and
remained tethered to and thus essentially entan-
Wind (No. 3) (1935–1936) (figs. 3, 37, 71–75).45 The
Chapter Two
Fig. 71 Arthur G. Dove, Thunderstorm, 1921, oil and metallic paint on canvas, Columbus Museum of Art, Ohio, Gift of Ferdinand Howald, 1931.167.
Fig. 73 Arthur G. Dove, Golden Storm, 1925, oil and metallic paint on plywood panel, 189⁄16 × 20½ in. (47.14875 × 52.07 cm), The Phillips Collection, Washington, DC, acquired 1926. Any reproduction of this image shall not be made without written consent of The Phillips Collection, Washington, DC.
Fig. 72 Arthur G. Dove, After the Storm, Silver and Green (Vault Sky), ca. 1923, oil and metallic paint on wood panel, Collection of the New Jersey State Museum, Gift of Mr. and Mrs. L. B. Wescott, FA1974.75. Reproduced with permission.
sheer eloquence with which Dove rendered nature’s
Storm Clouds, irregular bands of pink, mauve, green,
outbursts testifies to his fascination with meteoro-
gray, and plum surge skyward, contracting and ex-
logical phenomena, especially extreme weather. In
panding as they rise, shifting from curving forms to
Thunderstorm, slashes of silver paint plunge toward
jagged edges on the ascent. At the center of these
the earth; terra firma slices across the bottom of the
billowing cloud forms sits what looks to be an eye—
canvas like a chainsaw blade, its surface glistening
the “eye” of the storm, to be sure, here accompanied
as if wet or polished to a menacing sheen. A ser-
by the eerie green of a thunderstorm sky, but also
rated strip stretching between sky and ground sep-
an emblem of the power of the weather, its strength
arates the scene into two unequal halves, creating
and potency symbolized by this other-than-human,
the effect that the canvas itself is about to buckle
staring orb. Its brazen gape stands akin to that of
and split apart as a result of the thunderstorm’s fury
Dove’s Moon (fig. 5), its animal stare perhaps prefig-
and force. Oil and metallic paint in After the Storm,
uring a painting Dove began work on shortly after
Silver and Green (Vault Sky) combine to produce the
completing Storm Clouds, one called “Eagle Cloud” in
shimmer and glisten of a rain-slicked landscape as
the diaries.47 Dove made and painted the silver-leaf
a storm recedes, the air seeming to tremble as the
frame for Storm Clouds himself.48 Its silvery-pink me-
emerging sun’s rays illuminate the droplets of water
tallic sheen, created through the use of silver leaf,
still suspended in the atmosphere or on the surface
which catches, reflects, and refracts the light that
of leaves and blades of grass. Dove renders these ef-
hits its surface, aptly evokes one of the subjects of
fects almost otherworldly, and the subtitle Vault Sky
the painting: the scattering of light among water-
along with the blue-black expanse that consumes
laden air and clouds. By registering the scene’s pre-
almost half of the canvas’s space presses the scene
dominant hues at the literal border between inside
toward a preternatural realm. Although different in
and out, the frame also suggests that the scope and
overall effect, both Thunder Shower and Storm Clouds
power of a storm cannot be contained within any
convey the explosive potential of the earth’s atmo-
single view.
sphere. In Thunder Shower, which may have been in-
Dove exuberantly painted the weather, and he
spired by a storm that caught Dove and Torr while
also took weather reporting as a subject. Several of
driving home to Centerport from Brentwood in
Dove’s works boast titles that evoke weather reports
September 1939, jagged swaths and zigzags of color
or forecasts, including Partly Cloudy (1942) and Rain
burst from the center and careen toward the canvas’s
or Snow (1943) (figs. 76, 77). Dove’s signature in Partly
edges, as if a bomb has been detonated, the wiry line
Cloudy, at bottom center, sits nestled in the crook
that descends through the heart of the canvas evok-
of a downward sweeping curve, one of a series of
46
ing both a lightning strike and a burning fuse. In
yellow-white and yellow-gray bands that, in combination, call to mind the hull of a ship, as if to evoke the idea of the artist on board a boat reading and recording the weather—“partly cloudy”—or predict-
Fig. 74 Top, Arthur G. Dove, Storm Clouds, 1935, wax emulsion on canvas in artist-made frame, 15 × 211⁄8 in. (38.1 × 53.7 cm), Metropolitan Museum of Art, The Muriel Kallis Steinberg Newman Collection, Gift of Muriel Kallis Newman, 2006, 2006.32.14. Image copyright © The Metropolitan Museum of Art. Image source: Art Resource, NY. Fig. 75 Bottom, Arthur G. Dove, Electric Peach Orchard, 1935, oil on canvas, 20¼ × 28 in. (51.435 × 71.12 cm), The Phillips Collection, Washington, DC, acquired 1935. Any reproduction of this image shall not be made without written consent of The Phillips Collection, Washington, DC.
ing future conditions as he sails. The title of Sun Drawing Water itself evokes the actions of weather watching and forecasting and, as noted in the previous chapter, the phrase “sun drawing water” at the time colloquially described crepuscular rays, columns of light that appear to descend from cloud breaks and were commonly thought to portend the coming of a storm.49 Dove’s use of this colloquialism—in the painting’s title and also in his poem, “A Way to Look at Weather
105
Fig. 76 Arthur G. Dove, Partly Cloudy, 1942, oil on canvas mounted on masonite, 357⁄8 × 255⁄8 in. Collection of the University of Arizona Museum of Art & Archive of Visual Arts, Tucson; Gift of Oliver James, 1950.1.1.
Fig. 77 Arthur G. Dove, Rain or Snow, 1943, oil and wax emulsion on canvas, 35 × 25 in. (88.9 × 63.5 cm), The Phillips Collection, Washington, DC, acquired 1943. Any reproduction of this image shall not be made without written consent of The Phillips Collection, Washington, DC.
Things,” which includes the line “the sun draws
annotation, suggesting that the title was indeed a
water from the sea”—echoes other invocations on
quotation from this clipping and thus intended to
his part of weather or seasonal prognostications,
signal the phrase’s origin in the rhetoric of weather
including the phrase “the wind has weight,” which
watching and forecasting, including the locutions
signaled the coming of a storm and appeared in the
of common weather talk.52 A favorite topic of the
essay Dove wrote to accompany his exhibition at
period was weather prediction based on observing
Stieglitz’s Intimate Gallery in 1927–1928. Dove’s ob-
animal behavior—the circling of chimney swallows
servation that “The geese are flying northward . . .
as a foretelling of rain, the active spinning of long
it is a good sign,” included in the pamphlet that
threads of web by spiders as indicative of fair con-
accompanied his 1940 exhibition at Steiglitz’s An
ditions to come, the cessation of swarming on the
All three
part of bees as presaging a storm. Dove was himself
phrases fall into the period categories of “weather
attuned to such signs, writing from Centerport to
proverb,” “weather lore,” or “weather sign,” state-
Stieglitz in January 1944 about the “thousands of
ments about the weather and its future behavior
seagulls in now. Never have seen so many since we
that were borne of observation, experience, and
have been here. Sometimes mean storms, but this
tradition rather than the scientific procedures and
time they act differently.”53
American Place, is another example.
108
50
data of the discipline of meteorology. Well-known
Of course, Dove was not the first or the only art-
examples of such weather wisdom from the period
ist to paint the weather—not by a long shot—or to
(and that have persisted into the present) include
call on weather wisdom in his daily life. It would be
the verse “Red sky at night, sailor’s delight / Red
laughable to suggest otherwise.54 But weather per-
sky in morning, sailors take warning,” the Ground-
meated the whole of his practice in a manner not
hog Day tradition, and the belief that a “mackerel
at all usual for an American painter in the twenti-
sky,” in which clouds resemble the scales of a fish,
eth century. Dove’s invocations of weather wisdom
foretells stormy weather. The period phrase, “Mack-
reflected a larger preoccupation on his part with
erel sky, soon wet or soon dry,” reflects the hedging
the weather, which he watched and reported with
that commonly characterized proverbial weather
painstaking and persistent regularity. In letters
51
wisdom in the first half of the twentieth century.
to family and friends, Torr and Stieglitz included,
Dove’s use of weather vernacular to discuss and de-
he made a point of describing weather conditions,
scribe his art makes clear that he was conversant
particularly extreme weather events, sometimes in-
in this wisdom, which had its own extensive litera-
cluding pictures or diagrams to accompany his ex-
ture in the period, including handbooks, manuals,
planation; animated accounts of storms sit along-
and almanacs. In 1942, he tucked into his diary a
side musings about his art in these missives, and
newspaper clipping that described a selection of
they not infrequently take center stage. In August
weather signs, including “light puffy clouds” (which
1936, Dove wrote to Torr and described a cyclone
foretold clear conditions), “merging clouds” (rain),
that had swept through Geneva, including in the
“ring around the moon” (a storm within forty-eight
letter a graphic representation of the cyclone’s
hours), “hazy atmosphere” (warm), and “red in the
winds (fig. 110) and a newspaper clipping with pho-
sky” (if in the morning, rain or snow; if at night, the
tographs of the storm’s damage; Dove also described
end of rain or snow). It is tempting to imagine that
this cyclone at length and with great excitement in
the title of Dove’s Rain or Snow was inspired by this
a letter to Stieglitz.55 Writing to Stieglitz in Octo-
nugget of weather wisdom, clipped and saved by
ber 1923 on the occasion of another storm, Dove re-
him shortly before he created that painting. In the
counted how he had “been trying to memorize this
checklist for Dove’s 1943 exhibition at An American
storm all day so that I can paint it. Storm green and
Place, the title was given in quotes (“Rain or Snow”),
storm grey. It has been too dark and nerve stained
the only one of twenty-two works to boast such
to paint, so did three illustrations this morning just
Chapter Two
to keep from cutting that rope through by think-
for several months, from September 24 through
ing so hard about it.” And in an August 15, 1924, let-
the end of December. Although they are difficult
ter to Stieglitz and O’Keeffe, Dove reported that a
to decipher, these circular diagrams appear to be
storm passed through on Tuesday and that he had
Dove’s records of the location of the sunrise or the
“grabbed one of my best paintings out of it. . . . The
position of the sun in the sky as the day passed.57
workmanship is certainly better than anything yet,
In the case of circles that adorn the September 28
56
almost ‘mathematics.’” As his remarks to Torr and
and 29 entries, blue predominates, suggesting the
Stieglitz indicate, Dove found the drama of weather
sky (or perhaps the sea), while strokes of red and
fascinating and he also regarded it as a generative
yellow, mainly at the periphery, suggest the rays of
force within his practice, a phenomenon that he
the sun or their reflection in water; in the circle at
watched and with which he collaborated.
top right, overlapping colors blend to create green
In his diary entries, Dove kept regular and dil-
and purple, evoking the effect of light reflected and
igent records of weather conditions, reported on
refracted through water or a prism. The idea that
storms, and discussed the day’s forecast, developing
the diagrams designate the location of the rising
his own vocabulary for use in signifying weather
sun—or at least the actions and effects of the sun
conditions. The diary entries for September 28 and
vis-à-vis the earth’s atmosphere—is supported by
29, 1936, which combine words and images, are
a letter Dove wrote to Torr, postmarked October 5,
typical (fig. 78). On each page, Dove noted the tem-
1936, in which he included a tick-marked circular
perature and barometric pressure, sometimes more
diagram identical to those that appear in the di-
than once so as to register changing conditions.
aries, complete with accompanying temperature
He also drew a series of circles, their interiors filled
and barometric pressure data. Penciled toward the
in with a range of colors that appear to have been
bottom of page 3 of his letter appears the following
rendered with pastel or wax crayon. Such circle
phrase: “Have your diary all full of sunrises, to-days
forms recur in the 1936 diary, one or two to a page,
is,” a sentence that ends directly above the circle
Fig. 78 Helen Torr Dove and Arthur Garfield Dove diary pages dated Sept. 28 and 29, 1936. Arthur and Helen Torr Dove Papers, 1905–1974, Archives of American Art, Smithsonian Institution, 3:2:9, image #139.
Weather
109
diagram, as if pointing to it.58 If the circle diagram in the letter and those in the diary are sunrises, as Dove’s annotation “to-days is” indicates, then the V-shaped marks that sit at the perimeter of the majority of the circles and that closely resemble the similarly shaped tick marks in Dove’s painting Sun, most likely designate the sun’s location according to the graduated numerical markings on a modern compass rose that represent the degrees of a circle, from 0° to 360°, and that correspond to the cardinal directions, including all thirty-two directional points of the compass, as in north, north by east, north north east, north east by north, east north east, and so forth. This is a big “if,” to be sure, because the logic of the circle drawings in the diary, if there is one at all, does not correspond exactly to the regular path of the sun relative to the motion of the earth over the course of a day.59 Still, and again, these diagrams recur throughout Dove’s 1936 diaries and in his correspondence for much of that year. Whatever they are, they undoubtedly constituted a part of Dove’s weather watching, accompanied as they are in his diary by other weather data. Like the diary, Dove’s ship’s log, kept while living aboard the Mona, combines notes about visits from friends, the progress of his painting, and repairs made to the boat with daily and detailed data on the weather. The inside front cover of the log bears a list of abbreviations that Dove used in his daily reporting, with single letters standing for an array of conditions, including “b” for blue sky, “c” for cloudy, “d” for drizzly rain, “f” for fog, “h” for hail, “l” for lightning, “m” for misty, “p” for passing showers, “q” for squally, “s” for snow, “t” for thunder, and “u” for ugly. Log entries record the time of day as well as prevailing weather conditions, the tides, and the state of the sea. The two consecutive pages that include entries from May 31 to June 3 serve as a good example (fig. 79). At the head of the entry for May 31, Dove records the time (6:00 a.m.), writes “B” for blue sky, notes a breeze coming from the west, and draws a circle diagram, repeating the “B” inside Fig. 79 Two pages from the “Log for the Mona” (May– Dec. 1924), dated May 31–June 3. Arthur and Helen Torr Dove Papers, 1905–1974, Archives of American Art, Smithsonian Institution, 3:1:51, image #9.
110
Chapter Two
the perimeter of the circle. Dove also includes circle diagrams in his entries for June 2 and 3, but they look more like abstract and abbreviated renditions
of sky conditions, rather than potential sunrise locators. Dove notes a “red & gray dawn” for June 2; the right half of the circle is shaded softly with pencil, while the left contains a series of wavelike lines, perhaps designating clouds or wind. At the center of the diagram, Dove made the notation “B2,” most likely code for a certain kind of blue sky (the June 3 diagram contains the note “B1”).60 The previous page of the log records the conditions for May 30 (fig. 80).61 In this instance, the circle diagram, partially shaded and adorned with wavelike marks, encloses an inverted triangle shape, which in turn encloses the letter “B.” Dove notes that there was wind all day, and to the left of the circle he writes “B2.” The entries for May 23 and 24 also boast circular diagrams. The diagram for the twenty-fourth consists of a line encircling the word “Grey,” while Dove divides the diagram for the twenty-third into two parts, filling the left portion with wavy lines and the right sector with a word: “haze.” Here, word and image combine in a single figure to render the day’s conditions. “B7” and “C3” annotate this diagram, as does the phrase “Air fm South.” Throughout his writing and records, Dove experimented with such verbal and visual vocabularies for use in translating raw data or lengthy description into legible, efficient, and meaningful signs, including through shorthand and speedwriting techniques. As the above examples make clear, not all his weather codes are decipherable today, and it is not at all certain that these codes, meant for private use, were supposed to be perfectly consistent or systematic to begin with, or that they were intended to be readable by anyone other than Dove or Torr. This is an important point to keep in mind. Although I am arguing that language was centrally and deeply at issue for Dove, I resist any suggestion that his project consisted of a literal attempt to invent a new sign system, code, or tongue that might then be deciphered and used by viewers and readers, a resistance reflected in my emphasis thus far on the properties and procedures of language, translation and communication among them, as well as language’s visual forms—for example, the likeness between Gregg shorthand and Dove’s spi-
Fig. 80 Two pages from the “Log for the Mona” (May– Dec. 1924), dated May 27–30. Arthur and Helen Torr Dove Papers, 1905–1974, Archives of American Art, Smithsonian Institution, 3:1:51, image #8.
Weather
111
raling lines in Sun Drawing Water and Seagull Motif
paint or found objects, for use in the creation of
(Violet and Green)—rather than language as a code.
new, experimental forms, and it was also a model,
In devising forms of signification for recording the
its properties suggesting to Dove things he might
weather, for which he deliberately drew on numer-
do with his art. If I insist on anything in this book,
ous already existing notational systems, Dove ex-
it is that Dove’s art consisted of a proposition, not a
hibited less of an interest in invention than he did
prescription. His experiments across the board pro-
in reformulation, whereby he took what existed,
posed possibility rather than stipulating particular
adopted it for his own usage, and experimented
ways of proceeding.
with its capacities as he had experimented with
Other instances of weather notating in Dove’s
the capacity of the graphic in his letters, poems,
writing and recording, with their emphasis on
and prose. To be sure, he created novel, hybrid
translation of phenomena into verbal or graphic
configurations— recall the arrow- annotated “see”
sign, help to make this distinction clear. At the
in his letter to Torr—but nothing altogether new,
back of the ledger book that Dove kept from 1923 to
that is, nothing unrecognizable within the existing
1927, while living shipboard, he sketched a diagram
domain of language. As such, and again, his efforts
for use in the interpretation of data recorded with
constituted an exploration of the operations and ef-
an aneroid barometer, which registers changes in
fects of language, of language’s capacity to facilitate
atmospheric pressure by the expansion or contrac-
connection, communication, and interchange—of
tion of a small cell or capsule (fig. 81).62 As is stan-
language as a mode rather than a specific and rule-
dard with such a device, numbers at the perimeter
bound configuration or system of signs. Put another
of Dove’s circular diagram, beginning with 28 at the
way, language was for him a medium, analogous to
left and ending with 31 at the right and graduated
Fig. 81 Page from an accounting ledger that details the personal and business expenses, 1923–1927, of Arthur Garfield Dove and Helen Torr Dove. Arthur and Helen Torr Dove Papers, 1905–1974, Archives of American Art, Smithsonian Institution, 5:3:37, image #145.
112
Chapter Two
in between, indicate atmospheric pressure. The let-
the Beaufort Wind Force Scale, a system for esti-
ters that proceed along the inner edge of the circle,
mating and describing wind speed by observing the
from “A” to “K,” are Dove’s addition. According to
appearance of the sea.63 The scale expresses wind
the notations with which Dove fills the circle, each
force both numerically, on a scale from 1 to 12, and
letter corresponds to a specific pressure value so
descriptively. Categories of wind types correspond
that a particular numerical-alphabetical range cor-
to a numerical value, as can be seen in Dove’s chart;
responds with a certain set of weather conditions:
the number 7, for example, indicates a moderate
C–B indicates “very stormy,” for instance, and E–D
gale, while the number 2 designates a light breeze.64
indicates “clearing high winds accompanied by
As he did with the barometer diagram, Dove elab-
squalls.” Some aneroid barometers from the period
orated the basic Beaufort scale, annotating it with
included a few weather notes alongside the nu-
a list of the sailboat rigging appropriate for use
merical values, specifying what type of weather—
with each wind type on the right; on the left side
stormy, rainy, fair, or dry—might accompany which
of the scale, he annotated further, adding a series
pressure readings. But Dove’s elaborate and detailed
of numerical ranges under a heading, only partly
system for barometrically registering and predict-
legible, that indicates that the numbers measure
ing the weather, which combines numbers, letters,
something “in miles.”
and verbal description in a single diagram, was his
Also exemplary of the idiosyncrasy and experi-
own invention. On another page at the back of the
mentalism of Dove’s weather notating are his diary
ledger, Dove again listed the letter abbreviations
entries from the 1940s, in which he favored words
for weather conditions he had created for use in his
over pictures, including in these entries symbols
ship’s log (fig. 82). Opposite this list, he transcribed
and terms borrowed or adapted from meteorology
Fig. 82 Page from an accounting ledger that details the personal and business expenses, 1923–1927, of Arthur Garfield Dove and Helen Torr Dove. Arthur and Helen Torr Dove Papers, 1905–1974, Archives of American Art, Smithsonian Institution, 5:3:37, image #143.
Weather
113
as well as notational marks of his own devising.
so as to form an eccentric weather narrative and a
The entries for March 31 and April 1, 1942 (fig. 63),
personalized weather language, one that toggles
in which he combined numerical values, symbols,
between data specificity and an observer’s subjec-
words, and the delicately twisting lines that re-
tive impressions while forging a unique idiom from
semble the characters of Gregg shorthand, are ex-
multiple lexicons.
emplary. Although they bear a relation to the rib-
barometer diagram, wind In all three cases—
bon and waveform lines in Sun Drawing Water and
scale chart, and the 1942 diary entries— and
Seagull Motif (Violet and Green) and to the cursive
throughout his diaries and ship’s log, Dove drew
L-shaped motif in the seagull painting and sketch,
on but embellished or repurposed the established
these shorthand-like marks do not have a match in
vocabularies of weather watching and meteorology
the notational language of period meteorology. It
that were used to transfigure raw, often unseen data
is likely that Dove devised these characters himself,
into usable signs or terms. He did so in order to de-
perhaps to indicate wind direction or speed, and it
velop a system by which to register his own trans-
seems likely that he did so with the looping line
lations or intranotation equivalencies: air pres-
motifs that populated his paintings in mind. The
sure into number into letter and then into verbal
entry for January 18, 1942, like the March and April
description, or miles into wind force into rigging,
entries, is expansive in its combination of multiple
say, or a cloud-and bird-filled sky into weather sign
expressive forms (fig. 83). The following cluster of
and weather knowledge. In none of these instances
phrases accompanies temperature and barometric
are Dove’s translations perfectly precise or rigor-
pressure readings on the January page: “ptl klw,
ously logical, and in no case do they reflect an at-
Sea gulls flying high in a mackerel sky. Warm ‘soft’
tempt to craft a systematic code. But taken together
65
Here, instrumentally registered numerical
these schemes evidence his devotion to watching
values, speedwriting, weather wisdom, and a ver-
and reporting the weather as well as his awareness
bal description of conditions coexist and combine
and exploration of the notational procedures and
day.”
Fig. 83 Arthur Garfield Dove diary pages dated Jan. 18 and 19, 1942. Arthur and Helen Torr Dove Papers, 1905–1974, Archives of American Art, Smithsonian Institution, 3:2:13, image #13.
114
Chapter Two
symbolic operations of meteorology, what entailed
given the presence of multiple languages talking to
an idiosyncratic cobbling together of multiple no-
one another and interacting on a single page. And
tational systems and forms. The concern for lan-
much as horizontal, vertical, and diagonal lines
guage, and for what experimenting with language
interconnect Dove’s color blots in his copy of An-
might yield, that underpinned such a cobbling to-
drews’s manual, the ruled lines of the diary page
gether on Dove’s part might be articulated in the
here serve as the matrix for Dove’s consolidation of
form of a question, similar to one asked many years
multiple languages and forms, calling to mind the
later, and in a much different context, by Hans-
significance of lines within Dove’s overall concep-
Georg Gadamer: “But what kind of being is it that
tion of an interconnected, intersubjectivity, which
66
language possesses?” While Dove’s interest lay in
he indicated in his writing by the formulation “a
what language did, not so much what it essentially,
condition of light.” The calendrical, diary format, it-
ontologically was, Gadamer’s query acknowledges
self a system for calculating and expressing, in this
that language has qualities apart from the human
case the concept of a year built from a succession of
that might be of vital use, and it was just such prop-
months composed of twenty-four-hour days, serves
erties that Dove set about exploring and subjecting
as a metamatrix for the imaginative interlacing
to experiment. Dove’s selection and recombination
Dove undertakes within each individual entry, and
of notational systems and verbal forms in the 1942
it establishes the diary as an analog of or perhaps
entries evidences his dedication to testing the lim-
a test site for Dove’s pictorial and sculptural work,
its of and relationships among different forms of
envisioned by him as instrument-like complexes of
translation and communication, meteorological
circuitry for use in modeling or perhaps activating
and otherwise, through experimentation with the
a series of superintegrating bonds.
properties and qualities of these different forms.
In this way, Dove’s diary, like the paintings and
The resulting expressive unit can be described as its
assemblages, is as much about the properties and
own kind of network or intersubjective exchange,
modalities of expression as it is concerned with
Fig. 84 Arthur Garfield Dove diary pages dated Nov. 10–16, 1941. Arthur and Helen Torr Dove Papers, 1905–1974, Archives of American Art, Smithsonian Institution, 3:2:12, image #49.
Weather
115
what is therein expressed: again language as a mode
in a great diversity of media and expressive forms,
rather than decipherable code. Nowhere is this more
indicates that it was more than business as usual
evident than in Dove’s diary entry for November 14,
for him. For Dove, the weather, precisely because it
1941, in which he wrote, “Coated canvases & started
was at once a mundane affair and something quite
Ptly Cloudy” (fig. 84). Here, he utilized the same
extraordinary, served as a critical model or meta-
strategy of abbreviated spelling that he employed
phor for what he wished to accomplish in his art.
in noting the weather in his diary and ship’s log to
It functioned as a template for use in fathoming
indicate the first word of the title of his painting
the intersubjectivity and radical interconnectivity
Partly Cloudy, and he stretched his sentence beyond
after which he sought, a state forged from the stuff
the entry for the fourteenth. As a result, the phrase
of embodied and material existence through tech-
“Ptly Cloudy,” which refers to his painting, occupies
niques of translation even as it intimated a condi-
the upper left-hand corner of the entry for the fif-
tion that was anything but earthbound in its power
teenth, the very spot in which he customarily re-
and reach.
corded the weather data he gathered each day, often
So weather occurs across Dove’s body of work,
using that very phrase, “ptl klw,” to indicate condi-
unfolding in his paintings and assemblages but
tions, as he did at the top of his entry for the four-
also throughout his other productions and articu-
teenth. In the case of this diary entry, the phrase
lations, spreading through his practice in a man-
from the fourteenth shares space with the values
ner similar to the concentric circle motif and the
for temperature and barometric pressure that Dove
waveform, which constitute their own connective
67
recorded for the fifteenth. By adopting a weather
tissues among a great diversity of his productions.
abbreviation to indicate one of his paintings and by
The multicolored circular sunrise diagrams that
literally conflating a remark about his work in pro-
adorn the September 1936 entries of the diary con-
gress with the space of his weather notating, Dove
solidate multiple media and systems of representa-
puts forward his painting and his weather watching
tion within a single image and, in echoing the con-
as essentially conjoined, their conceptual and prac-
centric circles that populate his pictures, produce
tical linkage established within the systematic and
a visual bridge between Dove’s art (as signified by
interconnecting diary format.
both the color and the shape of the diagrams) and
To repeat, Dove was not at all alone in painting
the rest of his practice, including writing, drawing,
the weather, nor was he unique as an artist (or as a
weather watching, and diary keeping, thus embody-
human) in keeping regular records of weather con-
ing the all-encompassing nature of weather’s suffu-
ditions or in talking about the weather with family
sion. But what exactly did the weather do for Dove?
68
116
and friends. As someone who lived on a boat and
What compelled him to attend to and represent it
continued to sail regularly after he moved to shore,
so assiduously and ubiquitously?
and who for a period of time, first while living in
Let me begin to answer this question by posing
Westport, Connecticut, and then in Geneva, tried to
another: What is “the weather,” after all? Defined
make a living by farming, Dove would be expected
in a very basic sense, “the weather” refers to a set
to pay especial attention to the weather, which was
of phenomena that occur in the earth’s atmosphere
an integral aspect of his daily existence, and he
at a given time, a collection of states and events in-
would have owned as a matter of course the basic
cluding temperature, air pressure and precipitation
instruments for use in doing so, including a com-
as well as the products of the interactions among
pass, a barometer, and a thermometer.69 As I will
them. Weather constitutes a fundamental process
come to explain, the everydayness of the weather,
of the earth, and it underwrites the existence of all
and the everydayness of watching and recording it,
living things. It is a phenomenon that unfolds on a
were part of weather’s appeal for Dove. But the fact
macroscale, for weather events in a particular place
that weather pervades Dove’s practice, manifesting
are of course the result of a succession of phenom-
Chapter Two
ena that arise over time and across large expanses
of the far-reaching effects produced by massive or
of terrain. Weather, as such, ties together earth’s
minute fluctuations in the earth’s atmosphere, com-
disparate parts and peoples into a single meteoro-
monly called an “ocean” of air in order to emphasize
logical whole. Weather thus constitutes a system or
the contiguity or unity of its many parts; our daily
a network, in the sense of a widely distributed col-
weather, he wrote, is connected with “the grander
lection of entities that communicate with one an-
atmospheric movements of our planet,” even if re-
other and operate as a unit, a combination of related
motely. “If expanses of atmosphere were as open to
elements that together form a complex, aggregated
view as expanses of sea,” wrote the author of another
whole. The same can be said about the science of
manual, Our Own Weather, “the slightest brushes of
weather, meteorology, which came into being in
weather would be all the time giving us intimation
the middle years of the nineteenth century and, by
of a vastness, a puissance, and a mystery far exceed-
the end of the First World War, was in the United
ing the sea’s.”72 Period writing regularly cited trade
run States a fully institutionalized, government-
winds, cyclones and anticyclones, warm and cold
enterprise. From the outset, weather was described
fronts, and hurricanes as examples of weather sys-
as a global phenomenon, with atmospheric condi-
tems that produced effects across vast geographical
tions of disparate and distant regions understood
terrain.73 Only by staying abreast of weather trends
as fundamentally interrelated. This understanding,
and events across the hemispheres could accurate
which arose in a broader context of thinking about
predictions be made, and only through the same
how to articulate and systematize spatial and tem-
communication technologies, including telegraphy
poral relationships among various regions of the
and radio, that allowed for such tracking and pre-
globe (and between the earth and celestial bodies),
dicting could these predictions be widely dissemi-
resulted in an oft-articulated need for data collec-
nated and put to use.74 As such, weather science was a
tion and data sharing—for a vast weather science
collaborative endeavor of observation, registration,
70
network—across the continents. By the 1910s and
and communication that unfolded as a vast network
1920s, weather reporting and weather forecasting
of places, people, and machines, an undertaking that
in the United States did indeed constitute a vast,
combined the efforts of hundreds of individuals in
nationwide and transnational network of people
multiple locales and that, as the historian of science
and machines charged with gathering masses of
and technology Katharine Anderson has described
raw data and translating it into legible and usable
it, involved a monumentally scaled coordination of
form.
multiple and scattered parts, a “collective science”
As accounts of the history of meteorology de-
the work of which required far more than a single
scribe, the emergence of the science of weather
individual’s or a single institution’s expertise and
hinged on the development of new communication
whose mode of producing knowledge constituted
technologies, particularly the telegraph, that al-
“a vast spatial and social exchange.”75
lowed for the establishment of national and transna-
Both scientific curiosity and commercial con-
tional communication networks and thereby the ef-
cerns, particularly the shipping and agricultural in-
ficient, long-distance tracking and transfer of data.71
dustries, propelled the development of the science
As emphasized again and again in period writing
of weather in the United States. The first weather
about the weather, scientific as well as popular, such
reporting network was founded at the Smithso-
networks were necessary because weather was not
nian in 1849, and in 1870, Congress created an en-
a strictly local phenomenon; conditions in remote
tity called the Weather Service within the US Signal
regions had a hand in shaping the weather outside
Army Office, the duties of which were transferred to
one’s front door. “Conjure the globe before your
the Department of Agriculture in 1891 and managed
eyes,” instructed the author of the handbook Read-
by the newly designated United States Weather
ing the Weather, before describing weather in terms
Bureau. Efforts to establish a telegraph network Weather
117
for weather reporting and forecasting began in
to the bureau headquarters in Washington, DC,
the United States as early as the 1840s and 1850s,
where it was tabulated by bureau meteorologists.
and by the second decade of the twentieth century,
The process of transmission and tabulation was
weather science in the United States constituted
a complex one. Local weather stations converted
a coast-to-coast network of people and machines.
recorded data into an alphabetic cipher prior to
Under the auspices of the Weather Bureau, hun-
sending it via telegraph to Washington, where te-
dreds of weather stations across the country used
legraphers decoded the messages and entered the
government-issue instruments to collect measure-
data into statistical charts. The data ultimately re-
ments, including temperature and barometric pres-
ported by the Weather Bureau was thus the product
sure, at specified times of day. One such volunteer
of multiple translations: instruments translated
outpost was established in 1914 at the Agricultural
atmospheric phenomena, such as wind velocity or
Experiment Station in Geneva, New York, where
barometric pressure, into numerical form; these nu-
Dove had made the acquaintance of the scientist
merical values were then translated into an alpha-
Bernard Rudolf Nebel and borrowed the station’s
betic code; this code was then, after transmission,
pantograph (the weather station operated until
translated back into quantitative data; and the en-
76
1968). These stations, some run by Weather Bureau
tire process itself originated in a spatial translation,
employees, others manned by local volunteers, sub-
the transmission of data across hundreds of miles
sequently reported the gathered data by telegraph
by way of telegraphic wire.77
Fig. 85 Daily Weather Map, Jan. 22, 1922, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) National Weather Service (NWS) Collection, US Weather Bureau / NOAA / Department of Commerce.
118
Chapter Two
In order to make use of this data and to dissem-
indicate current wind direction, while shaded areas
inate it to the public, yet another translation was
specify measurable precipitation over the previous
required. Once the Weather Bureau tabulated the
twenty-four hours.
data it received from local weather stations, it con-
Isolines constitute the most prominent and
verted numbers into pictorial form. Bureau meteo-
striking feature of the weather map. They traverse
rologists handed off the accumulated mass of nu-
the surface, curving and looping dramatically
merical values and statistics to their cartographer
across geography and in places settling into the
colleagues who translated this mass into a synoptic
form of circles or ellipses. Some of these lines are
map. The bureau “weather map,” as it was called,
confined to the terrain of the United States while
was published in newspapers across the country
others stretch beyond the shoreline and extend be-
and posted in public spaces, including railroad sta-
yond the country’s borders, toward other nations
tions, department stores, and post offices. It was
and continents or out to sea. The contour of each
also regularly used to illustrate both scientific and
line represents a constant numerical value, as des-
popular texts on meteorology. The map employed
ignated by the numbers that accompany them on
an elaborate array of symbols and graphic signs to
the map; that is, the path traced by any given line
visualize current conditions over a very large area
specifies areas where identical readings were taken.
and, through this visualization, to facilitate the pre-
The black lines are isobars, indicating swathes of
78
diction of future meteorological states.
equal barometric pressure, and the red lines are iso-
The bureau’s map from January 22, 1922, which
therms, indicating bands of equal temperature. The
displays data gathered at 8:00 a.m. Eastern Stan-
circles and ellipses formed by isobars indicate ar-
dard Time that day, is exemplary (fig. 85). Numer-
eas of low or high pressure, usually associated with
ical data and other information accompany a map
inclement weather and fair weather, respectively.
of the continental United States that is graphically
These linear configurations are significant for the
annotated to indicate prevailing weather condi-
fact that they convey systems of pressure and tem-
tions and trends. Various forms of display and types
perature rather than individual data points or ob-
of mark combine to communicate present and
servations; the same goes for the large regions of
future weather. Columns on the right display the
shaded gray that mark systems of precipitation and
data gathered at local weather stations, including
the dotted red lines that specify dramatic changes
pressure, temperature, wind velocity, and precipita-
in temperature.79
tion. Immediately to the left of the columns, charts
The weather map thus construed amounted
display data gathered from Atlantic, Pacific, and
to an image of relationships: among temperature,
Alaskan stations as well as information about river
pressure, and wind but also among different places
water levels in various US cities. At bottom center,
and regions, as constituted by like conditions in
a box contains information about how to read the
disparate locales and represented by lines that
map and interpret its data. Another box, at bottom
tracked these equivalencies and in so doing stitched
left, provides a twenty-four-hour forecast for vari-
together multiple parts into a complex, interrelated
ous US regions. Within the borders of the depicted
whole. By representing weather in relational or sys-
North American continent, information is ex-
temic terms, as a series of connections, as a network,
pressed pictorially, translated into an arrangement
one literalized by the network of data gatherers at
of graphic notations by the bureau’s cartographers
weather stations across the country and globe and
so as to convey, legibly and efficiently, a massive
also by the telegraph network that made transmis-
amount of data in a single, straightforward descrip-
sion of weather station data possible, the map af-
tive array. Standardized symbols designate current,
forded viewers, bureau forecasters included, an over-
local weather—a transparent circle for “clear,” for
all, all-encompassing view, allowing them to absorb
instance, or a solid triangle for “hail”—and arrows
and understand an immense and immensely comWeather
119
plex collection of data quickly and easily and also
of translation with mass communication as its
to fathom weather on a monumental scale. This of
goal. Meteorology connected the vastly dispersed
course aided in the prediction of future conditions,
dots of weather and generated a picture that served
such as a coming storm or a cold snap—a capacity,
to interconnect, through shared knowledge, vastly
when first realized in the nineteenth century, that
dispersed people and places. Accordingly, just how
was the subject of no small amount of wonder and
data was to be translated into pictorial form was
amazement—but the map also worked to cement
a matter of great concern; beginning in the nine-
an individual’s understanding of himself or herself
teenth century and continuing into the twentieth,
as part of a nationwide and, by extension, a global
meteorologists devoted much discussion and de-
network of interconnecting phenomena, people, in-
bate to the development of weather map symbols,
80
struments, and terrain. Although most Americans
working to develop a standard graphic language as
were primarily concerned with the weather map for
well as a standardized set of terms that could com-
North America, the Weather Bureau also produced
municate complex ideas in radically reduced form
and distributed a weather map of the Northern
yet still be transnationally legible.83 For meteorol-
Hemisphere, utilizing a point of view above the pole
ogists, finding the correct visual language to com-
and relying on observations transmitted by tele-
municate weather conditions was just as important
graph from remote stations. Such synoptic images,
as ensuring that the instruments used to collect
along with even more ambitious weather maps that
data were uniformly calibrated and accurate. The
depicted all the continents of the globe, drove home
result, of course, was a hybrid of visual and verbal
the transnational nature of weather, as did the iso-
forms: a conglomeration of pictures, charts, words,
lines that breached national boundaries in the US
numbers, and, depending on the situation, sound,
weather map, vigorously underscoring the essential
as in a weather report broadcast over the radio.84
relationship between the local and the global.81
As Bernard Mergen describes in his cultural his-
Meteorology during the period under discus-
tory of weather in the United States, radio broad-
sion was thus a science of registration, through the
casters sometimes “read” the weather map over
work of human observation and data-collecting in-
the air, translating picture into broadcast speech,
struments; a science of translation, among phenom-
an act that indicates that listeners, who could not
ena, device, numerical value, statistical array, and
see the weather map themselves, were fluent in its
graphic expression; and a science of communication,
pictorial language and that their receipt of weather
among weather stations and between the Weather
data involved an act of visualization, of imagining
Bureau and the public. It was, clearly, also a science
the image as it was read by the radio announcer,
of picture making. Scholars of the subject agree that
who himself had to be fluent enough in meteorolo-
meteorology before 1945 was chiefly a matter of vi-
gy’s visual language to convey it sonically through
sualization. It was the graphic expression of data,
speech.85 Although in early twentieth-century me-
rather than its mere collection (or its complicated
teorology instrumental measurement and quan-
numerical manipulation, which would come later),
tification largely superseded data gathered by the
that allowed for meteorological assessment and
senses alone, as was the dominant trend in the
prediction, and it was the translation of masses of
sciences at the time, sensory engagement was par-
information into synoptic visual form that in the
amount to meteorology’s methods and conclusions.
first place enabled an understanding of weather as
Producing and looking at pictures made the work of
a system or a network, as opposed to a collection of
weather science possible, and as a visual practice,
82
120
isolated events. Put another way, it was the act of
meteorology made visualization and knowing one
creating a picture and the manipulation of visual
and the same.86
signs that produced weather knowledge, making
Weather science and its images were every-
meteorology, above all, a visual practice, one borne
where in the first three decades of the twentieth
Chapter Two
century. By 1912, almost 150 newspapers published
sign “sun drawing water” as a title for one of his
daily weather maps, and by 1921, nearly one hun-
paintings signal that, in addition to engaging with
dred commercial radio stations in thirty-five states
the tools, procedures, and vocabularies of weather
87
As
science, he participated in a traditional culture
Mergen writes, by the 1930s, the US Weather Bureau
of weather watching that persisted alongside the
was a “household presence.” The bureau’s weather
emergence of the professionalized science of mete-
map and radio broadcasts brought weather science
orology. Observation, experience, accepted wisdom
to the populace, and so did bureau-sponsored out-
or “weather lore,” and colloquial speech rather than
reach programs. Bureau representatives visited
instrumentally derived data, quantification, and
grammar schools, conducted teacher education
statistically based cartographic synopsis consti-
workshops, and sponsored lecture series. Between
tuted the means by which nonprofessional weather
the years 1909 and 1917, the bureau created weather
watchers and forecasters in the early decades of the
kiosks in dozens of American cities that contained
twentieth century (and previously) described and
information about weather reporting and forecast-
predicted the weather. Everyday conversation, di-
ing and featured basic data-gathering instruments
aries and other forms of personal record keeping,
that displayed current conditions. In 1931, the New
and popular almanacs, not telegraph networks, al-
York Daily News constructed a new office, the lobby
phabetic ciphers, and official bureau weather maps,
of which featured an enormous glass weather map
served for recording and transmitting this weather
that was plotted daily as well as gauges connected
information, and they did so in a decidedly popular
to instruments on the roof that reported tempera-
and amateur context.90
broadcast Weather Bureau weather reports.
ture, wind direction and velocity, humidity, atmo-
In the nineteenth century and earlier, weather
spheric pressure, and rainfall. A Weather Bureau
commentary reached the public through the popular
meteorologist provided lectures twice a day. By
press, mainly through almanacs. Published yearly,
1928, a member of the Boy Scouts of America could
almanacs were a hodgepodge of information; they
earn a weather merit badge by, among other things,
almost always contained a calendar as well as all
keeping a daily weather log, learning how to read
manner of tables, charts, timelines, and lists. Some
a weather map, and identifying dangerous weather
featured articles, with topics ranging from garden-
88
conditions.
ing, fishing, and food preparation to astronomy,
Dove’s particular attentiveness to the weather
politics, and history, and many included humorous
was decisively shaped by the popularization and
items and anecdotes about strange or unprece-
cultural dissemination of meteorological science—
dented occurrences. In the Philadelphia-based Farm-
by a pervasive visual culture of weather—and, in
er’s Almanac for the Year of Our Lord 1820, for example,
particular, by meteorology’s visual methods.89 I
the following appear in quick succession: a diagram
will discuss at length the exact nature of this shap-
of human anatomy as governed by the constella-
ing in the next section, but it is important first to
tions, a list of feast days, a table of solar and lunar
emphasize that other cultures of weather aided in
eclipses, an article on coffee excerpted from a local
forming the larger context for his weather watch-
newspaper, a joke poking fun at a literal-minded
ing and weather reporting, including the culture
schoolteacher, monthly calendars spanning twelve
of “weather wisdom” I described earlier, one that
pages annotated with daily weather predictions,
has been discussed at length by the scholar Kath-
an excerpt from the German naturalist Alexander
arine Anderson and in which Dove, with his re-
von Humboldt’s account of his travels, advice for a
course to weather proverbs and his keeping of daily
happy marriage, an article on horses and intestinal
weather logs, was plainly immersed. Dove’s point-
worms, information about potatoes, and a schedule
ing to the northward flying of geese as a portent of
of court sessions for New Jersey.91 Clearly, the goal
good weather and his use of the popular weather
of the almanac was to edify, but also to entertain. Weather
121
Prominent among the contents of nearly every al-
history of weather bureau,” Dove noted in the diary
manac publication was information about past and
entry that first recorded his work on the painting
future weather, including daily predictions, as seen
Partly Cloudy.94 The conjunction of remarks about
in the 1820 example, as well as seasonal or multi-
his painting and a note about interesting weather
year forecasts; anecdotes and information about
data is telling, underscoring the idea that Dove
weather events that occurred over the previous
understood weather watching and making art to
twelve months accompanied sweeping predictions
be of a piece, as he himself had articulated in his
for the coming year or years, with special attention
letters to Stieglitz. But his source for this weather
paid to severe weather. Rather than the product of
statistic could have been either an official bureau
synthesized and statistically analyzed data, these
publication or, just as likely, a popular almanac that
predictions were most often the articulations of
reprinted bureau data.
a single individual, the author of the almanac or
Richard Warren’s Reading the Weather, pub-
some other person noted for his preternatural in-
lished in 1920, is typical of the period’s hybrid ap-
sight regarding the weather. Such prognostications
proach to weather.95 Warren begins his text by de-
were based on personal observation, experience,
claring, “Science is certainly coming into her own
and popular tradition, and some almanacs touted
nowadays,— and into everybody else’s.” Hereto-
the near wizardry of their always-accurate prognos-
fore entrenched in “superstition and hearsay,” the
ticators, whose predictions were regularly likened to
weather has been “the subject of more remarks un-
92
prophecy or divination.
122
relieved by common sense than any other.” Yet with
After the turn of the century, almanacs retained
the coming of meteorological science, “the person
their basic format, presenting the reader with a
who talks about storm centers and areas of high
mishmash of lists, tables, pithy statements, advice,
pressure and cumulus clouds is no longer regarded
and essays on a range of subjects, but many began
as slightly unhinged.” Intended as a guide for the
to include Weather Bureau data alongside weather
amateur, Warren’s text addresses itself to those in-
wisdom, including in some cases weather maps,
dividuals to whom the weather represents a puzzle
exemplifying what Anderson has described as a
or mystery, unlike the sailor and the farmer who
murky, at times contested middle ground between
have by necessity had to cultivate a “weather eye.”96
weather science and popular weather lore. A single
Chapters on the earth’s atmosphere and its weather
page of The World Almanac and Book of Facts for 1924,
patterns introduce the layperson to current scien-
for example, featured a Weather Bureau chart of
tific knowledge; a chapter on the Weather Bureau,
normal temperature and rainfall figures for each
which Warren describes as a modern replacement
state as well as a section labeled “Weather Wis-
for the almanac, characterizes the bureau’s activities
dom,” which included traditional weather knowl-
and presents a detailed description and explanation
edge, as in “A gray, lowering sunset, or one where
of the weather map; and a chapter on the barome-
the sky is green or yellowish-green indicates rain”
ter instructs readers in its use. The final chapter of
or “Unusual clearness of the atmosphere, unusual
the book, entitled “A Chapter of Explosions,” takes
brightness or twinkling of the stars, indicate rain.”93
aim at weather superstitions and debunks with
Weather- watching guidebooks dating from the
no small amount of humor a selection of weather
early decades of the twentieth century, including
proverbs, including the chestnut “If March comes
those already noted, make clear that for the lay-
in like a lion it will go out like a lamb.”97 Yet Warren
person, weather watching was during this period
does not at all dismiss the idea that an individual
equal parts meteorological science and vernacular
with a practiced eye and a familiarity with legiti-
practice, drawing as it did on scientific knowledge
mate weather wisdom might equal the predictive
and procedures at the same time it depended on ev-
accuracy of the Weather Bureau. In fact, his book,
eryday experience and received belief. “Warmest in
more so than it constitutes an introduction to the
Chapter Two
new science, consists of a primer on how an indi-
instructional literature on meteorology, which cele-
vidual might see and read the natural world so as to
brated advances in reporting and forecasting while
predict coming conditions—that is, how one might
stressing the persistent inscrutability or recalci-
become versed and proficient in weather wisdom.
trance of the atmosphere. A rhetoric of wonder and
In fact, he dedicates the longest chapter, entitled
intimations of supersight often accompanied this
“Sky Signs for Campers,” to just such a tutorial. Fol-
noting of weather’s obscurity. That weather was
lowing in the tradition of weather wisdom, Warren
newly understood as an irregular process rather than
posits nature as a conglomeration of “signs” that,
a material object contributed to this, as did the ac-
when read properly, offer up information and un-
knowledged enormity and impalpability of weather
derstanding: the color of the sky, the appearance of
systems or events. Clouds caused especial trouble.
clouds, the behavior of animals, the direction and
In them, wrote the author of Our Own Weather, “all
strength of wind, the visibility of stars, or changes
the activities and intentions of the whole system
in barometric pressure, with numerical data here
of the weather are bound up as if in immense, dec-
treated as a sign or emblem rather than as a sta-
orated, gold-clasped books, written half to inform
tistic.
and half to mystify.” Their variety is “incalculable”
Importantly, weather watching for Warren
and their form changes ceaselessly.99 The sublim-
and his cohort of popular weather writers and
ity of weather made it an object of fascination for
amateur prognosticators entailed not just look-
laypersons such as Dove, while weather’s elusive-
ing at the world but seeing the unseeable—future
ness made it also the subject of intense, at times
conditions—through scrutinizing nature’s visible
obsessive scientific scrutiny, as exemplified by the
forms. Equal parts prophetic divination and science,
bureau’s elaborate quantification techniques.
Warren’s recommended mode of weather watching,
The entanglement of science and wisdom in
typical for its time and place—a moment obsessed,
popular meteorology in the early decades of the
for instance, with the meteorological meaning of
twentieth century would have primed someone like
different types of clouds—married new scientific
Dove to take precise daily measurements of weather
knowledge to a conviction that meteorology was
conditions, as would a volunteer at a bureau-run
still very much about a person observing and then
weather station, and to fashion as he did a fastidi-
translating the language of nature into another
ously elaborate key for use in interpreting barome-
form of information, an operation analogous but
ter data even as he looked skyward—at flying geese
not identical to the translations involved in the
or crepuscular rays—for signs heralding weather
production and use of the weather map, itself a sys-
to come. This entanglement also made it possible
tem of signs demanding to be read. As the author
for him to confront weather as at once wondrous
of The Book of the Sky (1922) put it, the weather map
and everyday, beyond full human comprehension
generated meaning through being observed, by
and within easy, measurable grasp. His ship’s log
offering a “bird’s eye view” of nationwide weather
and his diaries took on an almanac-like form, com-
conditions in the form of isoline patterns that, like
bining meteorological quantification and synoptic
weather signs, addressed and required the visual
imaging—as with his circular diagrams, which con-
98
sense. In both cases—isolines and signs—seeing
stituted his own radically reduced version of the
exceeded its normal capacity. Divination of future
bureau’s weather map—with anecdotes about the
conditions through scrutiny of weather signs or
day’s events, weather included, and the progress of
the patterns of a weather map produced access to
his work. The fact that he regularly recorded Torr’s
the as yet intangible and, in the case of the weather
temperature in his diary entries for the months of
map, allowed for a prospect enjoyed by no resident
February and March 1942, using the abbreviation
of earth, not even a bird. Themes of seeing the un-
“RT” (“Reds Temperature”; Reds was Torr’s nick-
seeable or not seeing at all ran through the popular,
name) to notate each value, suggests just such an Weather
123
embedment of data collecting and reporting in his 100
Dove’s diaries, everything from trips to town and
The combination of numerical data,
haircuts to grocery lists and the day’s menu—and
weather lore, and poetic description in his January 18,
its reliance on individual observation as well as hu-
everyday life.
1942, diary entry—temperature and pressure values,
manity’s capacity for wonder. One of Dove’s ship’s
seagulls, mackerel sky, “ptl. kwl.”—exemplifies this
log entries, for May 25, 1924, makes clear that he
back-and-forth between science and everyday expe-
owned an almanac for that year and consulted it for
rience, as well as a constant shifting between being
information about the weather.102 And that Dove
dazzled and amazed by weather events and attempt-
was well aware of the entanglement of and potential
ing to reduce them to containable numbers, sym-
tension between weather science and weather lore
bols, and standardized terms or signs particular to
is borne out by a statement he made in the essay he
the almanac genre. Many almanacs from the period
sent to Stieglitz in 1931, “The 20th Century Limited
included blank pages or calendars so their readers
or The Train Left Without Them”: “I know an old
could annotate or log as they wished, and the diary
weather prophet who intensely dislikes the word ba-
books used by Dove and Torr incorporated numer-
rometer.”103 Given the essay’s critique of nostalgia in
ous features of the almanac format: the calendar,
the face of the modern and new, one might interpret
of course, but also various types of tables, lists, and
Dove’s statement about the weather prophet, who
charts as well as how-to advice, maps, and short in-
rejects new science, here represented by the barome-
formational essays. Dove’s “Ready Reference Diary”
ter, in favor of old superstition, as embodying his in-
for 1926, for instance, called itself a “practical diary
dictment of cultural obstructionism. But more im-
and encyclopedia” containing “one thousand useful
portant is what the remark reveals regarding Dove’s
facts.” It featured on the bottom of its pages short
relationship to period weather watching—namely,
texts on topics such as “Polar Exploration,” “Tele-
that he was absorbed enough in both weather wis-
phone Statistics,” “Personal Hygiene,” “Layout of
dom and weather science to be able to articulate the
Tennis Courts,” “How to Avoid Lightning,” “Chinese
hybrid nature of the popular meteorology in which
Language and Literature,” and “Velocity of Radio
he was immersed. Clearly, Dove knew his weather,
Waves.” Some of these texts were titled “Weather
and he watched it with both the informed eye of the
Wisdom” and included just the sort of proverbs and
scientist and the prophet’s divining gaze.
lore characteristic of popular meteorology at the time and regularly referenced by Dove. The text at the bottom of the page for January 9 and 10, for example, reads as follows: “A morning rainbow is re-
Dove’s weather watching was thus the product of
garded as a sign of rain. An evening rainbow is a
two cultures of weather, one scientific, the other
sign of fair weather. Fogs indicate settled weather.
vernacular, and it was from these two cultures and
The first and last frost are usually preceded by a
their combination thereof that he drew inspira-
temperature very much above the mean.” Other
tion as an artist. Bent on crafting a visual language
sections provided lists of World Series winners, ra-
that, in his words, rejected “innumerable little
dio broadcast stations, and population data for the
facts” in favor of simplified motifs, and systemat-
101
One cannot know for sure whether
ically engaged in experimentation with the signs,
Dove read or even paid attention to these items in
systems, and devices through which communica-
United States.
124
Geography
the margins of his diary books, but the very act of
tion transpired—from letters and words to phono-
noting the facts of his daily life, weather included, in
graphs and radio waves—Dove must have found
a quasi-almanac format places him squarely within
meteorology’s translations and synoptic distilla-
a tradition of popular practice associated with al-
tions immensely appealing as a form of language
manac reading as well as weather wisdom, with its
and a mode of exchange.104 These meteorological
focus on the local and the everyday—in the case of
operations, which culminated in the production
Chapter Two
of an image, the weather map, would also have
then and now, that weather is what humans have
aided him in fathoming and activating the power
in common, and talk about the weather is one of
and instrumental potential of pictures in his own
the most common forms of human verbal inter-
work. As I see it, weather science, as an intellectual,
change. The colloquial or conversational bent of
instrumental, and visual practice that stitched to-
the almanac as well as the fact that weather lore
gether widely dispersed peoples and terrains— a
was just that, lore, traditional knowledge handed
complex of weather itself as well as weather’s ma-
down and disseminated by word of mouth, its idi-
chine or human transmissions and translations—
omatic, spokenness just what the almanac authors
served Dove as a model network, an exemplary
wished to capture in their mode of address, made
instance of the radical connectivity after which he
the watching of weather simultaneously scientific
sought. The visual strategies of the daily weather
and social, a network of specialists, instruments,
map proffered an example of how to articulate and
and numerical values as well as a web of everyday
incarnate this vast interconnectedness in pictorial
speech, a form of sociability based in verbal and
form. And through their entangling of the everyday
visual exchange among humans but also between
and the extraordinary, both scientific and popular
humans and instruments or humans and natural
meteorology provided Dove with a template for
signs, as in clouds or a stormy sky. In discussing
instantiating a superhuman effect through mate-
weather signs, the author of Reading the Weather
rial means and within the domain of human life.
employed a metaphor of speech, writing of how the
Everyday talk about the weather in almanacs, diary
sunrise “talks so confidentially to the hunter of the
entries, and among friends in combination with
coming day,” presenting nature as one participant
the mass distribution of Weather Bureau reports
among many in everyday weather talk.107 Hence my
demonstrated the activation of interconnectivity in
claim that weather itself, as a naturally occurring
the space of the everyday, giving Dove an idea as to
global network and connective tissue—a matter of
how to ensure the participation of his productions
“world connections,” as one author put it in 1913—
in and their effect on the material world. Weather
was likely for Dove a most powerful model for the
science construed knowledge as a visual practice,
idea of a vast web of relationships that occurred
and weather wisdom posited nature as a network
through shared experience at a monumental scale
of visual signs, as in sky color, cloud shape, or an-
and produced the conditions for a radical form of
imal comportment, and suggested that the act of
intersubjectivity.108 And it may well be that weather
viewing and deciphering these signs, approaching
was the very thing that provided the desideratum
nature as if it offered itself as an array of images
for his art in the first place. To an artist who wished
to be read, was a matter of revealing and commu-
to achieve a sublime state of all-encompassing in-
nicating knowledge. Both would have struck Dove
terrelations through constituting a vast network
as model forms of communication or interchange
of the everyday, material, and mundane, with art
while making clear that the everyday, in the end,
as the agglomerating and activating machinery,
was the extraordinary, and vice versa.
weather—at once cosmic and the nuts and bolts of
“The weather is for everybody,” wrote the author of Reading the Weather. “To-day every part of our country contributes to the knowledge of existing 105
everyday life—would have offered itself as a model system or approach. Preoccupied with exploring manifold forms of
“Everyone has something to
communication in all aspects of his practice, Dove
do with the air,” concurred the author of Weather
thus located in meteorology the essential materials
weather conditions.” 106
While referencing the networked nature
(notational systems, instruments, images) and pro-
of Weather Bureau reporting and forecasting as
cedures (translation, abstraction, supersight) as
well as the omnipresence of the weather, these
well as the desired outcomes of this creative work
statements also reflect the sentiment, oft expressed
(communication, the formation of networks, a con-
Rambles.
Weather
125
126
dition of everything connected all at once) while
lines of Golden Sun (fig. 9) that connote the use of
sharpening his sense of the potential of pictures to
a draughtsman’s tool, the vertical lines in Rain or
achieve these ends. Because meteorology in Dove’s
Snow also articulate the procedures—measuring,
day constituted an instrumental and informational
mapping, and drawing— whereby longitudinal
network as well as a network of sociability or hu-
lines are demarcated graphically. The visible out-
man intercourse, and was also, and essentially, a
lines of the square shapes that hover around the
visual practice, one that through a series of transla-
lines and bands suggest that Dove employed a pan-
tions created a vast network of people, places, phe-
tograph or another drawing tool to plot the basic
nomena, and things, Dove, in seeking an analogous
forms of his composition. By placing emphasis on
result, emulated this practice, compelling his pic-
the act or idea of drawing in the space of a scene
tures to perform the interconnecting procedures of
of weather, Dove connects his picture making to
weather science. Rain or Snow (fig. 77), for instance,
the visual practices of meteorology as well as to
proposes a story of its own origins that recapitulates
the instruments utilized therein to register and
the genesis and operations of the bureau weather
render data, suggesting an instrumental role for
map. The tale it tells of its beginnings, partly a fic-
the painting itself. Essential to map making and to
tion of course, goes something like this: Dove as
ocean navigation, longitudinal measurements are
weatherman observed conditions and gathered data
themselves a sort of instrument, a graphic struc-
with mechanical instruments, including his barom-
ture that allows for the calculation and plotting of
eter. He then made note of weather likely to come—
location and movement. Understood in this way,
“rain or snow”—as foretold by current conditions.
Dove’s evocation of the earth’s coordinate system
And then he reduced this material complexity to
in Rain or Snow further underscores his claim for the
legible, digestible marks, as did the bureau mete-
instrumental capacity of the work.109 In an undated
orologists with the weather map. In Rain or Snow,
typewritten essay, Dove described an approach to
thin vertical lines stand for rain, tipped squares for
painting that accords with the appearance of his
snow, and sloping bands for wind or, perhaps, pres-
pictures in the 1940s, including Rain and Snow. “Try
sure fronts, designated on the weather map by curv-
two or three areas,” he stipulated, “and make each
ing isobars that simultaneously represent weather
one do its own thing within its own boundaries, the
in the present and foretell future weather events.
areas to be chosen in the same sense as a motif in
The tilting vertical lines—one white, one orange-
color.” He then characterized this process as akin to
brown, and one black—call to mind the color-coded
navigation: “To go on, I would say, to make the ‘fix’
linear notations of the weather map and also re-
as a navigator would say of the whole area and with
mind the viewer of the lines that mark longitudinal
two or three of those ‘fixes’ to establish an idea or in
values on a globe or a map, including the bureau’s
other words the ship’s position.”110 This is a fascinat-
weather map. The tilt itself evokes the curvature of
ing statement, for it likens the process of painting
such longitude lines, which are halved ellipses, but
to the task of locating the position of a ship on the
also points up the fact that on the weather map for
earth’s surface, an undertaking that in Dove’s day
North America the lines appear not as curves but as
entailed measuring the distances or angles of lati-
diagonals sloping either to the right or to the left.
tude or longitude from the ship to multiple known
In Dove’s painting, the intersection of the vertical
reference points, such as a known landmark like
lines with lateral bands and tipped squares con-
a lighthouse or an island, and then plotting posi-
jures the grid pattern produced by the intersection
tion lines from which to calculate the ship’s coor-
of longitudinal lines with their latitudinal counter-
dinates. “Fixing” a ship, then, required inserting it
parts, further linking Dove’s picture to the visual
into a network of relations comprising other enti-
language of the weather map, and to that of car-
ties as well as the linear grid fundamental to car-
tography more generally. Akin to the razor-straight
tography. In comparing fixing a painting to fixing
Chapter Two
a ship, then, Dove implied that the very process of
ficiency as well as the sensitivity of a barometer,
this pictorial fixing constituted a form of mapping,
an effect reinforced by pairing the straight-edged
a cartographic act that inserted a single painting or
metal strips with the softly floating and bending
the forms within that painting into a network of
forms that dominate the scene.
locations and relationships. In this way, painting as
Dove undertakes something analogous, if not
fixing manifested as an instrumental act, one akin
identical, in Partly Cloudy (fig. 76). Here, concentric
to the use of measuring devices to plot the world’s
bands that expand around a circle of yellow desig-
weather or a ship’s transoceanic course, an idea un-
nate the sun. Playing a fundamental role through-
derscored by Dove’s injunction in his undated essay
out Dove’s body of work, such a concentric circle
to make the parts of a painting “each . . . do its own
motif both indicates celestial bodies and natural
thing,” such that the very forms of a picture are in-
forms and functions as an emblem and instrument
strumentalized.
of transmission, communication, connection, and
The strips of silver leaf at the edges of Rain or
exchange, thereby embodying and enacting the
Snow also incarnate the instrumental component
fundamental procedures of Dove’s art. As such, the
of Dove’s weather watching, and of meteorology as
circle motif may also be said to evoke the idea of in-
a whole. In the same manner that metal paint and
finity, or infinite traversal, giving off the sense that
metal springs in other of Dove’s works suggest the
the circular bands might continue to multiply and
mechanism and media of photography or the con-
proliferate, spreading their radiance or their noise
ducting material and capacity of telegraphy, these
across canvas surface and beyond, and calling to
strips call to mind the barometer’s metal parts as
mind an unceasing cascade or an ever-expanding
well as the device’s translating function. Dove’s
series of ripples as well as the far-ranging reach and
placement of the metal at the edges of the scene,
impact of weather systems and weather science. In
as if enclosing or containing the painting’s interior
Partly Cloudy, this effect is explicit. The sun’s con-
space, produces the effect of outer pressing against
centric bands echo in the irregular yet still concen-
inner, with the dark-brown band’s upward arc and
tric bands of the wave and cloud forms beneath it,
the light-brown band’s downward buckling the re-
this point- counterpoint suggesting a substantial
sult of this inward compression. This figurative ap-
connection among all parts of the scene, an inter-
plication of pressure calls to mind the workings of
change among forces and materials that results
a barometer, which measures the weight of air as
in atmospheric phenomena such as evaporation,
it presses against a solid surface, while moments
rain, and fog or haze as well as more far-reaching,
of encounter, overlap, and color-shift throughout
global effects, such as currents, tides, trade winds,
the painting put the viewer in mind of the barom-
pressure systems, and storm fronts. In a 1940 let-
eter’s conversion of the phenomenal into the in-
ter to Stieglitz, Dove spoke of such an epic inter-
formational. Two shapes intersect the uppermost
change between the earth and the stuff of the sky.
lateral band. One, an inverted triangle, shifts from
Referring to the vast, empty terrains depicted in
gray to brown and then back again as it crosses
O’Keeffe’s recent paintings, Dove wrote, “I’ve often
over the band, and the other, a tilted and irregu-
wondered what those huge areas do to the sun and
lar square, does the same. A triangle that pierces
moon.”111 Because Partly Cloudy employs concentric
the lower band, just to the left of the black vertical
circles and banding effects to envision the invisible
line, undergoes a similar transformation, while the
but monumental, global connections between the
plane of intersection between the two gray squares
heavens and the earth and traversing the globe in
at bottom right is marked by a shift from a lighter
the context of a scene of weather reporting—“partly
to a darker, more saturated hue. The precision with
cloudy”—it is no stretch to suggest that Dove’s cir-
which Dove has applied the metallic leaf combined
cles were also intended to call to mind meteorolo-
with its fragile delicacy evokes the mechanical ef-
gy’s own abstract renditions of the earth and its acWeather
127
Fig. 86 Daily Weather Map, Oct. 6, 1941, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) Central Library Data Imaging Project, US Weather Bureau / NOAA / Department of Commerce.
128
tive atmosphere, especially the circular or elliptical
works are not just pictorial artifacts but also con-
groupings of isobars in a typical weather map that
sist of a cluster or collection of operations. They
indicate areas of low pressure and foretell the com-
are condensations of expressive processes within
ing of a storm (fig. 86). Dove’s circles are of course
the space of painting akin to the compression of
not illustrations of isobars, but they call on the sym-
infinitely complex temporal and spatial phenom-
bolic language of meteorology in order to incarnate
ena and various instrumental procedures into the
the idea of connection across space and time that is
two-dimensional space of the bureau weather map.
exemplified by a weather system traveling far and
Bear in mind that weather forecasting collapses
wide. As a result, they install within Dove’s painting
past, present, and future into a single prophetic
both the instrumental origins and the instrumental
act. As a representation, then, a work like Rain or
potential of the bureau weather map.
Snow purports to record a past event: Dove in the
These, then, are not simply pictures of weather,
company of weather, perhaps in a boat at sea. But
and they are not paintings that use weather only
in the moment depicted, Dove sees and experiences
as a jumping-off point for explorations of indi-
the weather as if in the present tense so as to make a
vidual feeling or subjective response. Rather, they
determination of future conditions. In this way, the
are paintings that aim to embody the capacity of
painting is simultaneously a record of the seen and
weather and weather science to encompass and in-
known and a description of the not yet experienced.
terlink, through acts of measuring and mapping,
In predicting conditions to come, Rain or Snow com-
the globe and its inhabitants, human and other-
municates with the future, speaking in advance of
wise. As if themselves instruments, paintings like
time, such that the material constraints of time, of
Rain or Snow and Partly Cloudy operate as translating
geography, and of human perception are surpassed,
devices, conjuring and conjoining in their confines
as they are by the wireless reach of broadcast radio,
every aspect of the process by which they were cre-
telegraphy, or mental telepathy. Rain or Snow, then,
ated: watching the weather, using an instrument,
proposes a new relationship between a being and
recording and interpreting data, creating an image,
time, and its temporal summa—past, present, and
communicating the result. In so doing they sug-
future all at once—figures summation as such.
gest a radical continuum among the things and
It is worth mentioning here that the word “fore-
bodies involved in this process. As such, these
cast,” used in relation to weather since the nine-
Chapter Two
teenth century, embodies a chief aspect of Dove’s
the “mother of all sciences.”113 Although it had an-
effort to reimagine relationality through reimagin-
cient roots, geography emerged as an academic dis-
ing the capacities of painting and making. That is,
cipline in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries,
“forecast” embodies the idea of “casting,” as in a net
in conjunction with exploration, colonization, and
or a line, so as to connect with or entangle an entity
expansion on the part of Europe and the United
in advance of or beyond something else. So in the
States, becoming by the 1870s a staple of university
production of a forecast, one casts into the future
curricula, prompting the establishment of geo-
in order to secure a sense of what is to come, hoping
graphic societies, and rapidly professionalizing af-
to capture and reel into the present an image or idea
ter 1900, a process that accelerated during the First
of the future. Understood in this way, “forecasting”
World War.114 Cartography, one of the chief tools
is a close cousin to “broadcasting,” as in radio, an-
of geography and meteorology both, and a matter
other of Dove’s passions, which entails the casting
of especial concern within geography classrooms,
of radio waves into the atmosphere from a single
textbooks, and societies, served for Dove as a sa-
point to be picked up by a widespread network of
lient pictorial and conceptual model. The scholar
receivers, with the radio signal, while not a hook on
Denis Cosgrove’s characterization of geographi-
the future, thus becoming a many-threaded web or
cal mapping as a pictorial endeavor entailing the
net as it spreads through the atmosphere, and also
“complex construction and communication of
a multiply shared and thus interconnecting expe-
spatial knowledge” captures what Dove saw in the
rience on the part of those listening. And it bears
practice, in particular cartography’s combination
mentioning that, in the early years of radio and into
of drastically reductive abstractions and lateral,
the 1920s, one often had to “fish”—this was the pe-
all- encompassing spread, its simultaneous com-
riod term—for stations with one’s receiver because
pulsion to distill and set into wide circulation, as
signal strengths were unreliable or weak. Dove re-
exemplified by the weather map.115 Cartography
ported doing such “fishing.” Thus it is fair to see
showed Dove exactly what his abstract pictures
the radiating bands and concentric circles of Rain
could be and do. This was definitely the case in
or Snow as akin to the radio-wave bandings of a work
the 1940s, when he painted Rain or Snow and Partly
such as Me and the Moon (fig. 52), as nets cast out and
Cloudy, a period during which his pictures began to
in search of connection, as network or system in
flatten and organize themselves as if cartographic
addition to symbol or sign.112
systems and to look more like two-dimensional sur-
As paintings, works such as Rain or Snow and
faces than cross sections or projections of nature’s
Partly Cloudy and other of Dove’s pictures demon-
inner workings. These late works are usually under-
strate what was to Dove’s mind their radical poten-
stood as departures from Dove’s earlier production,
tial: their capacity as works of art to model but also
precursors to Abstract Expressionism’s embrace of
to make literally manifest through manifold acts
total nonobjectivity, experiments in form, color,
of translation a continuum among entities, phe-
and line for the very sake of form, color, and line.116
nomena, and cognitive and material operations.
Despite its abstractions and distortions, one easily
Hence my suggestion, at the outset of this study,
recognizes a work like Sun Drawing Water as a land-
that one might characterize Dove’s practice as a
scape, a portion of the land selected and then ren-
form of geography. Geography is the science that
dered as art. Works such as Sand and Sea and Flight,
deals with the study of the earth: its lands, features,
both 1943, on the other hand, all but abandon ref-
inhabitants, and phenomena. That is, geography is
erence to the world (figs. 87, 88). Yet to my mind,
the science that accounts for everything. It takes
when viewed in the light of Dove’s preoccupations
as its object of study the world (“geo”) and it aims
as I have thus far described them— his fixation
to write that world (“graphy”). Or at least it did in
with language, translation, and communication,
the early twentieth century, when it was dubbed
and with meteorology— these late works count Weather
129
Fig. 87 Top, Arthur G. Dove, Sand and Sea, 1943, oil and sand on canvas, 271⁄8 × 36 in., Mildred Lane Kemper Art Museum, Washington University in St. Louis, university purchase, Bixby Fund, 1952. Fig. 88 Bottom, Arthur G. Dove, Flight, 1943, wax emulsion on canvas, 12 × 20 in. (30.48 × 50.8 cm), The Phillips Collection, Washington, DC, Bequest of Elmira Bier, 1976. Any reproduction of this image shall not be made without written consent of The Phillips Collection, Washington, DC.
incontrovertibly as landscapes. But they ask their
dence and interconnectedness of all phenomena,
viewers to conceive of them as landscape in a new
terrains, and living things here packed into a single
sense. Dove’s pictures constitute not views seen or
annotated image. The same universalizing impulse
experienced subjectively. Rather, they exist as an in-
compelled Humboldt’s early use of isobars and iso-
strumental terrain: a system, a discipline, a grounds
therms to indicate pressure and temperature av-
for knowing constituted not only by a sense of place
erages, which to him represented the equilibrium
but also by the materials and procedures of earth
and integration of all natural forces; this impulse
science and by the fantasy proffered by such science
also drove his magnum opus, Cosmos, published in
of an utterly interlinked, essentially relational, and
multiple volumes between the years 1842 and 1865,
radically aggregate world.
which strove to imagine a wholly integrated and
Put another way, Dove’s paintings proffer land-
unified universe, with close observation and accu-
scape as geography. The simple, self- contained
rate measurement the tools by which connections
forms of Sand and Sea, for example, resemble puzzle
and interdependencies would be identified.117
pieces or cutouts. They also call to mind continents
Humboldt’s flattening and sectioning of Chim-
and oceans packed together in the space of a world
borazo inadvertently anticipates the flattened and
map. Dove renders the brown platelike shapes in
distilled forms of Dove’s Sand and Sea, as if a prog-
this painting with actual sand. As a product of ero-
nostication of the radical simplicity that would be
sion, specifically the interaction between mineral
required to visualize the idea of a network—Dove’s
matter and water, sand serves as a perfect emblem
desired relational summation—equal in its unfath-
of the essential interlinking of the land and the sea,
omable complexity to the infinitely threaded fabric
a status underscored by the fact that sand literally
of the universe itself. The landform on which Hum-
occupies the shoreline boundary between the ocean
boldt’s Chimborazo sits is reduced drastically in
and solid terrain. Dove’s Clouds (1927), materializes
scale and cropped at the base, so that the country of
this idea in an equally literal sense (fig. 89). A strip
Ecuador looks like an island; the ocean surrounding
of sandpaper pasted to the work’s metal support
this seeming island intersects with the edges of the
black storm indicates a shore darkened by blue-
scene at both right and left. In both cases—implied
clouds and rain; the metal support is zinc, an ele-
island and truncated sea—the cropping infers con-
ment abundant in the earth’s crust. The simplicity
tinuation beyond the frame, an effect similar to
of the composition of Sand and Sea belies its ambi-
Dove’s own cutting short of shapes at the canvas
tion, a desire to achieve monumentally on par with
edge in Sand and Sea. Such cropping also puts for-
the ambition of the grand illustrations that accom-
ward the ocean as the global connective tissue par
panied the German naturalist Alexander von Hum-
excellence, an idea that inspired meteorology’s dub-
boldt’s endeavors in physical geography, including
bing of its own privileged connective tissue—the
the “Tableau physique des Andes et pays voisins,”
earth’s atmosphere and its attendant effects—an
which Humboldt made to accompany his Essai sur
“ocean of air.” In Sounding the Ocean of Air, published
la géographie des plantes (1807) (fig. 90). Obsessive
in 1900, the meteorologist A. Lawrence Rotch char-
in its ravenous, chock-full accumulation of myriad
acterized this “ocean” as a terrain of exploration and
forms of data—adorned with the names of individ-
use akin to the seas and employed the term “sound-
ual plant species and vegetation zones, flanked on
ing,” derived from ocean exploration, to describe in-
either side by twenty columns of quantification and
vestigation of the earth’s atmosphere. Mechanical
observation, and annotated with more than twenty-
sounding devices for surveying the seafloor were in
six thousand words in the text of the Essai—this
use by the late nineteenth century, and electronic
view of the Andean peak Mount Chimborazo prof-
echo-sounders, a sonic technology that used sound
fers an expression of Humboldt’s belief in a condi-
waves to map ocean depths and seafloor topogra-
tion of cosmic equilibrium, the global interdepen-
phy, were developed in the 1920s.118 Rotch’s use of Weather
131
Fig. 89 Top, Arthur G. Dove, Clouds, 1927, oil and sandpaper on zinc, 38.1 × 50.8 cm (15 × 20 in.), Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, Gift of the William H. Lane Foundation, 1990.401. Photograph © 2016 Museum of Fine Arts, Boston. Fig. 90 Bottom, Alexander von Humboldt and Aimé Bonpland, “Tableau physique des Andes et pays voisins” [“Physical Tableau of the Andes and Neighboring Countries”], in Essai sur la géographie des plantes [Essay on the Geography of Plants] (Paris: Fr. Schoell; Tübingen: J. G. Cotta, 1807). Photograph © Kew Library, Kew Royal Botanic Gardens, Richmond, Surrey, UK.
the term “sounding” to describe the procedures of
blages.121 When Dove recorded creating a “stuff
meteorology thereby reinforces the metaphorical
thing” in his diary entry for April 3, 1943, he most
interchangeability of the air and the ocean common
likely referred to a preliminary version of Sand and
to the first half of the twentieth century, and it illu-
Sea. Dove used the term “things” to describe those
minates the larger context of Dove’s privileging of
works of his that incorporated found objects and
the waveform as a connecting and binding vocabu-
everyday materials, including sand, and he dis-
lary or motif. Because the waveform literally consti-
cussed working with sand in an entry two days later,
tuted one global connective tissue—the ocean—it
on April 5.122 The brute materiality, the condition
can also be said to metaphorically constitute the
of emphatic physicalness and presence that actual
atmosphere-as-ocean. If one takes the interlocking
sand brings to Sand and Sea accords with remarks
shapes of Sand and Sea to be essentially interwoven
made by Dove included in the pamphlet for his
in such a manner—land masses, stretches of ocean,
1943 exhibition at An American Place. “I would like
and the sky above stitched together by the instru-
to make something,” he said, “that is real in itself,
mental sounding of ubiquitous waves— one can
that does not remind anyone of any other thing,
understand Dove’s own literal stitching together of
and that does not have to be explained.”123 If Dove
forms in this work as enacting the assaying and in-
added sand to Sand and Sea, made the same year as
terconnecting work of meteorology and geography,
this statement, in order to make it “real in itself,”
positing the painting as its own kind of sounding
this would have been a powerful gesture, for with it
and mapping device.
Dove rejected the idea that the work was an abstrac-
In Sand and Sea, the viewer consumes the earth’s
tion of something else—what the weather map was,
surface from a vantage point somewhere within
that is, an abstract, synoptic view of the real—in
that very atmosphere-as-ocean, an ocean of air that,
favor of declaring it real on its own. This would in-
if one takes the brown shapes to be continents and
dicate that he meant his aerial view of continental
the blue and blue-gray patches to be the surround-
terrain and the surrounding sea to adopt but also to
ing sea, offers up a vast terrestrial expanse.119 The
surpass the capacity of the weather map by instan-
dark shape at left and the expanse of brown sand
tiating materially, in actuality, an all-encompassing,
at center interact like two clasped hands or two
systemic view: not the idea of a cosmic sum, but
puzzle pieces snapped together, reinforcing the idea
that sum itself or, at least, the aspiration that a
that the composition, following the example of a
work of art could generate such a condition or be
weather map, means to suggest a conglomeration
such a thing. The idea that the isolines of a weather
of interconnected terrains, forces, and phenomena.
map proffered a bird’s-eye view goes some way in
The rhetoric of period weather watching of course
characterizing, if inadvertently, this imagining of
confirmed this implied link between meteorology
a paradoxical simultaneity of abstraction and the
and a continental view. In 1900, one prominent al-
utterly real. Isolines constitute an abstraction, and
manac author characterized his account of changes
are of course not at all visible to a bird or to any
in climate from region to region as “a grand mete-
other creature that might hover up in the air. But
orological panorama” and a “bird’s eye view,” and in
implicit in the suggestion that isolines are what one
the decades that followed, such descriptions pro-
would see of the weather if one looked from a perch
liferated, including one that appeared in The Book
high above the earth’s surface is the idea that an all-
of the Sky, whose author characterized the weather
encompassing and interconnecting view, were it to
map as offering the earthbound observer a bird’s-
exist, would be a view not of everything as it is and
eye view of present and future conditions by way of
looks but one of graphic translation, of the world
legible patterns made out of isolines.
120
transmuted into diagram, schema, pattern, or code.
Because it incorporates a found material, Sand
Implicit, then, in the conceit of seeing isolines from
and Sea has been counted among Dove’s assem-
the sky is the idea that graphic translation conWeather
133
stitutes perhaps the truest, most valid state, that
some taken of the Centerport area where he settled
graphic notation stands as essence or the “real.”
in 1938, among them shots that included views of
Thus also inherent in this suggestion is the notion
his own house at the edge of a mill pond. And aerial
that the two operations of human notation and
imagery proliferated in American culture during
expression that most intrigued Dove, translation
this period, as exemplified by Waldo Frank’s use of
and communication, were understood by him to be
a commercially produced Fairchild Aerial Surveys
uniquely suited to accomplish the task of hypoth-
photograph to illustrate an essay, “Straight Streets,”
esizing a means to fashion a condition of intersub-
from his collection In the American Jungle (1937).125
jective joining together. In the series of statements
Flight, of course, played a major role in the devel-
that accompanied his 1929 exhibition at the Inti-
opment of meteorology in the twentieth century,
mate Gallery, Dove had stated that “there is no such
for it enabled first-hand scrutiny and measurement
thing as abstraction.” It is “extraction, gravitation
of the phenomena of the earth’s upper atmosphere.
toward a certain direction, and minding your own
With the onset of the Second World War, under-
business. If the extract be clear enough its value will
standing and predicting the behavior of this ocean
124
The operation of extraction, which entails
of air became essential to the tactical and strategic
removing something from a source by separating it
deployment of air power, an increasingly crucial
from other materials resident in that source, hews
component of international warfare in the 1930s
close as a description to Dove’s process. Rather than
and 1940s.126 In this way, Flight highlights seeing as
distilling the essential or the general from the par-
a theme and in particular the prospect of supersight
ticular, a painting like Sand and Sea extracts mate-
in a manner akin to Sun Drawing Water, Moon, and
rials from multiple sources—sand from the beach,
Fog Horns, which visualize entities and phenomena
visual signs from cartography, an aerial point of
not available to the unaided human eye. “There is
view from the phenomenon of flight—and recom-
nothing in all nature of greater interest to human
bines them, refiguring their role rather than their
beings than the atmosphere,” declared Edwin C.
form. The sand of Sand and Sea anchors the work in
Martin in Our Own Weather. But the difficulty in
the material world, further indicating Dove’s favor-
fathoming this, he continued, “is due, no doubt,
ing of extraction over abstraction and suggesting
largely to the fact that we see next to nothing of it.”
that he imagined this work as functioning instru-
Martin noted that certain effects involving water
mentally, like Golden Sun or Rain or Snow, alongside
vapor and dust give weather periodic visibility, in-
other physical objects and devices, including ba-
cluding the formation of crepuscular rays, the very
rometers, pantographs, and record players, so as to
things that Dove conjured in Sun Drawing Water for
activate and cement, rather than simply represent,
the purpose of likening the operations and effects
a state of radical interconnection and intersubjec-
of his pictures to the illuminating and pictorializ-
tivity, one modeled by the cosmos itself as well as
ing action of light. But, in the main, Martin wrote,
by the sciences dedicated to fathoming its nature
weather as a system or series of systems eludes our
and scope.
view and for this reason our scant faculty for seeing
exist.”
134
In Flight (fig. 88), Dove’s rotating forms evoke
the weather must be compensated for by technolo-
the spin of a propeller while the scene as a whole
gies such as the weather map.127 In Flight, Dove reg-
connotes the perspective granted by flight, an aerial
isters the paradoxical coexistence of nonseeing and
view that transforms the world into a patchwork
total sight within the practice of early twentieth-
of abutting colors and shapes and that allows lit-
century weather watching and reporting. At once a
eral access to a version of the vast perspective that
mere cluster of colored shapes and a cartography-
meteorology and geography only abstractly imag-
like prospect of the surface of the earth made pos-
ine. Dove was directly familiar with aerial photo-
sible by an aerial point of view, the painting signi-
graphs, having in 1940 been shown by a neighbor
fies the simultaneity of blindness and total sight
Chapter Two
that gave rise to the perceived wondrousness of
less, disorienting, antiperspective views, Stieglitz’s
weather and weather prediction during the period.
photographs analogized the weather map as an
Authors touted aerial travel as a means to truly see
array of data and as a gesture toward extrahuman
and understand the earth’s atmosphere and its ef-
cognition. Stieglitz’s clouds, and cloud forms in
fects, particularly clouds, the period’s signal but
general, may also have provided a model for Dove’s
elusive indicators of current conditions and harbin-
own abstract vocabulary. Clouds in the period were
gers of weather to come. The seeming intangibility
described as if the equivalent of abstraction—hard
of clouds, along with their transient nature, made
to pin down, nonreferential, recalcitrant, resistant
them less than ideal objects of sustained scrutiny
to interpretation—even as they were understood
and study and also produced a confounding prob-
to be a monumentally important source of human
lem of language, for it was immensely difficult to
knowledge and acknowledged as prominent, hyper-
fashion a systematic terminology for entities that
visible atmospheric effects, physical and palpable
seemed wholly without system or consistency. Ad-
manifestations of an actively if invisibly intercon-
ditionally, the view of the sky from the earth, as
nected world. Clouds, which gave up so little but
one author warned, was “deceptive,” as was one’s
did and meant so much, would have been a perfect
sense of the earth itself, and only a tour through
template for Dove’s desired instrumentalized ab-
cloudland and the view from above could offer
straction, for his attempt to muster the materials
128
an objective, undistorted, and rigorous survey.
of his practice into abstract yet vital, real and yet
Flight gives the viewer both perspectives, one from
not, animating and actualizing machines.
the ground as if looking up—what enables the be-
Dove’s inclusion of a propeller- like shape in
holder to see the propeller—and one looking down
Flight is significant in this regard. Dove was not
at the earth’s surface from a plane, doubling up in a
averse to rendering machines or the trappings of
manner similar to the bureau weather map, which
industry in his paintings, as evidenced by his views
graphically renders a sweeping and synoptic conti-
of storage tanks, oil rigs, motors, and gears as well
nental view at the same time it notates in its tables
as by his inclusion of clock and watch springs and
a series of particular instrumental readings taken
other metal parts in his assemblages, but he cre-
at specific locations on the ground. The doubled
ated literal representations of machines relatively
perspective of Flight allows insight into what Dove
infrequently. Of course, the propeller form in Flight
must have admired in Stieglitz’s Equivalents, photo-
equally evokes an actual part of a plane and the idea
graphic images of cloud-filled skies captured from
of rotational propulsion itself. As such, the painting
an earthbound point of view. The camera, like flight,
depicts a machine in action, its parts moving in pre-
was touted as an instrument through which the sky
cise coordination—an effect evoked by Dove’s viv-
could be transformed into an object of scientific
idly colored and carefully orchestrated shapes—as
scrutiny or into a scientific record, and the meteo-
well as the result: airborne motion. The human
rological texts from the period that included photo-
of course played a central role in early twentieth-
graphic illustrations dedicated most of these plates
century aviation, for, with the exception of a small
to photographs of clouds, the majority of which are
number of early, unmanned aircraft, a plane could
conspicuously difficult to read, ironically so, given
become airborne only when there was a pilot at
129
Stieglitz’s photographs
the controls.130 Dove’s painting, then, with its dual
may have struck Dove as a parallel species to the
perspective, suggests a relationship between hu-
weather map, and to meteorology itself. Combin-
man and machine similar to that formed through
ing the registration of scientific data and thus the
the use of a pantograph or a record player, with the
potential for scientific explanation with the other-
machine producing an effect—material, visual, or
than- scientific suggestion of something beyond
sonic—when activated by human hands. The im-
human vision and reach, created through horizon-
plied clockwise rotation of the multicolored propel-
their lauded purpose.
Weather
135
ler form certainly calls to mind a hand turning a
registration of itself. Accuracy of meteorological
phonograph crank or guiding a pantograph pointer
data was believed to hinge on the disembodiment
along the contours of forms in a small-scale sketch,
and automatization of measurement techniques,
and this is relevant here because in both cases—
and the idea of self-acting registration supplied an
pantography and the phonograph—effects result
extrascientific source of wonder at the time.132 In
that exceed the limits of intention. The sound
Our Own Weather, for example, Martin marveled at
emitted by a phonograph is a product of live mu-
meteorology’s solution to the problem of measur-
sic performed in a studio but also of the machinery
ing wind given its variability at different elevations.
that elicits this sound from a plastic disc, and of
Meteorologists, he wrote,
the plastic disc itself, creating sonic artifacts not native to the musical composition or traceable to
have subdued the wind into making, with the aid
any intentionality, human or otherwise (as I will
of automatic devices, its own record. All through
discuss at greater length in the next chapter). At its
the day, all through the night, and all through
inception, observers marveled at the phonograph’s
the year, and whether any observer is present or
ability to read itself, absent a human interlocutor.
131
not, it is tracing on paper, in a plain infallible
And pantography produces a copy at a larger scale
line, just as if it were a human draftsman, its
than the original sketch by means of tracing, but
every descent and mount in strength, from none
of course that tracing, even setting aside questions
at all to the mightiest it is capable of. Because of
of scale, never perfectly reproduces the exact con-
this ingenious management of it a thing always
tours of the original. In this way, the phonograph
invisible and ever varying gets exhibited to us, at
and pantography possess an automatistic aspect,
chosen places of observation, in its quality and
whereby what is produced exceeds the design or
action with such a constancy and minuteness
will of the human activating the apparatus in ques-
as was never any human being nor, indeed, any
tion. Any relation involving the collaboration of
living creature.133
human and machine—as with a pilot flying a plane,
136
a machine that also responds on its own as if will-
In Martin’s characterization, the wind measures
fully to certain conditions of flight—will have such
itself, producing a data representation that, ac-
an aspect. It is in part the automatism resident in
cording to the author, surpassed in its fidelity all
human-machine relationships that I believe Dove
previous observations and descriptions on the part
wished to evoke by instantiating, through a single
of living things. Dove, of course, cared little about
form, a machine part, the propeller, in addition to
fidelity to appearances, but the notion of self-
rendering the end result of human activation of the
action on the part of a nonliving entity, like that of
machine as a whole, that is, flight. And it is in part
a barometer or the wind, along with the prospect
the automatistic aspect of pantography and the
of extrahuman seeing, would have been immensely
phonograph that, to my mind, drew Dove to these
compelling to him and surely played a role in his at-
technologies in the first place.
traction to weather and weather science in the first
I raise the issue of automatism in a discussion
place. Self-action was, in fact, an artistic objective
of the meteorological condition of Dove’s works
of Dove’s. Dove likened extraction, the operation he
in part because Dove may have used a pantograph
identified with his own process, to gravitation and
to create Flight but also because meteorology’s
to “minding your own business,” suggesting that his
automatisms constituted a source of fascination
work proceeded according to a force over which he
during the period under discussion, including the
had no control—in this case, gravity, a fundamental
extraobservational, automatic registration of data
force of the universe—and when it was left to its
by instruments such as the barometer as well as
own devices.134 In the letter to McCausland that ex-
what was described in period texts as weather’s
pressed his desire to establish art through rhythmic
Chapter Two
formation as an “automatic force,” Dove wrote, “To
measuring automaton, but this notion would have
build a head and put on it hair and eyes and lips
appealed to him precisely because wind was an at-
and ears like the handles on a jug is not enough. To
mospheric force to which was attributed the facility
make it breathe as does the rest of nature it must
of global interconnection. This capacity for binding
have a basic rhythm. In other words I should like
far-reaching terrains together through phenomena
to make a painting exist in itself.”
135
In a series of
notes, he reiterated and elaborated on this idea:
such as trade winds and hurricanes, together with wind’s ability to be its own meteorologist, posited wind as a thing of extraordinary power and, conse-
Have always felt that I could stand knee deep in
quently, as a ready exemplar for Dove’s art, which
the sand or water and paint what was going on
he wished to instill with instrumental potential,
inside. That is working directly on the paint-
and to do so in a literal sense even if this was ul-
ing . . . without resorting to the representing of
timately impossible, and not simply at the level of
anything but simply to the presenting of the
metaphor. Dove’s description of himself in the let-
thing felt. . . . That is not using nature as model
ter to McCausland standing in sand or in a stream
glancing back and forth. Nature to the eye,
and making direct contact with the object of his art
through the arm to the hand and to the picture.
along with his characterization of the chain of con-
But doing the thing you are doing, making some-
nections among his vision, his body, and his work
136
thing you want to function by itself.
established in the act of making suggest that Dove may well have imagined himself as instrumental
Dove expresses in these remarks a desire to produce
within his pictures-cum-devices. Just as his signa-
a painting that would, once created, exist unto itself
tures colluded with and participated in the forms
and function on its own, a wish that reiterates his
and operations of his paintings, making him over
aspiration to paint parts of a picture so that they did
as a simultaneously external and internal activator
their own thing. This was not a longing for whole-
or prompt, Dove’s sense of himself translating from
sale disembodiment or formalist purity— Dove
human into machine (or into wind-as-machine), be-
writes here of an essential connection among eye,
coming part of a work’s automatic operations, oper-
arm, hand, and picture, after all—or for an animis-
ating in step with that work in the act of creation,
tic art. Rather, my sense is that Dove’s articulated
fashions Dove the artist as Dove the instrument.137
desire for a self-acting painting, one that remained
This interweaving of self and object—an instance
yet in process after the fact of its making, drew on
of a human becoming a registering and translating
the model of automatism proffered by meteorology
machine, conversely analogous to a painting ren-
and its procedures. Barometers and wind, within
dered operational by assuming the properties of
weather science, were automatons only in the sense
human language and communication—would of
that, once activated or engaged by a human, they
course constitute the definitive expression of in-
executed a procedure by their own devices: barome-
tersubjective association and relation. And in the
ters registered atmospheric pressure; the wind mea-
space of a painting that proffers the sky from the
sured its own velocity. Their automatic operations
point of view of an earthbound human as well as a
proceeded from a human-machine collaboration,
view from above made possible by a machine, and
from an exchange between a person and a register-
does so by activating the concepts and vocabularies
ing instrument that produced the conditions for
of the totalizing technologies of earth science, the
self-action, which entailed taking a measurement
propeller in Flight, whose spin within the canvas
apart from and unavailable to the intervention of
produces the effect of a rotating embrace of all other
the human senses or a phenomenon measuring
compositional parts and calls to mind the spin of a
itself. One cannot know whether, in point of fact,
record and the trace of a pantograph, would serve
Dove was tuned in to the idea of the wind as a self-
perfectly to signify this absolute interchange. Weather
137
Fig. 91 Arthur G. Dove, Your Baby, 1942, collage on newsprint. Photograph courtesy of Christie’s, New York.
The propeller also and inevitably binds Flight
Dove’s watercolors in 1939 and, later, a painting,
to its time and place. In his diary entry for Decem-
Lattice and Awning, dated 1941).139 In Dove’s diary
ber 7, 1941, the day the Japanese military attacked
entry for November 17, 1942, he wrote that he had
the American naval base at Pearl Harbor in Ha-
“Pasted up ‘NY Times’ for Bernsteins.”140 Dove’s
waii, Dove wrote in bold script “WAR with Japan”
note refers to a collage, now called Your Baby and
and then circled the phrase; in subsequent entries
previously unremarked in the literature, that he
Dove treats the participation of the United States
crafted on that day by pasting an assortment of
in the Second World War with equal intensity and
clippings onto the front page of the November 17
makes note of war-related blackouts and food and
edition of the New York Times, which he then gave
138
Dove’s son, William, worked in war
to the Bernsteins (fig. 91). News of the war dom-
production in 1942 and was drafted into the army
inated the paper’s headlines, which included dis-
in 1943. And Dove received firsthand accounts of
patches from Europe, the Soviet Union, Africa, and
the European theater from his friend and doctor in
the Pacific. Dove pasted over the majority of these
Centerport, J. C. ( Jake) Bernstein, who had joined
reports, replacing stories about foreign policy, mil-
the armed forces in 1942 and spent three years over-
itary strategy, and battles with less-serious-minded
seas (and, with his wife Julia, had acquired one of
imagery. Photographic portraits of individuals not
fuel rationing.
138
Chapter Two
associated with the headlines in question, adver-
intended by Dove as a private memento and a ges-
tisements for lingerie and fertilizer, a want ad for
ture of friendship, its intermixing of war news, au-
“beautiful girls,” a playing card, and images of a
tobiographical references, and jokes characteristic
toilet, a dancing woman, pipes, and a coiled snake
of his irreverent, at times bawdy sense of humor
jostle for attention with the day’s news. Dove
confirms and underscores the connection he felt
added text to the page, as well, creating in conjunc-
between his world and that of the war overseas.
tion with the newspaper copy a Dadaesque jumble
The war, of course, did not severely impinge
of sense and nonsense. Many of these additions
on Dove, but it was a constant in his everyday life
were autobiographical, including textual additions
during these years, and as early as 1939 it found
reading “Reds,” “Arthur Dove,” “Bernstein,” “Soldier
its way into the mainstream of his pictorial out-
Doctor” (above a pasted photograph of Bernstein
put. In War (fig. 92), a work on paper from 1939, a
in uniform), and “Greenlawn Pharmacy” (a refer-
bomb blast takes the form of a bolt of lightning
ence to the Bernstein’s hometown of Greenlawn),
or a column of fire, blue in color and tinged with a
and many were humorous. Dove pasted the head-
blazing-orange hue, spewing debris, ash, or shrap-
line “Mrs. Roosevelt Receives 3 Kings” immedi-
nel across the right half of the composition; alumi-
ately adjacent to a playing card featuring the king
num leaf applied throughout registers the machin-
of spades. Above the pasted ad for manure-based
ery of warfare responsible for this infernal strike.
fertilizer, Dove added copy from a marketing cam-
Other works, including two closely matched scenes,
paign for a constipation remedy, making it seem as
both entitled Italy Goes to War, one an oil painting
if the cows featured in the fertilizer pitch were in
and the other a watercolor, also render the explo-
digestive straits, and throughout he appended text
sive violence of war, in this case as precipitated by
that commented ironically on the paper’s content:
Italy’s invasion of France in 1940, which accompa-
“Phew!” “Are you happy about it?” and “Burlesque
nied Italy’s declaration of war on both France and
Type Show.” Although the collage was presumably
Britain.141 Although the paintings U.S. (1940) and
Fig. 92 Left, Arthur G. Dove, War, 1939, gouache and aluminum leaf on paper, 7 × 5 in. (17.8 × 12.7 cm), The Museum of Modern Art, New York, NY, USA, given anonymously, by exchange, 468.1980. Digital image © The Museum of Modern Art / Licensed by SCALA / Art Resource, NY. Fig. 93 Right, Arthur G. Dove, U.S., 1940, oil on canvas, 50.8 × 81.3 cm, Museo Thyssen-Bornemisza, Madrid, 1975.23. Photo Credit: Museo Thyssen- Bornemisza / SCALA / Art Resource, NY.
Weather
139
Fig. 94 Arthur G. Dove, 1941, 1941, wax emulsion on canvas, 25 × 35 in. (63.5 × 88.9 cm), The Phillips Collection, Washington, DC, acquired 1942. Any reproduction of this image shall not be made without written consent of The Phillips Collection, Washington, DC.
1941 (1941) (figs. 93, 94) do not explicitly reference
terconnection, as also a matter of confronting the
war, their titles and appearance, in particular the
horror of a pan-geographic, world war, one with un-
palette of army greens and olive drab, the morph-
precedented global reach and devastation, as made
ing of abstract shapes into the form of a helmeted
possible in part by the very science and technology,
or gas-masked head, and the possible allusion to
from meteorology to flight, that Dove strove to em-
a falling bomb or a tossed grenade as well as the
ulate and embody in his work.143 The banding and
configuration of ovals that resembles an airplane
quasi-concentric effects in 1941 bear close resem-
propeller in 1941, identify them as war-related in
blance to those I have described as connoting in-
theme. In a 1940 letter to Stieglitz, Dove referred
terconnection, networks, and human sociability or
to U.S., which he reported having painted “at the
exchange throughout Dove’s imagery, reminding us
German Inn across the way,” in the same breath that
that totality, in Dove’s conception, could take either
he described the inn playing “Taps” and lowering
a futuristic and utopian or a distinctively dystopian
the flag at night and alongside a conjecture that
shape.
the war was “just a means of keeping the mob occupied” while diplomats “go on with their intrigue.”142 And it was during the period of global escalation
140
Full Circle
leading up to the Allies’ declaration of war on Ja-
Dove’s work endeavored to imagine a dynamic and
pan that Dove created Neighborly Attempt at Murder
all-encompassing web of relations wherein bound-
(1941) (fig. 115), one of only a handful of paintings
aries between things and beings were dismantled
by him that connote violence in the extreme. Given
as easily as trade winds, ocean currents, storm sys-
the presence of war in Dove’s life and in his body
tems, and fighter jets defied and dismantled hemi-
of work, one could understand his meteorological
spheric, continental, or national borders. In his
and geographic impulses, including his aerializing
diary entry for October 11, 1939, Dove noted that
views, which articulated fantasies of utopian in-
he was “putting down one color after another in
Chapter Two
Fig. 95 Arthur Garfield Dove diary pages dated Oct. 11 and 12, 1939. Arthur and Helen Torr Dove Papers, 1905–1974, Archives of American Art, Smithsonian Institution, 3:2:10, image #283.
formation,” employing the term, “formation,” that
weather map, designating significant systems of
throughout his writing connoted interconnection,
pressure, served as a chief source of weather knowl-
communication, and networked exchange. Adja-
edge for the public as well as for bureau forecast-
cent to this note he drew a spiraling line that closely
ers, and everyday meteorological literacy assumed
resembles the concentric circle motif ubiquitous
immediate recognition and comprehension of this
144
The implied link
visual cue. The structure of the atmosphere itself
between the idea of interconnection and the circle
was described visually as well as verbally in terms of
motif posited by this pairing leaves no doubt that,
stacked and interconnected circular forms. The au-
in Dove’s pictorial world, the interconnecting sys-
thor of Man and Weather (1926), Alexander McAdie,
tems of weather and those of the science of meteo-
for instance, wrote that our atmosphere “may be
within his body of work (fig. 95).
rology found their pictorial equivalent in the circle
likened to a six-story building. That is, there are six
form. This makes sense, for circles were prominent
concentric aerospheres or air floors,” what he also
in the visual and verbal rhetoric of weather science
called a “six-story air shell.”145 The exact specifica-
and, in Dove’s own weather watching and record-
tions of the atmosphere’s various layers, especially
ing, they constituted a fundamental diagram-
those not yet reachable by humans, were still in
matic form. Circles configured, either actually or
scientific flux, but the very terms used to describe
graphically, certain of the fundamental processes
them, including “troposphere” and “stratosphere”
of weather and the signal phenomena of weather
along with the word “atmosphere” itself, perpetu-
science, especially those that figured largely in con-
ated the stacked-circle metaphor. Period illustrators
temporaneous meteorological discussions of global
often depicted these concentric layers in the form
weather patterns, including cyclones, anticyclones,
of a sectional view of the nestled spheres. Charles
and hurricanes, either concentric in nature or con-
F. Brooks, for example, in Why the Weather? (1924),
centric in form when represented graphically. The
illustrated the prevailing ocean winds against a
concentric circle isobar patterns of the bureau
backdrop of atmospheric semistrata, a format typWeather
141
ical for the period (fig. 96). In Meteorology for Avia-
fabric of existence: celestial bodies, sound waves,
tor and Layman (1930), Richard Whatham included
gusts of wind, clock springs, the ocean, humans,
a diagram of the structure of the atmosphere that
animals, foghorns, shorthand, Einstein, Joyce, the
combined a sectional view of the major layers with
Mona, love letters, jazz, seagulls, airplanes, thun-
an evocation of the three-dimensional globe (fig.
derstorms, the tides, phonograph records, radio re-
97). Concentric circles and spheres have of course
ceivers, and so forth. What is more, if circles were a
long been used to represent the earth itself. From
signal form of meteorology and Dove wished for his
ancient cosmological models, including Aristotle’s
creations to do the work that meteorology did, his
conception of the celestial spheres, to John Cleves
concentric circular forms would have taken shape
Symmes Jr.’s hollow earth theory in the nineteenth
so as to fashion his act of making as meteorology,
century, which inspired both Edgar Allan Poe and
as an equivalent binding together of all existence
Jules Verne, concentricity has served thinkers of all
and all phenomena through material and pictorial
stripes in their imagining of the structure of the
means. In this way, his paintings and assemblages
earth and the surrounding universe as well as in hy-
existed as instruments that registered, translated,
pothesizing the interactions among celestial bodies
and communicated among multiple parts even as
This concentric model, if not all the
they materially fashioned the very intersubjective
ideas that gave rise to it, appeared throughout me-
network that would arise from these collective op-
teorological writing in the first half of the twentieth
erations.
in motion.
142
146
century, as typified by the illustrations in Willis Lu-
Dove was not alone in imagining an apparatus
ther Moore’s Descriptive Meteorology (1910) in which
or organism capable of such a feat. In Weather Pre-
concentric circles represent the earth, including an
diction by Numerical Process (1922), the British math-
image delineating the relationship between local
ematician and meteorologist Lewis Fry Richardson
isobars and isobars in general circulation (fig. 98),
recounted his efforts to produce equation-based
and in which circle forms are used for myriad other
forecasts. He proposed that the behavior of the
illustrative purposes in the text, as in the case of a
atmosphere could be expressed through a system
diagram of cyclonic wind direction (fig. 99).
of mathematical equations and its future behav-
With circles representing everything from baro-
ior thereby predicted by way of calculation, and he
metric pressure and wind systems to the structure of
described in his book how this might be accom-
the earth and the architecture of the cosmos, it is no
plished. The first scientist to theorize and attempt
wonder they wound up an essential motif for Dove.
numerical weather prediction, Richardson’s efforts
For him, they represented suns, moons, and water
failed only because the machines capable of run-
as well as waves of many sorts but also stood for the
ning his equations—computers—had not yet been
all-encompassing and systemic interchange among
invented.147 He permitted himself a fantasy of suc-
entities he wished to incarnate in his paintings and
cess, however, and called it his “Forecast-Factory.”
assemblages. If geography is the science of every-
After estimating that sixty-four thousand human
thing, where everything is imagined as a massive,
“computers”—at the time a term for a person who
interlinked system, one modeled by the intercon-
performed mathematical calculations—would be
necting capacity of weather and weather science,
required to predict global weather three hours in
then circles, like the waveform, served for Dove as
advance by using a combination of his equations
signifiers of the potential of pictures to achieve
and data-filled computing forms, he envisioned
just such a system. And because weather science,
as an alternative a hyperefficient forecasting hive.
along with geography, was itself understood as a
I quote Richardson’s fantastical description at
science that interconnected everything, one sees
length here in order to convey the scope and par-
that Dove’s circles could represent and embody a
ticularity of what he envisioned, and because the
threading and entanglement among all parts of the
very nature of his vision demands an account that
Chapter Two
Fig. 96 “Air Circulation in a Sea Breeze,” in Charles F. Brooks, Why the Weather? (New York: Harcourt, Brace and Company, 1924), p. 113, fig. 23. Photograph: David Connelly.
Fig. 97 Above left, “Structure of the Atmosphere,” in Richard Whatham, Meteorology for Aviator and Layman (New York: Frederick A. Stokes Company, 1930), p. 4, fig. 1. Photograph: David Connelly. Fig. 98 Above right, “Relation of the Local Isobars to Those of the General Circulation,” in Willis Luther Moore, Descriptive Meteorology (New York: D. Appleton and Company, 1910), p. 147, fig. 43. Photograph: David Connelly. Fig. 99 Right, “Variation with Altitude of Cyclonic Vectors and Components,” in Willis Luther Moore, Descriptive Meteorology (New York: D. Appleton and Company, 1910), p. 151, fig. 46. Photograph: David Connelly.
renders it in one piece, fully intact and missing
of a huge spinning bowl, but so far the arithmetic
none of its parts.
proves the better way.” Another building housed “all the usual financial, correspondence and adminis-
Imagine a large hall like a theatre, except that the
trative offices.” And outside were “playing fields,
circles and galleries go right round through the
houses, mountains and lakes.” Stated Richardson,
space usually occupied by the stage. The walls
“Those who compute the weather should breathe
of this chamber are painted to form a map of
of it freely.”149
the globe. The ceiling represents the north polar
In Richardson’s vision, a full-circle amphithe-
regions, England is in the gallery, the tropics in
ater doubles as the earth, representing its geog-
the upper circle, Australia on the dress circle and
raphy but also embodying in the theater’s architec-
the Antarctic in the pit. A myriad computers
ture the earth’s spherical shape. Within this space,
are at work upon the weather of the part of the
humans interact with numbers, machines, and one
map where each sits, but each computer attends
another so as to produce accurate, usable predic-
only to one equation or part of an equation. The
tive results. The division of labor among the “com-
work of each region is coordinated by an official
puters” calls to mind that of a factory assembly
of higher rank. Numerous little “night signs”
line—the Ford Motor Company perfected the con-
display the instantaneous values so that neigh-
cept in the years immediately prior to Richardson’s
boring computers can read them. Each number
publication— with each individual in sequence
is thus displayed in three adjacent zones so as
contributing to the creation of a final product; the
to maintain communication to the North and
emphasis placed by Richardson on precision, effi-
South on the map. From the floor of the pit a tall
ciency, and standardization suggests that theories
pillar rises to half the height of the hall. It carries
of scientific management more generally informed
a large pulpit on its top. In this sits the man in
his scheme.150 In his account, Richardson heralds
charge of the whole theatre; he is surrounded by
communication as absolutely key to the success of
several assistants and messengers. One of his du-
his operation. Fittingly, his fantasy factory incor-
ties is to maintain a uniform speed of progress in
porates a buzzing communication network formed
all parts of the globe. In this respect he is like the
of multiple modes of translation and transmission
conductor of an orchestra in which the instru-
that would address internal and external audiences
ments are slide-rules and calculating machines.
alike, including speech, illuminated signs, rays of
But instead of waving a baton he turns a beam of
light, pneumatic tubes, code, telephone, and radio.
rosy light upon any region that is running ahead
Experimentation and research play a role, as does
of the rest, and a beam of blue light upon those
traditional weather wisdom in the form of the “en-
who are behindhand. Four senior clerks in the
thusiast,” although Richardson puts relatively little
central pulpit are collecting the future weather
store in this particular participant’s contribution.
as fast as it is being computed, and despatching
The image of a conductor orchestrating perfect co-
it by pneumatic carrier to a quiet room. There it
ordination among humans (the “computers”) and
will be coded and telephoned to the radio trans-
machines (slide rules and mechanical calculators),
148
mitting station.
a synchronization as pleasing as musical harmony, along with Richardson’s nod to the necessity of out-
144
Richardson pictured his factory as a complex of
door recreation for his workers, cement the utopia-
spaces and functions extending beyond this main
nism of his vision. Aspects that evoke surveillance
computing room. “In a neighboring building,”
the elevated overseer, the and discipline today—
he wrote, “there is a research department, where
corrective beams of light—were for Richardson ex-
they invent improvements. . . . In a basement an
empla of good organization and rigorous, ground-
enthusiast is observing eddies in the liquid lining
breaking work performed in the name of scientific
Chapter Two
and social progress, elements necessary to the effi-
at the level of global geography, and his works of
cient performance of his monumental forecasting
art strove to be near-magical, superinterconnecting
apparatus.
computing instruments, minifactories that forged
In imagining the triumph of numerical weather
bonds among isolated parts, suturing this to that
prediction, Richardson envisions a vast organism,
and here to there with the ultimate aim of radically
not a living creature but a system that functions as
reinventing conventional notions of how one com-
if alive and, in this case, that counts humans among
municates and with whom. If weather and weather
its component parts. A complex of people, architec-
science provided Dove with a model of global, even
ture, maps, signs, lighting effects, numerical values,
cosmic interconnection and interaction, with the
colors, pneumatic tubes, telephones, radio, and
weather map inspiring an idea of how to make a
watchtower perches, the Forecast-Factory subjected
picture of intersubjective union, and meteorology’s
masses of data to a system whereby that data was
instruments an idea of how a picture could be a ma-
set into relation with yet other data through cal-
chine, then it would have been a vision like Richard-
culation so as to produce a form of knowledge—a
son’s that afforded a view of how all this vastness
weather forecast—that bound the past to the future
and all this instrumentality could find a home in
and the far-flung to the close at hand. Numbers
a physical, smaller-scale, diminutive thing—in a
interacting with other numbers in the space of
painting or a sculpture—and also a view of how
equations, humans communicating across amphi-
this scaled-down thing might come to embody the
theaters or between buildings by way of voice or me-
ideal of communication, converse, and connec-
chanical devices, incompatible tenses coexisting,
tion among all the world’s phenomena and parts
distant geographies shaking hands: every aspect
that came to be expressed in Dove’s work and in
of Richardson’s forecasting scheme entails an ani-
his myriad articulations of this ideal, including his
mating encounter or relation, the establishing of a
characterizations of extraction, formation, and the
line of communication and a mode of conversion or
sought-after condition of light. I doubt that Dove
translation that activated yet more transmutations,
read Richardson’s Weather Prediction by Numerical
all within an ever-expanding web of activity. What
Process, but I am sure that he shared Richardson’s
one has in Richardson’s vision, then, is an ambitious
dream of creating a many-bodied, animate transla-
and out-of-this-world blueprint for the machinery,
tion and communication instrument or organism,
circuitry, and activating medium of a global system
one that integrated the capacity and cosmic con-
or network, one that encompasses natural phenom-
nections of weather and weather science into the
ena, humans, instruments, language, sonic effects,
material and intercourse of everyday life. And if he
and pictures in its objects of study, operations, and
had in fact encountered Richardson’s fantasy of a co-
outcomes, and that exists to register, translate, and
lossal calculation, conversion, and communication
communicate on a global scale.
apparatus, Richardson’s privileging of mathematics
If a meteorologist could have imagined such a
over any other human code would not have been
thing in 1922, then so too could have Dove during
the thing that captivated Dove, despite his dedica-
the years he was at work on paintings and assem-
tion to the conic sections and his praising of his
blages such as Sun Drawing Water, Seagull Motif
best work as “almost ‘mathematics.’” Rather, Dove
(Violet and Green), Rain, Partly Cloudy, and Flight. If
would have found alluring the idea that a material
what Richardson imagined was a vast circulatory
entity composed of many parts and processes could
system or organism that interwove weather, hu-
function as did language or, put another way, that
mans, machines, and notational mechanisms and
the properties of language, especially those that
modes, then Dove could have envisioned some-
possessed the capacity to connect and convert and
thing similar. And he did. Dove’s circles evoked this
thus create binding ties, could attach themselves
very sort of circulatory system, one that functioned
to and live inside of things. Alluring also would be Weather
145
146
the idea that those things inhabited by the opera-
more literal pairing of matter and motility. Also in
tions of translation and communication could in
the 1920s, he played around with sound, pairing,
turn become templates for human interchange and
for example, painting with the phonograph to see
existence. Dove explored such habitation in paint-
how the act of painting and the workings of an in-
ings produced throughout his career. In the 1920s,
strument of sonic transmission might compare. I
he added a form of sculpture to his repertoire, cre-
turn now to such experimentation and to its place
ating the series of assemblages he called “things,”
in Dove’s career-long exploration of the possibility
the subject of chapter 4, in which he explored a
of a living art.
Chapter Two
3
Sound Sound Torr’s entries in the diaries she and Dove kept for 1926 and 1927 describe one of Dove’s most direct engagements with the idea of translation. Over a period of several months during these two years, he undertook a series of paintings based on musical compositions, created while listening to phonograph records. Collectively, the entries, along with passages from the 1928 diary, establish the basic outlines of Dove’s listening and painting. On May 23, 1926, Torr reported a “nice evening” during which she and Dove played the Victrola, one of numerous entries that describe she and Dove purchasing and listening to records, by themselves or with friends. In July 1926 they bought “‘Rhapsody in Blue’ by Gershwin & 4 jazz” in Huntington, and in January 1927, Dove went to Huntington and “brought back Fire Bird records—Stravinsky—played them . . . in P.M. quite beautiful.” Torr reported that Dove was “quite amused by Gershwin.” “Early in P.M. Holly & Hank here,” she wrote on February 8, 1927. “Had coffee, played Stravinsky records to them, & ‘The Jealous Lover.’” In January 1927, Torr traveled to Huntington and purchased compositions by Gershwin and Stravinsky for Dove, and in late December 1927, she bought Dove “a Whiteman record & an address book.” In January 1928, she returned to Huntington and purchased several more records as presents for Dove. Torr’s diary entries also mention occasions on which she and Dove painted while listening to their record collection, Dove p ainting 147
148
directly in response to the music that played. On
paintings share certain features, including the use
December 1, 1926, Dove “did a handsome spirited
of found objects and the medium of metal. During
‘music’ with almost everything in sight to Gersh-
this time, Dove was also at work on a small number
win’s ‘Rhapsody in Blue,’” continuing work on this
of other canvases, including Seagull Motif (Violet and
painting for the next several days. In early January
Green), completed in 1928 but underway by January
of the next year, Dove continued painting from Ger-
1927 (fig. 3).2 It may seem excessive to enumerate as
shwin, creating, as Torr described it, a “Gershwin
I have Dove’s music listening and music painting
ink—steel spring, it is mean and beautiful!” Dove
during this period of many months but as Harry
began another painting shortly thereafter, which
Cooper stresses in his article on Dove’s record pic-
Torr referred to as “An Orange Grove in California,”
tures, any interpretation of these paintings must
completing and framing it and the “‘Gershwin’ ink-
attend to the conditions of their making and to
spring” piece by the middle of the month. During
the intriguing fact that they originated in listen-
these weeks, Torr described Dove “painting big jazz,
ing rather than in looking.3 This listening, the diary
beautiful” and creating as a result “6 things” from
entries together reveal, occurred not only as a stim-
the records to which they listened, sand papering
ulus to putting brush to canvas—play record, paint
and varnishing frames for three of these pictures
picture— but also transpired across Dove’s daily
late in January. Dove next began a painting from
life, often in the company of other people. Other
“Stravinsky records” and worked on this canvas into
entries from these months describe yet more expe-
February before he “tore it up.” He revisited one of
riences of music listening. Torr notes that she and
the Gershwin pictures late in February 1927, chang-
Dove attended vaudeville performances, went to
ing the “‘head’ in Rhapsody in Blue,” as Torr put it,
the movies, and listened to the radio on their boat.4
and he made a “pastel—Jazz—very fine” around the
All these things formed Dove’s day-to-day musical
same time. More painting from Gershwin ensued,
résumé and would have had a hand in his decision
Stravinsky having been scrapped: “Jazz on victrola.
to paint while listening to records.
A decides on Gershwin— Whiteman— Stravinsky
Those moments when phonograph music did
sad.” This resulted in “‘I’ll Build a Stairway to Para-
provide the immediate stimulus to painting—when
dise,’ ” which Torr also referred to as “I. B. a S. T. P.” in
Dove put on a record and then took up his brush—
her entries. Torr described checking out Melville’s
wound up producing five identifiable canvases, now
Moby-Dick from the library in Huntington and both
dated 1927, all of which are directly linked to specific
of them reading it during this time, and her entries
musical compositions and also to a particular pho-
suggest that she understood the two activities as
nograph recording of those compositions.5 All five
somehow connected: “A working on ‘I. B. a S. T. P.’ A
paintings were displayed at Dove’s 1927 exhibition at
got Moby Dick from library”; “Both reading Moby
Stieglitz’s Intimate Gallery. A sixth painting, clearly
Dick. A worked on ‘I’ll Build a Stairway to Paradise’
music based but which may or may not have been
in pastel.” Torr reported in April 1927 that “A did
a direct response to record listening, accompanied
‘I’ll Build a Stairway to Paradise’ entirely over—in
the other five. Yours Truly (1927), also on exhibition,
oils” and had framed it by the end of the month.
shares its dynamic, swinging forms and spiral mo-
Dove gave Stravinsky another chance in November
tifs with the record pictures and may owe its title to
1927. “A did beautiful painting of 4th movement of
a popular Broadway musical that premiered at the
‘The Fire Bird,’” Torr wrote on the thirtieth of that
Shubert Theatre in January 1927, but no documenta-
month.1
tion exists to confirm this. As Donna Cassidy has de-
Dove’s work on the record paintings, as I will
termined, Dove painted George Gershwin—Rhapsody
call them throughout this chapter, coincided with
in Blue, Part I and George Gershwin—Rhapsody in Blue,
work on his assemblages, including Hand Sewing
Part II while listening to the 1924 Victor recording
Machine (1927) (fig. 120), with which the record
of the Paul Whiteman orchestra playing Gershwin’s
Chapter Three
composition, with Gershwin at the piano (figs. 100,
canvases the silvery sheen of metallic paint and, in
101). Dove most likely painted Orange Grove in Cali-
one—Rhapsody in Blue, Part I—through sections of a
fornia, by Irving Berlin and George Gershwin—I’ll Build
clock spring attached to the canvas surface. Linear
a Stairway to Paradise while listening to Victor re-
forms stand against a relatively unadorned ground
cordings of Whiteman’s orchestra playing composi-
in Improvision, the whole of which is dominated by
tions of the same name by Irving Berlin and Gersh
a protagonist-like figure: a T shape, formed by a
win, released in 1923 and 1922, respectively (figs. 102,
vertical line topped by a horizontal one from which
6
103). A fifth painting, Rhythm Rag, the current lo-
extend what look like arms. This anthropomorphic
cation of which is unknown, was probably based on
effect is amplified by a “head” that sits atop the “T”
yet another Victor recording of the Whiteman or-
and “feet” that spring forth from the base of the
chestra, released in 1927 and bearing the same name
vertical line. Torr referred in one of her entries to
as Dove’s work; the composer of “The Rhythm Rag,”
the “head” of the “Rhapsody in Blue” painting, and
Willard Robison, recorded it in 1924 with his Deep
in the other canvases configurations of line do now
7
River Orchestra.
and then assume the role of a dominant “note” or
The remaining painting in this group, titled
“phrase.” But none of the other pictures suggest
Improvision in the 1927 exhibition checklist, cannot
such a straightforward figure-ground relationship,
be linked definitely to a particular piece of music
one constituted by a prominent configuration of
8
(fig. 104). Given that Torr’s diary entries describe
shapes set against a quieter backdrop. Still, Impro-
Dove producing several paintings while listening to
vision takes its place among the other musical pic-
Igor Stravinsky records (including a work that Dove
tures in the 1927 catalogue—it is listed as number
destroyed), it is possible that Improvision’s musical
6; the others are numbers 1 through 5, out of a total
source was one of that composer’s works. A likely
of nineteen works—suggesting that Dove classed it
possibility, Stravinsky’s The Fire Bird, a recording of
among those made by way of phonograph listening.
which Dove purchased in 1927, was commissioned
Given this, and because it bears a title that evokes
by Serge Diaghilev for the first season of his Ballets
a musical operation (improvisation), the work war-
Russes in Paris and premiered at the Paris Opéra in
rants consideration alongside the other five.
1910; subsequently fashioned into several concert
Dove’s record paintings are usually considered
suites by Stravinsky in 1910, 1919, and 1945, the com-
in isolation from the rest of his body of work, not
position would have reached Dove in 1927 in the
necessarily because they are understood as a side-
form of such a suite rather than the original 1910
line or as unrelated to his practice as a whole, but
9
score. Yet unlike the rest of the music paintings,
because they were produced in a distinct manner,
Improvision does not borrow its title wholesale from
one unique to this moment in Dove’s career, and
a musical work, a fact that argues against its origins
also because they are related to other artistic prac-
in a particular composition or recording or against
tices in and around the 1920s that engage music as
Dove’s wishing to mark it as such. The painting also
subject matter or inspiration. As a result, they are
diverges in formal terms from the four canvases
often discussed alongside such practices, rather
Dove created while listening to Gershwin and Ber-
than in the context of the rest of Dove’s oeuvre.10
lin. All five canvases feature lines of varying thick-
I would not argue against the specialness of Dove’s
ness in the form of spirals, cross-hatchings, single-
record paintings, but I do take them to be an in-
rail tracks, zigzags, and sawteeth. But such marks in
tegral part of his larger project and, perhaps most
Improvision are rigorously simple compared to those
importantly, as part of a persistent and prolonged
in the other four works, where they proliferate and
engagement on his part with the sonic and, more
assume exceedingly complex forms, interweaving
particularly, with the possibilities of transforming
among one another and also through planes of bold
sound, a phenomenon unavailable to the naked eye,
and shimmering color, including in three of the
into visual form, something explored by numerous Sound
149
Fig. 100 Arthur G. Dove, George Gershwin—Rhapsody in Blue, Part I, 1927, oil on metallic paint with clock spring on aluminum support. 11¾ × 9¾ in., Michael Scharf Family Collection. Fig. 101 Arthur G. Dove, George Gershwin— Rhapsody in Blue, Part II, 1927, oil, metallic paint, and ink on paper, 20½ × 15½ in., Michael Scharf Family Collection.
Fig. 102 Arthur G. Dove, Orange Grove in California, by Irving Berlin, 1927, oil on cardboard, 51 × 38 cm, Museo Thyssen- Bornemisza, Madrid, 1975.52. Photo Credit: Museo Thyssen-Bornemisza / SCALA / Art Resource, NY.
Fig. 103 Arthur G. Dove, George Gershwin—I’ll Build a Stairway to Paradise, 1927, ink, metallic paint, and oil on paperboard, 50.8 × 38.1 cm (20 × 15 in.), Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, Gift of the William H. Lane Foundation, 1990.407. Photograph © 2016 Museum of Fine Arts, Boston.
Fig. 104 Arthur G. Dove, Improvision, 1927, oil on paperboard, Denver Art Museum Collection: The Lucile and Donald Graham Collection, 1997.312. Photograph courtesy of the Denver Art Museum.
artists in Europe and the United States in the first
the musical potential of other sonic forms, such as
half of the twentieth century, and an undertaking
factory noise; (2) paintings based on radio listening;
that for Dove constituted part of his translation
and (3) paintings that represent “live” sound, rather
11
154
work. Painting from records constituted only one
than recorded or broadcast sound, a category that
of several sonic experiments carried out by Dove,
includes foghorn blasts, the wind, the tap-tap of
and this chapter explores the specific nature of
telegraphy, and the crackle of electricity. As Dove’s
each of these pictorial investigations, all of which
brother Paul recalled, Dove was keen on music and
entailed Dove painting a particular kind of sound
owned several musical instruments, but also took as
generated in a particular sort of way and listened
subject matter “anything from a knothole in a tree
to or heard in a particular fashion. So I discuss the
trunk to the wind in the willows, the sound in the
paintings based on record listening, of course, as
telephone wires, the moo of a cow or the coo of a pi-
well as three other categories of works: (1) paintings
geon or the clouds and sunrise.”12 Jazz, Morse code,
based on music more generally, or on the idea of mu-
radio broadcasts, thunder and lightning, sound
sic, in which Dove explores not a particular musical
waves, and bird calls: all these things and more
composition but a musical type, such as swing, or
show up in Dove’s exploration of the sonic in art.
Chapter Three
have been referring to one of several types of pho-
Painting from Records
nographic devices available at the time, including
I begin my analysis of the paintings made from
acoustic and electrical models, the latter having
record listening by returning to Harry Cooper’s in-
been previously introduced by Victor.15 However,
junction to attend to the conditions of the making
it is almost certain that she and Dove owned an
of these paintings. To comprehend what painting
acoustic (or “mechanical”) phonograph—one that
from record listening entailed for Dove and to un-
amplified sound by way of a diaphragm and horn
derstand fully the paintings that resulted, I take my
and that relied on a hand-wound, spring-powered
cue from Cooper in wanting to account for the most
motor to spin the turntable—because their boat
basic facts of Dove’s listening and making. The fol-
was not wired for electricity until November 1926,
lowing two questions guide my inquiry: To what,
several months after Torr’s first mention of their
exactly, did Dove listen? And what, consequently,
Victrola listening. Because the Victor brand domi-
did he hear?
nated the market in the 1920s, it is safe to assume
It is important to register once again, even if it means restating the obvious, that Dove listened
that Dove and Torr did in fact own a Victor-made Victrola.16
to records and, as Torr noted in the diaries, used a
One gathers from Torr’s diary entries that it
Victrola in order to do so. The records were 78 rpm
took Dove several days over the course of several
discs, made of a plastic compound and measuring
months to complete the Rhapsody in Blue canvases,
ten inches across, with a playing time of around
and as his son, William, reported, Dove played the
three to four minutes per side. They were molded
Gershwin record repeatedly as he painted.17 So over
or stamped from a master disc onto which live
the course of his listening, which was instigated
13
sound had been recorded. The Victor recording
by placing the disc on the phonograph’s turntable,
of Gershwin’s “Rhapsody in Blue” that Dove owned
Dove had to stop and restart or flip the record, re-
was acoustical, as opposed to electrical—that is, re-
locating the phonograph needle to the outer edge
corded without the aid of electrical amplification,
of the disc whenever one three-to four-minute side
which was introduced in the mid-1920s—as were
finished playing. He would also have had to turn
the recordings of “I’ll Build a Stairway to Paradise”
the phonograph’s hand crank periodically in order
and “An Orange Grove in California.” As reported
to maintain or restart the turntable’s rotational mo-
by Cassidy and Cooper, the “Rhapsody” disc was
tion.18 The act of painting is, inarguably, a physical,
double sided, divided into a “Part I” and a “Part
material one, for it involves a body with limbs ma-
II”—a division that carried over into Dove’s two
nipulating matter. The act of painting while listen-
paintings, which were titled accordingly—and, as
ing to a record played on an acoustical phonograph,
was often the case with earlier phonographic re-
as described here, amplifies the physicality of this
cordings, Gershwin’s composition was presented
act, for the painter, rather than simply looking at
14
in abbreviated form. It is difficult to determine
a referent, must engage that referent physically in
with precision what kind of phonograph Dove and
order to make it actively present and thus available
Torr used to play these records, but one can make
as a pictorial source. That is, Dove, in order to have
an educated guess. Torr first mentions playing a
Gershwin’s tune at hand so that he could paint from
Victrola in her diary entry for May 23, 1926. While
it, had to interact with and activate two objects, the
the moniker “Victrola” refers only to internal-horn
phonograph and the phonograph disc.
phonographs made by the Victor Talking Machine
This is important to note because, as historians
Company beginning in 1906 (the horn was hidden
of sound technology and the recording industry
in the machine’s cabinet, the doors of which were
have observed, the invention of the phonograph
opened when played), the colloquial use of the term
ushered in new cultures of listening as well as
was (and continues to be) more loose, so Torr could
novel conceptions of musical form, in part because Sound
155
phonograph technology simultaneously disembod-
it parsed a distinction between the simply inani-
ied and reembodied listening. Emily Thompson
mate and matter activated by and utilized within
has described how “dramatic transformations in
networks of human relations.
what people heard” resulted from changes in the
The process by which Dove engaged and acti-
manner in which these people listened within the
vated objects so as to produce his referent—that is,
context of a rapidly transforming auditory land-
to make music materially present—when undertak-
scape, one reshaped by new technologies and new
ing to paint while listening to records would have
19
At the
comprised multiple instances of translation, a fact
same time it evacuated the musician’s body from
that probably drew him to sound technology in
the experience of music listening, the phonograph
the first place, but that also compelled and shaped
and its appurtenances transformed music into a
the nature of his subsequent engagement with
graspable, material object—a commodity of course
this technology. The very material engaged at the
but, more basically, a material artifact, a tangible
outset of his process, the phonograph records, the
and tactile presence quite unlike its live and fleet-
playing of which initiated Dove’s act of painting,
ing source, one that, as Douglas Kahn has pointed
constituted a technology of translation. Acoustic
out, was newly fixable, as linear inscription on the
records rendered the properties of live music as a
phonograph disc as well as by way of the graphic
spiral groove inscribed on a disc. A large horn col-
techniques of acoustical research that served to
lected the sound produced by musicians in a stu-
quantify and objectify sound through rendering it
dio and directed it toward a diaphragm apparatus,
as image. Repeatability, for instance, the fact that
the vibrations of which guided a stylus that cut
Dove could hear Gershwin’s “Rhapsody in Blue”
this groove into the disc’s surface. Musical sound
over and over again in quick succession, was itself a
was thus rendered as a visually available, if illegi-
circumstances for encountering sound.
function of sound’s novel material forms.
20
Dove, thus, in making his paintings, listened to
when literally translated, “phonograph,” a term
music, but he did so by engaging music in a bluntly
coined in 1863, means “sound-” or “voice-writer,” and
material fashion. Listening for him was at its origin
the term most likely derived from the nineteenth-
a matter of the manipulation of things, what may
century practice of “phonography,” a form of pho-
explain his tendency to call the music paintings just
netic shorthand where notational marks signified
this—“things”—in the diaries (Torr borrows Dove’s
sounds rather than letters (hence the combination
term thusly: “Gershwin thing,” “6 things,” “Stravin-
of “phono” and “graphy”).22 Dove’s study of short-
sky thing”) but also in “An Idea,” the essay he wrote
hand and speedwriting thus predisposed him to see
to accompany the 1927 exhibition, where he refers to
record grooves as abbreviated script or sign.23 It is
21
156
ble, graphic mark. It is worth mentioning here that
his record paintings as “the music things.” Dove’s
also worth mentioning that the phonograph itself
work on these paintings coincided with work on his
was originally intended for the recording and trans-
assemblages, which he regularly called his “things,”
mission of human speech and thus at its inception
several of which accompanied the music pictures in
was linked to language, and that even earlier sound
the 1927 exhibition, as if to highlight the fact that
technologies, including the “phonautograph” and
the material conditions of the canvases made from
the “parleóphone,” were designed to translate
records was not wholly dissimilar to the materiality
sound, including speech, into visual form, making
of the assemblages, three-dimensional works made
it no stretch to suggest that the phonograph in the
of everyday stuff. I will have more to say about the
1920s would have connoted for Dove the graphic as
historical and conceptual significance of the term
well as the aural, or a hybrid of the two.24
“thing” when I discuss the assemblages at length
When Dove played one of his records, the lin-
in chapter 4. For now, suffice it to say that Dove’s
ear or graphic representation of music was re-or
designation was a knowing one, not least because
untranslated by a phonograph needle tracking the
Chapter Three
concentric grooves. A phonograph needle vibrates
employed to listen and existed precisely because
as it registers the lateral displacement of the inci-
of those technologies.27 In other words, what he
sions, motion that is transferred to the sound-box
heard had not existed prior to its recording and
diaphragm which converts, also through vibration,
playback, and it was thus not at all an index of its
mechanical energy into acoustical energy. When
original referent; rather, this phonographic sound
Dove placed the needle on the rotating disc, mu-
was a new iteration of what had been originally
25
performed, one that hewed close to its source but
Painting this sound, then, was for Dove a matter
diverged in important ways, as did a translation of
of hearing the product of two translations—sound
text from its original source, a phenomenon theo-
into line, line back into sound—and then translat-
rized by Walter Benjamin and, in the case of sound,
ing once again, transforming played and listened-to
an outcome that one scholar has aptly character-
music’s spatial and temporal dimensions into picto-
ized as the “phonographic effect.”28 I draw attention
rial, visual form, compressing music’s volume, once
to such an effect not because I believe that Dove
again, into a two-dimensional, if not strictly linear,
would have worried over such technological medi-
system of notational marks. If this, then Dove’s ear
ation, although he would have been well aware of it,
was itself a registering device, akin to a sound box or
having heard Whiteman play Gershwin and Berlin
diaphragm, and his brush became the phonograph
live previous to his purchase of the Victor records,
needle’s analog, for its bristles both registered and
but rather as a way of attending with precision to
recorded, instrument-like, what Dove heard, trans-
the sound that did reach Dove’s ear during his pro-
lated from ear to brain to brush-wielding arm, and
cess of painting: music, yes, but also what have been
these bristles also replayed this music, retranslat-
dubbed “sonic artifacts,” sounds indigenous to the
ing it as paint on canvas or, to quote Dove’s 1927 ex-
process of recording and playback and to the de-
hibition catalog essay, as “music of the eye.” Music
vices used therein.29
sic manifested once again as volumetric sound.
was itself the product of a translation, Dove noted
By this I mean, for example, short bursts of
in this essay, for it reduced sound as such, in and of
sound, three to four minutes at a time, followed
itself, into a more simplified and direct form. In a
by the whisper of the needle tracking the termi-
manner analogous to Dove’s own pictorial reduc-
nus of the groove, the swish of its removal from
tions of motifs from nature but also in accordance
the surface of the disc, then the intervening hum
with his notion of stitching and interweaving
of the turntable’s rotation followed by the pop of
formations and line into a complex whole, music
the needle hitting the outer edge of the moving
transfigured the sonic into a system. As he wrote,
disc as the process begins again. I also mean the
matter and phenomena such as wind and water and
recorded sound of instruments, some of them too
sand are simplified as “color and force lines and sub-
loud, others too soft, depending on their proximity
26
stances, just as music has done with sound.”
to the recording horn, with brass perhaps sounding
And what did Dove hear? He heard Gershwin
too deep or wind instruments excessively shrill; and
and Berlin and Stravinsky of course, but not as if
maybe a few notes or sonic effects here and there
he were in the presence of the live performance re-
that registered on the recording but during a live
corded on the disc. Although record companies in
performance would have been unavailable to the
the 1920s marketed their products as exact replicas
human ear; this, plus the scratch and scrape of
of the live and went to great lengths to establish
the phonograph needle on the plastic surface of
the documentary function of the disc, phonograph
the disc as it played, and also the skips and crackles
recordings transformed the live in manifold ways,
caused by the needle hitting dust or debris settled
especially when produced and played without the
into the grooves; also the too-fast pace of a tune
aid of electrical amplification. So what Dove heard
generated when the hand crank has been turned to
was decisively a function of the technologies he
its limit so as to ensure that the record’s spin will Sound
157
not slow prematurely and make the sound drag
understanding of these works, for I see such regis-
and distort, and the thickening and lengthening of
tration as an integral aspect of the material condi-
sound when such slowing did occur as the motor’s
tions of Dove’s making of the music paintings.
spring completed its release; and all this against
So Dove’s painting from records constituted
the backdrop of a thick hiss or sonic haze—a sound
multiple acts of translation and engaged multiple
akin to that produced by putting an ear to a seashell
translating operations, including registration, and
and “hearing” the rushing roar of the sea—as gen-
his process involved activating and interacting with
erated by the collective mechanical workings of the
material objects that in turn imposed a specific set
phonograph apparatus, a thick symphony of sounds
of material conditions on his listening and making.
generated by the synchronized operation of all its
And Dove’s painting from records did not consist
parts.
30
I spend time with what Dove’s listening to pho-
equivalents for particular notes or musical phrases.
nograph records most likely entailed—the actions
To be sure, the forms of the record paintings evoke
he would have taken, the objects he would have
the characteristics of the jazz music to which Dove
engaged, and the sounds he would have heard—
listened in the manner that Cassidy and others, in-
because to my mind these things bear directly on
cluding Cooper, have described. Sweeping and spi-
the nature of the paintings that resulted, including
raling lines and sizzling color mark the quick and
the four about which I will have the most to say:
deft cadences and the brash energy of the compo-
Rhapsody in Blue, Part I and Part II, I’ll Build a Stair-
sitions in question, while linear couplings call to
way to Paradise, and Orange Grove in California. For
mind the call-and-response effects typical of jazz.
Cassidy, jazz offered Dove a specifically American
This includes the zigzag pairs that dance through-
model of abstraction for use in embodying the
out Orange Grove in California, the clock spring and
American spirit and marking a particular national
its painted almost- shadow in Rhapsody in Blue,
identity, and I build here on the idea that jazz pro-
Part I, and the staccato slashes welded over wending
vided Dove with a model of expression.31 I also fol-
lines in Rhapsody in Blue, Part II. Quick-seeming and
low Cooper’s insistence that the formal character-
all-over brushwork engenders a sense of improvisa-
istics of these jazz-based works cannot be bound
tion in each of the canvases, with the linear lurches
to a particular musical piece. Dove, Cooper writes,
and spasms of Orange Grove in California pushing
was less interested in illustrating jazz than he was
the closest toward ecstatic musical abandon, some-
in pushing abstraction closer to its limits, by col-
thing Dove probably associated with jazz even if
lapsing the distinction between figure and ground
the recordings were not themselves the products of
(predicting Pollock in the process), an effort modu-
improvisation.
lated by the physical limits of music listening in the
So record music may have provided Dove with
second half of the 1920s and by the fact of painting
a vocabulary by which to register emotional experi-
from listening itself, where concentration on an un
ence in pictorial form, as scholars have proposed.33
seen surround (volumetric but nonvisible sound)
Yet more than it was an attempt to produce pictures
eclipsed consciousness of the visible world. All this
of music, Dove’s painting from records entailed an
amounted to registration rather than illustration,
exploration of the possibility that painting might
the production of a graphic trace rather than a
itself constitute a sound technology, one like but
denotative contour, which Cooper describes as an
not identical to the plastic disc or the phonograph.
essential, enabling aspect of Dove’s push in these
Dove saw painting as proffering the notational po-
32
tential for rendering recorded music once again as if
I am less concerned with the matter of abstraction,
live, through the processes of translation described
but Cooper’s insight regarding Dove’s painting as a
above, but he also expected more from painting than
form of registration has proved critical to my own
this. I do not mean that for Dove painting was a sup-
pictures toward an ever more radical abstraction.
158
primarily in a search for visual or iconographic
Chapter Three
plement to records constituted by lack, or that Dove
then to the point. A moving point could follow a
wanted to right any perceived wrongs perpetrated
waterfall and dance. We have the scientific proof
34
against music by the recording industry. What I
that the eye sees everything best at one point.”36
suggest here, instead, is that Dove, inspired and in-
Dove’s remarks drew on Kandinsky’s consideration
trigued by the idea that music might be translated
of how musical notation might be translated into
and thus reconfigured in the first place, wished to
a geometric vocabulary in the form of a configu-
know what painting might add to the mix, and
ration of variously sized points, a proposition he
also what painting might tell us about music and
illustrated in his text (fig. 105).37 That Dove paired
listening to music that a record, and music itself,
Kandinsky’s ideas about reducing phenomena to
could not. Put another way, Dove had an inkling
geometric form with a comment on what (accord-
that the experience and understanding of music,
ing to Dove) science had contributed to an under-
and the possibilities for communication, connec-
standing of human visual capacity—we see best at a
tion, and exchange proffered therein, might be ex-
single point—in order to elaborate on his character-
panded or otherwise productively transformed if he
ization of the “music things” indicates that he had
painted it, and that only doing so in collaboration
more than the pace of modern life in mind when
with sound technology, which itself rendered music
he created his record paintings. Clearly, perception
anew, would do the trick. For him, then, painting
concerned him as well. That he closed “An Idea” by
from records and the translations executed therein
resisting the notion that a painting consisted only
opened up new possibilities for music and also for
in the reduction of motifs to abstract form suggests
pictorial art. Painting from records, like painting
that he was interested in a kind of translation that
in collaboration with weather and weather science,
reconstituted the motif in full yet altered form: “As
generated for Dove a thorough analysis of music as
the point moves it becomes a line, as the line moves
an operational form and consequently introduced
it becomes a plane, as the plane moves it becomes
new operational potential to the domain of paint-
a solid, as the solid moves, it becomes life and as
ing, instrumentalizing pictures by way of bringing
life moves, it becomes the present.” The first two
them into vital relation with musical sound and,
phrases of this sentence recapitulate Kandinsky,
also, with sound technology.
but the remainder imagines not reduction or dis-
In “An Idea,” the essay that accompanied the
tillation, but generation and plenitude: a form of
1927 exhibition, Dove wrote that “the music things
abstraction that translates, transfigures, and en-
were done to speed the line up to the pace at which
genders rather than whittles away so that a work of
we live to-day,” one of a very few remarks made over
art’s origins—the motifs or materials that initiated
the course of his career that seem to indicate that
its creation—are fully and excessively present, if
his art was at all meant to capture the character-
transposed. “It becomes the present,” Dove wrote.
istics oft attributed to twentieth-century moder-
The record paintings, I suggest, are precisely this:
nity: “inventiveness, restlessness, speed, change,”
pictorial translations of music, music- listening,
as Dove supposedly put it elsewhere. But Torr is
and listening technologies that amounted to a re-
the one who recorded this conversation among
constituted composite of these three things, what I
her, Dove, and Dove’s dear friend the painter Al-
would thus describe as a reimagined recording and
fred Maurer, and above her jottings she wrote “I
registering system, one that strove to “play” music
wrote things as they talked—don’t know who said
so that the eye could see but also hear, in Dove’s
what.”35 After his comment in “An Idea” about why
words, “everything best.” One might say that paint-
the music things were created and the speeding up
ing music from records, for Dove, made it more real
of their line, Dove began his revision of Kandinsky’s
than real. Neither documentary (a mere record of
1926 Point and Line to Plane: “The line is the result
musical sound) nor mimetic (the reproduced illu-
of reducing dimension from the solid to the plane
sion of musical sound), the record pictures comSound
159
Fig. 105 “Theme 2 translated into points,” in Wassily Kandinsky, Point and Line to Plane, ed. Hilla Rebay, trans. Hilla Rebay and Howard Dearstyne (New York: Solomon R. Guggenheim Foundation, 1947; repr., New York: Dover Publications, 1979), p. 45, fig. 11. Originally published in German in 1926 as Punkt und Linie zu Fläche. Wassily Kandinsky: © 2013 Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York / ADAGP, Paris. Photograph: David Connelly.
bined multiple modes of playing and listening
of monumental procedures (flight) and new points
and registered both the sensory and the material
of view (from the air or encompassing the might
aspects of the sonic so as to constitute a new all-
of continents and oceans). In creating pictures that
embracing complex of sound, one that through
are at once paintings and music, oil on canvas as
analysis conducted in the act of painting called
well as the agglomerated apparatuses and effects of
forth the lived experience of music, the fulsome,
music making and music listening, Dove re-created
not pared away, material essence—the “real”—of
neither of these things: not painting, not music.
musical sound. “Anybody,” Dove wrote a few years
Rather, he produced something new, a novel expres-
later, in 1929, “should be able to feel a certain state
sive form born of an essential suturing among the
and express it in terms of paint or music . . . to feel
entities, operations, and phenomena that consti-
the power of the ground or sea, and to play or paint
tuted the experience of bodies, pictures, and sound.
it with that in mind, letting spirit hold what you
The prevalence of circle and spiral motifs in the
do together rather than continuous objective form,
music paintings suggests that Dove understood
gaining in tangibility and actuality as the plane leaves
his paintings as analogs to the technology he uti-
38
160
the ground.” Allusions to painting, music making,
lized to paint them, for they register the material
natural forces, ocean waves, and a prospective aerial
conditions of record listening through mimicry
view combine in this statement to suggest a condi-
of the rotational aspects of the phonograph: spin-
tion or entity comprising a network of matter, oper-
ning discs, needles tracking spiral grooves, hands
ations, and sensation—the stuff of material life—as
turning cranks, springs winding and unwinding to
well as the wholesale transposition and reconstitu-
make motors run. In Improvision (fig. 104), a spiral
tion, but not dematerialization, of this stuff by way
runs regularly and neatly across and up the canvas’s
Chapter Three
lower right corner, giving way as it ascends to an-
ing, zigzagging, sawtoothing, and cross-hatching
other spiraling form, this one more ribbonlike in
forms unleashed and cascading up and down at
shape. Similar spiraling forms run up and down
left and right, and also by the spherical forms in
and across the top of I’ll Build a Stairway to Paradise,
the upper portion of the canvas that appear to have
and a slight spiral form arcs out from the right edge
been generated by a set of orbitally spinning, en-
of Rhapsody in Blue, Part II, with echoes of its twist
circling lines. Dove conceived of the spring and the
emerging across the whole and reverberating writ
spiral as metaphors of time: “The future seems to be
large in the oval shape of the canvas (figs. 103, 101).
gone through by a spiral spring from the past. The
Orange Grove in California brims with circling and
tension of that spring is the important thing,” he
spiraling forms, so much so that the rectangular
wrote in a letter to Stieglitz in 1925.39 This further
and immobile canvas can seem to twist, turn, and
suggests that the spiral forms in these canvases
wriggle in space (fig. 102). Thick, slashing spirals
were intended to evoke constitutive properties of
of black paint at bottom center and across the up-
phonographically played and listened-to music: its
per half echo delicate twists wedged in the upper
existence and unfolding in time (an aspect of all
right corner and squeezed between swathes of dark
music), but also its successive repeatability and its
blue-gray at upper left as well as looping lines de-
frequent starts and stops, with this starting and
scending from top center, these calling to mind the
stopping subject to the exigencies and automa-
lines of a musical staff as if whipped by the wind. In
tisms of the machine or the whims of its operator,
both Orange Grove in California and Rhapsody in Blue,
who could drop or lift the needle at will, and thus
Part II, Dove inserted a scaled-down version of his
not necessarily a function of the natural beginning
concentric circle motif, at the upper edge of Orange
or end of a musical piece.
Grove in California, with blue-green encircling black,
Through these circle and spiral motifs, Dove
and in the upper right of Rhapsody in Blue, Part II,
established a constitutive connection between
with yellow encircling red encircling black. The
his canvases and the material that initiated their
circular shape and concentric lines of these motifs
creation, his pictorial twists and turns evoking the
evoke, in the space of canvases made from record
spirals and spins and circles of records and record
listening, the spirally grooved records themselves,
listening. Metal does something analogous to this.
and their diminutive stature announces the differ-
Silver metallic paint in Rhapsody in Blue, Part II, I’ll
ence of these canvases from the weather pictures
Build a Stairway to Paradise, and Orange Grove in Cali-
discussed in the previous chapter, with their big-
fornia, and metallic paint and the metal clock spring
ger and bolder concentric circle motifs, brash key-
in Rhapsody in Blue, Part I, establish a connection
notes rather than bit parts, while yet proclaiming
between the world of art and the world of machines
a shared investment in sonic translation, be it the
or, more specifically, between paintings and phono-
sonic conditions of listening to jazz or the globally
graph parts. Dove used metal and metallic paint in
resonating deafening booms, ear-splitting cracks,
other of his paintings and also in several of his as-
beating rain of a thunderstorm. The and drum-
semblages, but in the context of the paintings made
clock spring attached to the surface of Rhapsody
from records, metal signifies in a very specific way,
in Blue, Part I (fig. 100) constitutes the most literal
establishing a continuum between the paintings
evocation of the material of record listening—the
and the thing activated (phonograph apparatus)
spring-driven motor of the phonograph—and the
in order to produce the paintings’ referent (music),
fact that Dove has pulled it taut, save for a few coils
such that an equivalency is drawn between the two
toward the bottom edge of the painting, gives one
(canvas and phonograph), a sense of “the same as,”
the impression that it is about to spring, that the
or even “more than,” rather than “an illustration of.”
painting, so to speak, has been wound and is poised
The presence of metal in these pictures also con-
to do its work. Such work here signifies as the spiral-
notes the sonic artifacts produced by the recording Sound
161
and playback processes, those sounds that origi-
along with the phonograph’s metal parts essential
nated from the machinery used therein and that
media within his art.
thus belong to the machine rather than to the mu-
Sherrye Cohn has argued convincingly that
sic itself. In other words, the fact that metal literally
Dove’s practice was in part shaped by his interest
constitutes parts of Dove’s paintings establishes a
in the occult, and in theosophy in particular, and
connection between these works and the machine
that what he took from theosophy was not incom-
and the machine noises that initiated their produc-
patible with the scientific principles on which he
tion, a kinship emblematized by paintings that do
also drew: white light and the aura, inspiration for
not simply show music but, rather, render music in
Dove’s “condition of light,” but also theosophy’s
a state marked and transformed by technology. In
idea that, to paraphrase Cohn, the universe is a
both recording and painting the machine is liter-
continuous medium of energy manifested as vi-
ally in the music, making Dove’s pictures more of a
brations that organize themselves as phenomena,
matter of sound plus sound technology than musi-
including mind and matter, an idea that paralleled
cal sound on its own, what I described above as a re-
the claim of contemporaneous physics that all mat-
configured composite of record listening’s multiple
ter was in constant motion and part of a dynamic,
aspects and the operations and conditions of paint-
electromagnetic continuum, a formulation of the
ing and, consequently, a fashioning of the sonic in
universe as a constantly transforming and all-
excess of itself. In a 1934 essay entitled “The Form
constituting complex that counted as a precedent
of the Phonograph Record,” Theodor Adorno char-
the De rerum natura of Lucretius. Cohn connects
acterized the record as a brutely material thing, as
what she characterizes as vibratory patterns in
form in and of itself divorced from content: “a black
Dove’s paintings with this theosophical precept.41
pane made of a composite mass . . . a circular label
Without rejecting this interpretation, I would sug-
in the middle . . . at the very center a little hole.” The
gest an alternate way of conceiving the place of
record, he wrote, “is covered with curves, a delicately
vibration in Dove’s thinking and painting. Sound,
scribbled, utterly illegible writing, which here and
music included, originates in vibration, travels in
there forms more plastic figures . . . structured like
the form of waves, and entails minute changes in
a spiral, it ends somewhere at the vicinity of the
local air pressure; the last is caused by the motion of
title label, to which it is sometimes connected by
air molecules displaced by a vibrating object—the
a lead-out groove so that the needle can comfort-
source of the sound—which generates the traveling
40
162
ably finish its trajectory.” Although forming part
waves. When a record is played on a phonograph
of his critique of new modes of receiving music,
like the one Dove owned, mechanical energy (vibra-
including the manner in which these modes evac-
tion) converts into acoustical energy (oscillating
uated substance and nuance from musical sound,
air molecules and consequent sine waves).42 Much
which was in turn part of a larger indictment of
as they register their mechanical, metal- parted
commodity culture, Adorno’s emphasis on the ma-
source, Dove’s record paintings diagram these
teriality of the phonograph and its accessories and
displacement and conversion processes, and not
the formalist language with which he describes the
simply by virtue of the fact that in all of them lines
phonograph record brings Dove’s approach to the
assume wavelike forms. The pictures do not do so
phonograph and its accessories further into relief.
exactly or scientifically, or even in a manner that
Adorno perceived as tragic his sense that the poten-
suggests that Dove understood fully the acousti-
tial of the phonograph record lay in its status “as a
cal phenomena I have just described; he probably
thing” to be possessed that so easily submitted to
did not. But his paintings do evoke certain of the
analysis as dumb form. Conversely, Dove embraced
basic operations of sound reproduction, attending
the phonograph record’s objecthood, making its
particularly to the idea of conversion and the phe-
like grooves holes, curves, spirals, and writing-
nomenon of the displacement of air. Dove’s evo-
Chapter Three
cation of Kandinsky in “An Idea” of course speaks
“conditions of sound,” which he implied were com-
to his interest in conversion: point into line into
ponents of a larger “condition of existence,” and
plane into solid, and the solid into life and the pres-
he hypothesized the form those conditions might
ent. Additionally, his citation in this same essay of
have taken in Cézanne’s art, stressing space and
a phrase used by mariners, “the wind has weight,”
extension, qualities associated with sound.44 The
while discussing the idea of converting the “mon-
hiss and whoosh that Dove would have heard when
umental bulk” of a tree into a representation of its
he played a record on his phonograph, as produced
“force lines,” places his sense of conversion squarely
by the material workings of the machine as well as
within the realm of wind, water, and air, as does
by the movement of air currents through that ma-
his expressed wish, also in this essay, to simplify
chine, surely reminded him of the gusts and blasts
“wind and water and sand” into “color and force
of ocean winds, thus establishing for him a link
lines and substances, just as music has done with
between listening to records and the operations
sound.”43 The phrase “the wind has weight” evokes
and effects of the wind. It seems almost too easy to
the press of a strong gust against a solid form, a
point out that the verb that describes a hand turn-
sensation produced by the force of displaced air
ing a crank, as on a mechanical phonograph, or the
molecules. Dove’s use of the phrase, while not ev-
action that causes a spring to coil—“wind”—is a
idence of a full understanding of the physics of
homonym of the noun that describes the weighty
wind, does suggest that he imagined his pictures
blasts of air of which Dove spoke in “An Idea,” and
of music as engaging the same forces and phenom-
that he painted across his body of work. But let it be
ena as did his pictures of weather and the shore.
said, and let me also point out that one could rea-
So the spiraling and wavelike strokes, and also the
sonably draw an analogy—and I believe Dove prob-
crosshatches and doubling and tripling lines in the
ably did—between the instruments that Dove reg-
record paintings, all of which evoke the idea of air
ularly used to register displacements of air (changes
displaced in time and space—one line initiates the
in barometric pressure) and those he used to regis-
movement, the others, as if dominoes, register and
ter and transmit recorded sound, itself a product
track its consequent traverse—describe not just the
of air molecules in motion: the barometer and the
rotations of the phonograph and the notes of jazz
phonograph, respectively, both of which served to
but also the very air that moves through the pho-
convert or translate something from one form into
nograph machine so as to generate sound. These
another—that is, weather into numerical data and
marks behave much as do the ribbonlike lines and
grooves on a disc into music, with the first conver-
sweeping spiral forms in paintings such as Sun
sion reducing or distilling a physical phenomenon
Drawing Water and Seagull Motif (Violet and Green)
and the second restoring volume and life.
that plot the motion of the wind and the flight of
This in turn suggests that when Dove painted
birds and also replicate the arching swoops and
from records he explored the possibility of restor-
hatches of shorthand, themselves not unlike a re-
ing a bodily dimension to music, not because he
cord’s linearly incised grooves, the “graphy” side of
believed sound technology deprived music of its
phonograph technology.
essential corporeality but, rather, for the purpose
Once again, circles and waves describe but also
of imagining a notational system or language that
foster interconnection among disparate entities
might register and communicate music’s material
and experiences, serving as both a formal and con-
basis, its origins in the body but also in the appa-
ceptual apparatus for such suturing and also mak-
ratus that made music present for Dove and any-
ing clear that Dove’s “condition of light” encom-
one else who listened to music by way of winding
passed not just color and light but sound as well. In
a crank and spinning plastic discs. In this manner,
a series of undated remarks on Cézanne, Stravinsky,
Dove’s paintings were, again, more like music than
music, and painting, Dove referred to Stravinsky’s
music itself, at least music as imagined by others of Sound
163
his generation (or their present-day interlocutors),
such an instrumental status for Dove’s pictures. In
as abstract, ethereal, disembodied, or exclusively
1926, Edmund Wilson described an affinity between
45
of the spirit. For him, music was tangible, solid,
Dove’s pictures and the operation of Thomas Wil-
weighty, measurable, and materially and excessively
fred’s color organ, or “Clavilux,” a mechanism de-
present. Painting from records allowed Dove to im-
buted by Wilfred in 1922 that produced elaborate
merse himself in a particular experience of music,
compositions of colored light, sometimes accompa-
and he came away from that experience under-
nied by music, and Edward Alden Jewell made the
standing music to be so much more than sound. In
same connection in 1935.47 In I’ll Build a Stairway to
this way, Dove created a system by which to trans-
Paradise (fig. 103), Dove thickens his silver paint in
late music into a kind of visual language without
two places. To the right of center, the multidirec-
making it visual as such: language that did and did
tional and cube-like strokes wedged between two
not translate, that transfigured without disfiguring,
cascades of black build up to a layer of impasto dis-
or disembodying, its referent, music, which for him
tinct from the surrounding surface, one that in its
constituted a complex of relations and exchanges
crumpled appearance looks like crushed aluminum
between objects, phenomena, bodies, and beings
foil. Through the middle of the picture, appearing
that might be transferred wholesale to the oper-
to move from top to bottom, pushes an elongated
ations of a work of art, itself a complex of things
silver shape, its front pointed like the tip of a knife,
and acts. How else to explain the clock spring boldly
its heft accentuated by thickly applied pigment set
and gleefully protruding from the surface of Rhap-
into relief by its more thinly laid surroundings. In
sody in Blue, Part I? Or the ubiquitous metal paint
both instances, Dove’s brushwork waxes sculptural
and the moniker “things”? That Dove exhibited the
and in so doing introduces the mass and volume
music paintings with several of his assemblages, in-
of the object world— and, specifically, given the
cluding Hand Sewing Machine (fig. 120), a collage on
silver hue, the matter of metal—into his pictures
a metal ground that features a device powered by
of sound. That he does so in the space of one of
a hand turning a crank (two others on view, Hun-
his most putatively nonobjective, depth-canceling
tington Harbor I and Huntington Harbor II, both 1926,
paintings makes his point about materiality all the
boast metal supports), also makes clear that, in cre-
more plain.
ating a dialogue in Stieglitz’s gallery space among
We know from the diaries that music listening
like works (the assemblages) and works object-
was a part of Dove’s everyday life, and that this lis-
made through the use of a thing (the phonograph),
tening often took place in the company of family
Dove wished to highlight the essential connection
or friends. Historians of sound technology have
between the material world and pictorial art, and in
described the manner in which the idea of the
addition to this that he wished to evoke the promis-
audience was reconfigured by new modes of mu-
cuously material experience of listening compelled
sic consumption, and how with the phonograph
46
164
by a sound technology like the record player. And
in particular, performance became, in one schol-
of course it was this materiality that had in the
ar’s words, a “mere adjunct to musical experience.”
first place inspired the idea, formulated by Dove
Newly material and transportable in the form of
in the act of painting from records, that a paint-
a disc, thus unmoored from a particular time and
ing itself might be configured by way of a transla-
place, music could migrate from one site to another
tion and transfer of properties to be itself a kind of
and, when played, would unfold apart from the bod-
technology, an instrument alongside other instru-
ies and the instruments that generated it.48 But of
ments, among them barometers, cameras, and pho-
course other bodies and devices filled the void, such
nographs. At least two critics drew a direct com-
that what resulted was not so much music robbed
parison between Dove’s paintings and an apparatus
of its corporeal aspect but, rather, a new physical-
that produced “music for the eye,” suggesting just
ity or materiality, one constituted by the listener or
Chapter Three
listeners and the listening machine, and also by the
and linking these various components into a sonic
reanimation, through said machine, of the limbs
continuum or system. Prescient, then, was Torr’s
and lungs that generated the sound at its origin.
characterization of Dove as painting “with almost
Dove, I believe, found the idea of a simultaneous
everything in sight” as he worked on one of the
continuum of bodies, machines, and sounds across
Rhapsody in Blue pictures while listening to Ger-
time and space compelling because it suggested a
shwin.50 As such, painting from records entailed
novel form of human interchange (his interest in
calling into being, in concentrated pictorial form,
theosophy would have primed him for this), and
novel modes of making contact and communicat-
perhaps he imagined that the dialogue among his
ing among people but also across media and mate-
paintings and his assemblages in the 1927 exhibi-
rial. Painting from records thus offered an idea of
tion approximated such a connectivity, a new form
the operational modes, instrumental capacities,
or mode of music played “live,” and also that the
and phenomenal outcomes— those encompassed
network of relations he established among him-
by the phonograph as a technology, from a start in
self and his wife and his friends by way of music
a recording studio to a finish in a listener’s ear, or
listening over the course of days and months did
a painter’s brush—apposite to the task of rewiring
the same. It is worth emphasizing here that Dove
and reconfiguring a much larger complex, that of
bought records, but as the diaries make clear he also
human existence.
received many as gifts, with the phonograph disc
This might mean that Dove’s paintings were
thus rendered a literal medium of transfer and ex-
illustrations, after all. As Cooper has noted, Dove
change; he also listened to the records with Torr and
used the word “illustration” to describe at least
with friends, and sometimes Dove and Torr painted
one of the record pictures, writing to Stieglitz in
together as the records played. In a discussion of
October 1926 of the reaction on the part of two of
telephony, Steven Connor has described how the
his acquaintances to his work: “They have waxed
illusion of bodily presence persisted for those who
enthusiastic over a ‘thing’ of mine being done from
used this new technology, through, he writes, “the
Gershwin’s ‘Rhapsody in Blue’ not as yet completed,
sense that the voice that arrived at the other end
but I feel it will make people see that the so-called
of the line had not been transported so much as
‘abstractions’ are not abstract at all. R. said that in
stretched out,” and my understanding of how Dove
describing it to some people who had heard the
imagined the experience of listening to records
music, he found that they understood this even
49
played on a phonograph hews closely to this. It
though they had objected to my other ‘things.’ It
is possible, then, that in the record paintings Dove
is an illustration.”51 This final phrase could mean
meant to model a form of intersubjectivity that
any number of things, including that Dove did
transcended time and space and also one that abol-
in fact mean in his music paintings to illustrate
ished barriers between the animate and inanimate,
straightforwardly the music to which he listened
between sentient beings and machines. The sonic
or, as Cooper suggests, that Dove called the most
complex instituted by the record pictures through
radically abstract of his canvases illustrations as a
multiply translating and thus reconstituting both
way to explain their nonobjectivity and thus soften
music and painting inferred radical intersubjectiv-
their blow.52 It is also possible that Dove meant
ity as such. The novel modes of music production
to evoke another sense of “illustration,” one even
and transmission that characterized phonography
more literal than what Cooper envisions. Dove
demanded collaboration and exchange among mul
tended to use the term disparagingly, dismissing
tiple entities and phenomenal forms, gathering
the work of Thomas Hart Benton and Grant Wood
into a single, collective experience of listening mul-
as “huge colored illustrations” and indicating his
tiple bodies collaborating with multiple machines,
preference for having his tooth drilled at the den-
the through-line of transmuting music gathering
tist over looking at a Benton self-portrait. He beSound
165
littled the mural format in similar terms: “There
his pictures translated sound but also sound tech-
seems to be an epidemic of wall trouble now. Think
nology into pictorial and material form and, in so
I should enjoy a floor better covered with glass.
doing, rendered both anew. The paintings did so
Most of these wall frescoes look like huge water-
by collapsing barriers between opposed terms—
53
color illustrations.” When Dove discussed in his
live / recorded, embodied / disembodied, visual /
draft of a letter to Samuel Kootz the idea of paint-
material, human / machine, sound / graphic mark—
ing Shakespeare, he made clear that there existed
so as to reconstitute each in excess of its original
a distinction between such an undertaking and
state, thereby intimating a new relational, inter-
merely “illustrating his works.”54 But it is import-
subjective mode and, through the pictures them-
ant to remember that Dove himself worked as an
selves, positing the vocabulary to be used therein.
illustrator for many years, continued to take on illustration commissions through 1930, and was at work on commissioned drawings in the fall and winter of 1926, the period during which he initi55
Before he made paintings while listening to records,
ated his series of music paintings. Most scholarly
Dove created several pictures related to music, in-
accounts insist on Dove’s resentment of such work,
cluding Music (1913) and Sentimental Music (ca. 1913)
but in 1926 he reported that he had “become a tri-
(fig. 106).58 An even earlier work, Movement No. I
fle reconciled with my old work of illustrating” and
(1911) (fig. 107), might also belong with this group,
believed that his “experiments at this modernistic
which I designate his music paintings to distin-
painting of mine” had improved his skill as an illus-
guish them from the record pictures. Dove revived
trator.56 This suggests that by the late 1920s Dove
this early effort two years after he completed the
imagined his painting and his illustration work to
record pictures, in 1929, with Primitive Jazz (location
be in some manner related, rather than opposed,
unknown), and again in what wound up being the
and also that for him, in 1926, the year he called
final years of his career, with a canvas entitled Prim-
his Gershwin painting an “illustration,” the term
itive Music (1944) (fig. 108).59
may have designated a middle ground between his
166
Painting Music
The music-based works created prior to 1926–
two pursuits, one encompassing an attention to the
1927 might be seen as more straightforward at-
relationship between words and images as necessi-
tempts (at least for Dove) than the record pictures
tated by his illustration work and that at the same
to render in visual terms the effects and experience
time bore in mind the conclusions drawn by his
of specific musical sounds or types. In Sentimental
experiments with an abstract pictorial vocabulary
Music, for example, layers of white, rose, gray, and
in his art. “Illustration,” then, when used in refer-
gray-blue pastel form a thick, plush surface that
ence to the record paintings, evoked not only depic-
calls to mind the feel of velvet and is set into mo-
tion but translation, the operation necessitated by
tion by a series of rounded and billowing forms
rendering the words of a magazine story in visual
and dramatically surging lines, including two that
form and constitutive of the process of painting
shoot skyward, as if propelled by rockets, evoking a
abstractly from record listening, including all the
heightened emotional state. Dove moved his pas-
translating operations that unfolded within that
tel stick in multiple directions as he laid his color
process. In this sense, then, Dove’s paintings from
down so that the entire surface lurches and seethes,
records did after a fashion illustrate their source.
thereby registering the motion of his hand as well
Dove listened while he painted, but he also looked
as the swells, plateaus, and crescendos of an expres-
up—in so doing he would have been given to “see”
sive and affecting musical piece. Thick black lines
the sound he was painting, not as sound but in the
that skim across and bubble through the compo-
form of the phonograph apparatus sitting near him
sition foreshadow the spirals and linear sweeps of
and with which he had to interact.57 In this way,
the later record paintings, while the center cylin-
Chapter Three
Fig. 106 Above, Arthur G. Dove, Sentimental Music, ca. 1913, pastel on paperboard, 215⁄8 × 18 in. (54.9 × 45.7 cm), recto: Landscape with House and Barn, Metropolitan Museum of Art, Alfred Stieglitz Collection, 1949, 49.70.77a, b. Image copyright © The Metropolitan Museum of Art. Image source: Art Resource, NY. Fig. 107 Right, Arthur G. Dove, Movement No. I, 1911, pastel on canvas, Columbus Museum of Art, Ohio, Gift of Ferdinand Howald, 1931.166.
Fig. 108 Arthur G. Dove, Primitive Music, 1944, gouache on canvas, 18 × 24 in. (45.72 × 60.96 cm), The Phillips Collection, Washington, DC, acquired 1944. Any reproduction of this image shall not be made without written consent of The Phillips Collection, Washington, DC.
der forecasts the skyward-bent liquid chutes of Sun
The pastel Team of Horses (1911 or 1912) (fig. 68), for
Drawing Water. The twist and turn-back at the base
instance, shares spinning discs and sawtooth arcs
of one of the rocket-propelled lines predicts analo-
with Chinese Music, and the up-thrusting chimney-
gous shimmies and shifts in the later pictures, and
like shapes and fanning rectangular shards of Nature
perhaps also evokes the sharp intake of breath of
Symbolized No. 1 (Roofs) (1911–1912) foreshadow those
a singer pausing to inhale between the end of one
in the later work. William Innes Homer included
note and the beginning of another. One comes away
Movement No. I in “The Ten Commandments” group,
from Sentimental Music thinking of inner works or,
suggesting a concrete link between this suite of
even, innards. The coiling tube-forms at upper right
pastels and a painting like Chinese Music.60 Yet Chi-
and the half-round, half-pointed form at left, with a
nese Music is noisy in a way that the pastels are not.
saggy paunch at its base and a sharp triangle at its
The pastels move and jostle and thrust and spin,
apex, evoke human organs and organ systems while
but they do so quietly, as if film without sound.
the pumping, thrumming, and bellowing shapes of
Even Movement No. I—with its whisper-soft pastel
the painting collectively call to mind musical in-
surface, its planes of deeply saturated blue gently
struments at work: the throaty blasts of horns, the
rotating in space and across smooth fields of gray
sharp hum of wind instruments, and the whining
and gray-brown, and its slow motion starburst ef-
vibrations of strings, or perhaps even the internal
fect, evocative of a galaxy coming into being—can
machinery that produces the plonks of a piano or
seem mute despite the apparent clatter of its forms.
the bellows of a pipe organ.
This suggests that the “movement” of the title re-
Chinese Music (1923) (fig. 109), with its quasi-
168
fers as much to the idea of motion as it does to
Cubistic fragmentation and multiplication of
music or sound. Chinese Music, on the other hand,
sharp-edged geometric forms, seems closer in spirit
hums, clangs, and roars. Its shapes, along with lib-
to the pastels that make up the series “The Ten Com-
erally applied metallic silver paint at right, call to
mandments” than it does to the record pictures or,
mind buzz saws, turbines, and pistons—machine
for that matter, than it does to Sentimental Music.
or factory noise—in addition to musical notes or
Chapter Three
Fig. 109 Arthur G. Dove, Chinese Music, 1923, oil and metallic paint on panel, 2111⁄16 × 181⁄8 in. (55.1 × 46 cm), Philadelphia Museum of Art, The Alfred Stieglitz Collection, 1949, 1949- 18-2.
sounds. The rising wave or crescendo of semicircles
There are multiple points of connection, for-
at right, which culminates in the sharp points of a
mal as well as conceptual, despite the first-glance
sawtooth blade, evokes music, as do the multiplying
radical difference between the painting and the
and repeating rectangular shapes that seem to push
ten photographs in the “Music” series. Both boast
up from the bottom edge of the canvas one after the
a shared slicing of a circular or cresting form across
other. These can seem like notes pressed out of an
the foreground space: a silhouetted hill in many of
instrument or a throat by the exhalation of breath,
Stieglitz’s images, and in the Dove, a curving saw-
or perhaps the depress of piano keys and the conse-
tooth blade, the shading into shadowy black at the
quent strike and rebound of hammers hitting steel
tip of each tooth perhaps referencing the blacked-
strings. But such forms also call to mind factory
out landscapes in the photographs. The circles that
buildings or smokestacks at night, the burnt red at
float across the left half of Chinese Music may allude
the base of each evoking the blaze and heat of man-
to the partially obscured white-hot suns, mere dots
ufacturing within and the circular forms that drift
within vast expanses of sky, in some of Stieglitz’s
across the canvas’s left half denoting industry’s of-
pictures. The resemblance of Dove’s circles to the
fal, smoke or ash channeled into the atmosphere by
sunspots that radiate throughout Georgia O’Keef-
61
a chimney flue.
fe’s The Shelton with Sunspots, N.Y. (1926) also sug-
It has been suggested that Chinese Music was in-
gests that Dove had the sun and its associated op-
spired by a visit Dove made to a Chinese restaurant
tical phenomena in mind when he created Chinese
with Rebecca and Paul Strand in October 1923, but
Music.
even if this were the case, one cannot know just
Rosalind Krauss has described the particular
what Dove meant by the phrase “Chinese music”
mode of abstraction on offer in the cloud photo-
and what about such music struck him with the
graphs as a function of cutting or cropping by
desire to give it visual form. As Cassidy has noted,
which a natural sign— the sky— is rendered un-
other artists and writers of the period alluded to
natural by virtue of excerpting and dislocation,
Chinese, or “Oriental,” cultural forms, and Dove’s
producing disorientation rather than recognition
62
painting surely fits within this broader strain. It
on the viewer’s part.65 I resist drawing a parallel
is also likely that Dove’s turn, or return, to a musi-
between such “cutting” and the implied action of
cal subject in 1923 was inspired by Stieglitz’s exhi-
the sawtooth blades in Chinese Music and other of
bition that year, the one that featured “Music—A
Dove’s works, including Team of Horses and also
Sequence of Ten Cloud Photographs,” the series
Thunderstorm (1921), and vestiges of which appear
he had begun in 1922 at his Lake George home (fig.
in the paintings made from records and also those
63
170
46). Chinese Music does not initially appear as if
from radio, including Swing Music (Louis Armstrong)
inspired by the cloud photographs, so different
(1938) (figs. 71, 114). But I do insist that what Krauss
in appearance is it from those works. But because
characterizes as the chief operation of Stieglitz’s
Dove held these photographs and the Equivalents in
photographs—excerpting or, as she puts it, “punch-
such high esteem, he may well have seen in them
ing” out a segment from a continuous field—abides
something he might like to try.64 Given the impact
in Dove’s Chinese Music as well. In this work, two
of the cloud photographs on Dove in 1942, when
sawtooth blades signal the cut of each canvas edge
he purchased one after hoping “for some years” to
through geometric shapes that begin or end beyond
do so, one can infer that they made their initial
the frame, suggesting the unfolding of musical or
mark when early examples were exhibited in 1923,
industrial sound across time and space while resist-
prompting him to pair abstraction and music in a
ing any attempt to match form or color to a partic-
manner comparable but not identical to Stieglitz’s
ular musical note or phrase, a resistance that might
in the “Music” suite, the result being a painting like
explain the recalcitrance of the work’s title, which
Chinese Music.
precludes any iconographic impulse.
Chapter Three
And I would also suggest that it was with a
All paintings have genealogies, and many art-
work like Chinese Music that Dove began to sense
ists’ bodies of work are intratextual, but I like to
a connection between music and the weather, one
think that the connections among Dove’s early mu-
that set the stage for his paintings from records
sic pictures, his paintings from records, his paint-
three years down the road. Golden Storm (fig. 73)
ings of the weather and the shore, and Stieglitz’s
provides a kind of missing link: between the early
photographs of clouds are something more than the
music pictures and the record paintings, but also
usual artistic borrowing from this or that source,
between the early works and Dove’s weather paint-
from the art of others or from one’s own production.
ings of the 1930s and 1940s, including Sun Drawing
My sense is that somehow this intertextuality, for
Water and Rain or Snow. Made two years after Chi-
Dove, was yet another model of the intersubjectiv-
nese Music, in 1925, Golden Storm translates the geo-
ity in which he was invested, one that stood along-
metric and industrial forms of the earlier picture
side the model that technology-aided music listen-
into a natural setting. The metallic paint, the steely,
ing held forth, and that, by way of the sawtooth
rough, even rusty feel of the surface, and the fore-
form, forged a vocabulary or language of its own,
ground sawtooth blade of Chinese Music carry over
with this particular motif circulating among his
into the storm scene, establishing a direct connec-
works, assemblages included, in a manner similar
tion between the two works, while the blackened
to the ubiquitous concentric circle and waveforms,
hill-like forms in the bottommost register of Golden
as if shared data or a communal voice. The zigzag
Storm pay homage to their kin in Stieglitz’s cloud
edge that defines the point of transition between
photographs, from which they seem directly trans-
a yellow triangle at center and a darker yellow strip
posed. In Golden Storm, the sawtooth motif has
to its right in Dove’s final music painting, Primitive
transfigured from an emblem of sound or slicing
Music (fig. 108), constitutes yet another transpo-
into a rendering of waves and wind beating against
sition of the sawtooth motif, but stands also as a
a shore. One cannot know whether Dove made the
hearkening back to the spiral forms of the paint-
connection between sonic waves and those made
ings made from records. Like the cloud arc in Sun
of water or air prior to making Golden Storm in 1925,
Drawing Water, then, it bridges the distance across
or if this work’s dialog with Chinese Music suggested
these various works, putting them in conversation
the connection after the fact, but the link persisted,
across time and space, making them buzz with the
reappearing in the record pictures in the manner
sound of wind, water, factories, and jazz, but also
I have already described: where doubling, tripling,
with the chatter and hum of shared speech. In late
spiraling, and cross-hatching lines posit an analogy
August of 1936, Dove wrote to Torr, who was visiting
between the “breathing” of phonography and the
her mother in Hartford, Connecticut. In his letter
operations and effects of the wind, with one result
he described in detail a cyclone that had hit town
being the twinning or analogizing of the phono-
in the wee hours on a Sunday morning, enclosing a
graph and barometry. Sun Drawing Water confirms
newspaper clipping, “Some of Geneva’s Shade Trees
this connection in the subtlest of manners, by way
Laid Low in Sunday’s Storm,” that featured pho-
of the cloud or vapor mass at left, part of which
tographs of the damage caused by the storm. “It
pulls away from that mass and arcs elegantly into a
blew the southwest column off the front porch,” he
wavelike form, its tip pressing pointedly toward the
wrote. “It picked all our harvest apples which I have
left, thus calling to mind the sawtooth forms of Chi-
gathered. And the yard is full of sticks and horse
nese Music and Golden Storm, in Sun Drawing Water a
chestnuts and crabapples. It wasn’t dark a second.
misty vestige of those sawtooth motifs that origi-
One right after another. This window here by the
nated in Dove’s thinking in the early 1920s about
desk is dark with the leaves plastered flat against
intersections and exchanges among sound, music,
it. Quite exciting. Hope it didn’t hit you.”66 The
wind, and waves.
“O” that begins the sentence “One right after anSound
171
Fig. 110 Page 2 of an Arthur Garfield Dove letter to Helen Torr Dove, Aug. 23, 1936. Arthur and Helen Torr Dove Papers, 1905–1974, Archives of American Art, Smithsonian Institution, 2:1:32, image #22.
172
other” loops downward to connect to the “n” that
ship’s logs, “ideas,” shorthand, and notes). The re-
follows it, but also upward, where it breaks out of
sult: painting, music listening, weather watching,
letter mode and streaks into a rightward-leaning
and language-based communication among family
sawtooth squiggle (fig. 110). Here, Dove employs the
and friends combine in a single epistolary gesture.
sawtooth motif to represent a weather condition—
It is worth noting that this coalescence occurs in
cyclone winds—further cementing the connection
the context of an operation— correspondence—
I have been making between this motif and weather
that is by nature a medium or mechanism of in-
effects, the wind in particular. But he also renders
tersubjectivity, one that involves the transfer and
the sawtooth form coextensive with a letter of the
exchange of matter and states of thought between
alphabet, which in his note to Torr forms part of
parties across distances over time. Here, then, with
a word, recalling the graphic hybrids, “Sweets” and
this sawtooth squiggle, Dove supplies an emblem
“see,” that he produced in other letters to Torr, and
of what he wished for his paintings to achieve, or at
bringing to mind his wordplay more generally. Here,
least to imagine as possible: the construction and
then, the sawtooth motif is more than metaphori-
animation of an all-encompassing system of inter-
cally or analogously a vocabulary or language: it is
connection and exchange among all things across
literally part of a word, and thus announces itself
all space, one that took its cue from the world as
as a kind of speech or tongue, hybrid in that it com-
system but then one-upped that world, generating
municates meaning both verbally and visually, for it
unprecedented forms of relation and interchange—
is simultaneously letter and pictorial sign, and also
the transfer of properties and states of being
because it conjoins Dove’s pictorial projects with
between music and weather, say, or between human
his constant writing work (letters, but also diaries,
and machine.67
Chapter Three
Fig. 111 Arthur G. Dove, The Moon Was Laughing at Me, 1937, wax emulsion on canvas, 6¼ × 8¼ in. (15.875 × 20.955 cm), The Phillips Collection, Washington, DC, Bequest of Elmira Bier, 1976. Any reproduction of this image shall not be made without written consent of The Phillips Collection, Washington, DC.
Radio Pictures
52), also originated with a popular tune (of the same
If music listening and a shared sawtooth vocabu-
name), with music and lyrics by Lou Handman and
lary constituted models of communication and in-
Walter Hirsch; multiple artists recorded the song
tersubjectivity for Dove, then radio listening surely
in 1936, including Bing Crosby, whose version was a
constituted another. Dove based at least two paint-
radio hit.68 Dove wrote in his diary on December 2,
ings on songs he heard on the radio. One, The Moon
1936, that he “did small ‘Moon is Laughing at Me,’”
Was Laughing at Me (1937) (fig. 111), was inspired by
and in several entries in February 1937, Torr used
the popular song “The Moon Is Grinning at Me,”
the phrase “From the Radio” to describe a painting
which had been recorded in 1936 by Ben Pollack and
on which Dove was at work, treating the phrase in
His Orchestra and also by the Mills Blue Rhythm
three of four of the entries as an actual title; on Feb-
Band. Dove’s slight alteration of the title reflects
ruary 14, she noted that “From the Radio” was based
the theme of the song: a man spurned by the object
on a “song with moon in it.”69 Both paintings were
of his affection whose bad luck moves the moon to
exhibited in 1937 in Dove’s annual show at Stieg-
mock him. The other, Me and the Moon (1937) (fig.
litz’s An American Place; in the checklist to the Sound
173
exhibition, the titles of the two pictures are given
vice to which one passively listened, reflected radio’s
in quotation marks while the other titles are not,
reception and use at the time. Dove approached the
indicating that Dove wished to make a direct con-
phonograph in terms of its connecting capacities,
nection between his works and the musical pieces
essential to and embodied by the technology but
70
from which they derived. The radio paintings, al-
implicit within it rather than explicitly its func-
though of course closely related to the record pic-
tion. Radio, on the other hand, wore its connectiv-
tures, warrant their own discussion because they
ity on its sleeve, understood from its inception and
originated in a sound technology not identical to
invention as a device for use in facilitating multi-
the phonograph and, also, because the music that
directional communication and connection among
gave rise to them was not strictly instrumental, as
multiple parties. As one historian has written, radio
were the Victor recordings of George Gershwin and
participated along with the phonograph and tele-
Irving Berlin, for it featured the human voice.
phony in a “revolution” in the aural environment,
It is clear from a series of letters that Dove wrote
one that precipitated a “major perceptual and cog-
to Torr in 1936, during her extended visit with her
nitive shift” in the United States and changed the
mother in Connecticut, that he was an avid radio
nature of people’s relationship to sound. Radio in
listener. In the letters, he described when he lis-
particular fostered a new concept and form of com-
tened to the radio and what he heard: popular and
munity, an imagined one engendered by the phe-
classical music (Bach was a favorite) but also plays,
nomenon of large numbers of people in disparate
political speeches, commentary, news items, and (of
locations tuning into and partaking in the same set
71
course) weather reports. Dove’s correspondence
of broadcast sounds; the word “broadcast” itself sig-
during this time makes clear that his interest in ra-
naled a shift in thinking: from wireless technology
dio was in part inspired by the arrival of one “Mr.
as a matter of communicating between two parties
Thomas” to the Dove Block, a commercial building
to imagining this technology as a form of mass
owned by the Dove family in Geneva to which Dove
transmission and communication.74 In a 1922 essay
and Torr moved in 1937, having previously resided at
entitled “Singing to Tens of Thousands,” a performer
the family home nearby; they transformed a former
recalled that, ahead of his first radio broadcast, he
roller-skating rink on the third floor of the Dove
imagined “a life-size map of the United States, and
72
Block into a studio and living space. Mr. Thomas
in every town, every hamlet, every crossroads, there
rented space in the building for his radio station.
was nothing but ears” waiting to tune into his voice.75
Dove called him a “radio wiz.” in an August 30
In Radio: An Art of Sound (1936), the German-born
letter to Torr—he “knows codes etc. and can reel
psychologist Rudolf Arnheim undertook to explore
them off,” Dove said—and suggested that he and
the nature of radio as a medium, and his character-
Torr use radio as a means to communicate during
ization of the temporal, spatial, psychological, and
her absence, providing an example of how such an
sociopolitical transformations wrought by the new
exchange might transpire on the air: “P.S. If you
technology parallels that of the 1922 performer and
would like to hear me over the radio, I’ll find out his
also accords with Dove’s sense of the sonic within
station letters ‘W-H-O-Q (or something) DOVE’S
his pictorial project. Arnheim examined the new
HALL Geneva—Graham McDove speaking.’ Let you
aural capacities rendered by wireless transmission
know when I’m on the air and you can tune in.” In a
as well as its social effects, and he described ra-
letter the next day, Dove reiterated this idea, writ-
dio as a potentially global medium or macrocosm
ing to Torr that Mr. Thomas “did some broadcasting
that refashioned perceptions of reality by defying
for me. You could have heard it about 9 o’clock on
the boundaries of geography, time, and ontology.
the shortwavelength.”
73
That Dove understood radio as a medium of communication and exchange, and not simply a de174
Chapter Three
With radio, a new world was created, and previously namely, music and matter— distinct entities— exchanged properties: “so music entered the mate-
rial world, the world enveloped itself in music . . .
proposition continued what appears to have been
what hitherto had only been thought or described
a running story line between Dove and his wife
now appeared materialised, as a corporeal actual-
about a “ghost” or “ghost noise” in their home, one
76
ity.” As the scholar Jeffrey Sconce has made clear,
described in their letters as having taken up resi-
by the 1930s radio engendered a novel iteration of
dence in their telephone or as living in their cel-
perceived connectivity, one that involved a sense
lar and making itself known by “tunking.” In one
of flow and simultaneity among multiple entities:
letter, Dove explained to Torr that the ghost tunks
among the electromagnetic spectrum (of which ra-
translated as “When is Reds coming home?” before
dio waves are a portion), the electricity that powered
inquiring if she would like him to buy her a radio.80
the radio medium, the information transmitted by
Dove also associated the inventions of the radio afi-
this medium, and the listener-recipients of this in-
cionado Mr. Thomas with extranatural or enchanted
77
formation. Radio thus constituted a technology of
capabilities. “He is an electrical wizard,” Dove wrote.
communication that produced the conditions for a
“Has all that sign stuff that turns on when anyone
new intersubjectivity, one that comprised connec-
comes near it. Vaudeville, specialties, etc.”81 Dove’s
tions across time and space and between the ani-
wonder in this letter at the radioman’s ingenious
mate and the inanimate brought about by way of
creations referred to apparatuses like the one that
a series of translations among forces, matter, and entities, including the translation of unseen and impalpable wave frequencies into audible sound that could be registered materially as a graphic trace. What is more, radio at its inception and into the 1930s was commonly associated with the occult, as was wireless telegraphy, of a piece with invisible forces and entities and unfathomable realms. Tuning into the radio in Dove’s day was thus a matter of joining a widespread network of many parts but also a potential means for making contact with the denizens of unknown and unseeable worlds, and radio broadcasts themselves were likened to the telepathic transmission of consciousness or thought. This, along with the fact that it was wireless—sound generated out of thin air, as if by magic—made radio amenable to imaginings of unprecedented and/ or superhuman modes of contact and interchange.78 Dove clearly considered radio in these terms for, in addition to proposing it as a form of communication between him and his wife, he often drew associations between radio and various forms of occult communication, including telepathy. Referring to the many letters they had exchanged during Torr’s absence, Dove suggested an alternative: “I could talk with you on radio from block [the Dove Block] if you have short wave length. W8XKI. . . . We would have to have a date beforehand. Our hour on the air. Maybe we could have our own telepathy?”79 This
Fig. 112 Page 2 of an Arthur Garfield Dove letter to Helen Torr Dove, Sept. 26, 1936. Arthur and Helen Torr Dove Papers, 1905–1974, Archives of American Art, Smithsonian Institution, 2:1:36, image #28.
Sound
175
Mr. Thomas built in the Dove Block’s skating rink,
on “tunking,” magic eyes, and mental telepathy at-
which Dove labeled “a photo cell thing” in another
test. Dove’s son, William, reported that his father
letter to Torr, providing her with a sketch to illus-
“believed that he had certain powers,” and Dove
trate the apparatus (fig. 112). What the apparatus
himself made note of his telepathic experiences.84
entailed exactly is not fully clear, but Dove wrote
When he spoke directly of occult operations such
that when a person crossed between two boxes,
as telepathy, Dove often associated them with ra-
shown in the sketch with a dotted line between
dio broadcast technology, likening the mind or
them, pieces of ground glass lit up, followed by
thought to radio sound or transmission and the
the ringing of a bell and then a radio commencing
body to the radio apparatus that did the transmit-
to play. If the boxes were photoelectric cells, as is
ting. Cohn has identified several possible sources
likely, the shadow of a body passing between them
for Dove’s ideas, including Upton Sinclair’s book
would have triggered an electrical impulse that
on paranormal perception and communication,
caused the lights to flash and the radio to turn on.
Mental Radio (1930), which featured a short pref-
Dove noted in his letter that one also sees a “magic
ace by Albert Einstein, in which Sinclair analyzes
eye” when the line between the cells is crossed.
visually based experiments involving drawings and
This could refer to another illuminated component
compares telepathy to radio broadcasting. What-
of the apparatus or, more probably, to the idea that
ever the source—and Sinclair is a likely one—Dove
the photoelectric cells “saw” a person pass and re-
considered paranormal communication and radio
sponded by triggering light and sound effects. Ei-
to be not just analogous in their operations but in-
ther way, Mr. Thomas’s ensemble both amused and
terrelated phenomena. In a document titled “Sug-
impressed Dove with its ability to produce effects
gested Interview,” from his miscellaneous writings,
absent any apparent human intervention, and he
Dove hypothesized the following exchange: “What
described the implied connection between the two
do you think of the mystics? Mysticism is like radio
cells in terms of a waveform traveling through the
and the mind and body are the instruments.”85 Dove
air. “The things are on tables,” he wrote, “so you just
used the term “instrument,” as did both scientists
walk between them and there is hell to pay. Some
and occultists, to refer to a device or entity that
82
Dove’s description of a light ray that
received signals or messages and also transmitted
turns on lights and makes a radio play, as if out of
them to other devices or entities. He employed the
thin air, taps into connections made at the time
term and related turns of phrase to describe both
between technologies such as telegraphy and radio
machines and humans, putting devices such as
and the supernatural, aligning in his thinking the
barometers and phonographs alongside telepaths
83
technology of radio with the wondrous or magical.
and other preternaturally insightful individuals
Later in the photocell letter, Dove noted how much
in his formulation of exquisitely sensing entities.
he missed Torr and affectionately cautioned her to
In this he may have been inspired by Paul Strand,
watch out for his “competition” in Hartford. “Don’t
who employed the term “instrument” to refer to the
let anyone cross our light ray,” he wrote, positing
preternatural capacities of the camera in a privately
their connection in terms of the photocell-radio ap-
published tribute to Stieglitz, a copy of which he
paratus and its magic-seeming capacities.
sent to Dove.86 In a letter to Stieglitz, Dove wrote
light ray.”
176
Although not seriously involved or deeply in-
that the photographer had “a very strong sending
vested in occult circles and practices, yet prone to
outfit,” and in another he recounted with no small
using occult vocabulary metaphorically (in his ex-
amount of humor his first attempt at using a tractor
pressions of affection for Torr, for example), Dove
on the Geneva farm to plow a barley field, saying “I
was without a doubt attentive to certain of the
do not believe any human instrument can give out
ideas explored therein, as Cohn has aptly demon-
its best when its ass is being shaken off a tractor.”87
strated and to which his aforementioned remarks
Both statements echo the remarks Dove made in
Chapter Three
his letter to Elizabeth McCausland regarding his
of the transmitted sound would come: “How do
search for a fundamental motif, for a flexible and
you feel about a person when you’re talking over
rhythmic “formation” rather than blandly repeated
the phone? If you know them, or if you don’t know
geometric shapes. With such a formation he would
them, do you get something, do you put that into
release into space ideas “so that those with sensitive
words of your own, from what they say, or from
instruments” might access his thoughts, the whole
what you think? Or if it were music over the radio,
process eventually establishing itself as “an auto-
have you ever tried to think how it would look?”91
matic force.”88 Elsewhere Dove drew a direct analogy
Here, Dove places equal emphasis on the how as
between telepathic minds and modern machines,
well as the what of transmission, considering what
evoking a description of sound technology preva-
transmitted sound might look like as well as the
lent at the time: as a medium that transcended time
means by which such an image would be generated
and space, gathering past, present, and future, as
in the act of communication or broadcast.
did a weather forecast, into a single entity or expe-
Given that Dove understood radio as a means
rience. “Modern instruments,” he wrote, “are finally
of communication and exchange and associated
getting around to what those fine old gentleman
it with occult transmission, and that this under-
of the East could do a thousand years ago. . . . Their
standing was accompanied by his use of radio as a
most sensitive individuals could do things a thou-
stimulus to creative production, one guesses that
sand years ago that our modern world is all stirred
the paintings that resulted from radio listening
up inventing instruments to do. We think it re-
constituted more than visual renderings of the
markable to hear what is now happening at a dis-
moods and images conjured by the music he heard.
tance with our ear phones clamped to our heads,
The Moon Was Laughing at Me and Me and the Moon
and many of these fine old individuals in the east-
did register what Dove heard, of course, just as the
ern countries thought nothing of doing the same
paintings made from records did. But these works
thing in the present, past or future. They seem to
also modeled the idea of a network of relations
have eliminated time.” That Dove associated such
that embodied newly imagined forms of commu-
mental gifts with both radio and the act of painting
nication and intersubjectivity, with telepathy—the
is clear from the following undated remarks: “The
transmission of thoughts and information in a
human being is probably born with a far finer radio
manner that transcends time, space, and the lim-
outfit than he ever invents for himself afterward.
its of technology and human physiology—as well
More people who have this gift are appearing every
as radio broadcast joining weather and weather
day. This so-called sixth sense is very closely con-
science as exemplars.
nected with what is being done by the moderns in
The radio paintings diverge significantly in
painting, literature and music. They may not admit
style and overall feel from the paintings made from
it but it is.”89
records. Although they evoke the landscape format
Radio without a doubt inspired Dove to paint.
by way of proffering what might be read as com-
He wrote to Torr on September 28 that he had
binations of earth, sky, moon, and stars (Cassidy
“heard some really good music on Joe’s radio yester-
has aptly called them “pseudo-landscapes”), they
day noon. It started me on abstractions again. My
appear flatter and more surface oriented than the
table shook so I didn’t dare paint. So did water-color
record pictures, for there exists little variegation
abst. in my lap.” Dove’s diary entry for the previous
among their formal components, save for obvious
day confirms this: “Worked on abstractions in water
differences in hue and shape.92 Dove’s mark making,
color,” he wrote.90 In an unpublished, undated note
which transmuted and transfigured multiply within
Dove expressed curiosity about translating radio
each record painting, is here rigorously uniform,
and telephonic sound into visual form, wondering
his marks remaining consistent and unobtrusive
from whence one’s impression of the unseen source
across the whole of each canvas even if painterly or Sound
177
Fig. 113 Arthur G. Dove, Study for Me and the Moon, between 1935 and 1938, pencil on paper, 51⁄8 × 63/4 in. (13.0175 × 17.145 cm), The Phillips Collection, Washington, DC, Gift of Lisa Travers and William O’Reilly, 1997. Any reproduction of this image shall not be made without written consent of The Phillips Collection, Washington, DC.
178
roughly sketch-like in places. Color predominates,
dia, most likely inspired by Max Doerner’s The Mate-
rather than line, producing a flat puzzle-piece or
rials of the Artist, which Dove began reading in the
patchwork effect that approaches the feel of later
fall of 1935, and also by a more general renewal of in-
works like Sand and Sea and Flight. This is the case
terest in wax-based painting techniques in Europe
especially in The Moon Was Laughing at Me, where
and America in the 1930s, encouraged in part by
sectors abut and interlock but rarely intersect or
Doerner’s work.93 The wax emulsion technique, in
overlap (fig. 111). Given the healthy size of each
which wax is combined with pigment so that min-
plane or sector of color relative to the rectangle of
iscule drops of color are suspended throughout the
the canvas whole, Dove’s radio pictures produce the
wax, was not for Dove unique to these two paint-
effect of shapes pushing and spreading across the
ings, so it would be unwise to place too much store
surface, rather than a sense of motifs moving and
in its use in the radio pictures. But my sense is that
twisting energetically in space as in the case of the
two of the qualities associated with this technique
record paintings. This is not to say that line is un-
would have been particularly appealing to Dove for
important in these works. Two preparatory pencil
use in rendering radio sound: the overall matte ef-
drawings for Me and the Moon emphasize either the
fect of the medium as well as the suspension of one
outlines of the major shapes of the painting as ini-
material within another that defines wax emulsion,
tially conceived or the fluid and delicately twisting,
something with which Dove would have been very
wavelike line that meanders almost whimsically
familiar, having conducted extensive tests and ex-
through the finished picture, the only thing that
periments with various suspensions, as inspired by
interrupts the effect of lateral spread across the sur-
Doerner’s treatise and other technical manuals and
face plane in the painting (figs. 56, 113). But color
attested to by marginal notes in his well-worn copy
and shape predominate, something predicted by
of Doerner’s book and by remarks in his correspon-
Dove’s color annotations in the small pencil sketch.
dence and the journals.94
The radio paintings differ from the record pic-
While not exceptional within Dove’s body of
tures in choice of medium as well. In both, Dove em-
work, the combination in the two radio paintings
ployed wax emulsion, with which he experimented
of planar sweep and flattening effects with the
extensively beginning in 1935 and for the remaining
matte quality of wax emulsion, which produces an
years of his career, along with other wax-based me-
effect of continuity and sameness across the sur-
Chapter Three
face despite variations in brushwork or hue, proved
both operations—propagated radio waves and wax-
eminently suitable for the rendition of the experi-
encased molecules of pigment—having a touch of
ence of sound characteristic of radio listening, an
the supernatural about them. Emulsions are made,
experience that entails the connecting of widely
after all, by forcing a mixture of substances that do
dispersed parties by virtue of airborne waves that
not naturally combine.
travel in space. Understood at the time as engen-
Another key difference between the record
dering a new connectivity among individual listen-
paintings and the radio pictures involves the source
ers who listened as a gathered group even in the
of their sound. The music that inspired the crea-
isolation of their own homes, radio’s collectivizing
tion of the radio pictures featured singing, while
capacity set it apart from the phonograph in the
the music that inspired the record paintings did
popular imagination, leading Dove, for instance,
not. Radio’s transmission of the human voice wire-
to fashion radio as a technology of connection in
lessly through time and space—translating speech
his correspondence with Torr and to link it to the
and other sounds, including live and recorded mu-
operations and effects of telepathy. The material
sic, into signal and back again—probably inspired
characteristics of The Moon Was Laughing at Me and
the drawing of parallels between it and telepathy,
Me and the Moon thus appear to model the idea of
Dove’s own associations as well as those of his
radio itself and, in so doing, to model a condition of
contemporaries. But this feature— the fact that
collective experience and, by extension, a condition
real humans communicated in real time by way of
of intersubjectivity. Such a condition combined ra-
radio broadcasts, speaking to other humans and
dio’s properties and procedures, particularly its gen-
transferring information directly, as if in imme-
eration of a continuum of many bodies across time
diate proximity—may also have suggested radio
and space as evoked by Dove through the continu-
technology in particular as a model for a new form
ous and lateral-spreading flatness of the paintings,
of human interchange and new capacities for rela-
with operations of a more otherworldly sort, as
tionality not bound by the constraints of distance,
figured by the seemingly weightless suspension of
physiology, or nature of being. The lyrics to both of
pigment characteristic of wax emulsion, what some
the radio tunes that inspired Dove’s paintings de-
occult-minded commentators might have likened
scribe the moon, a celestial body, in conversation
to that medium of preternatural propagation, the
or directly interacting with a human. To wit: “Me
ether.95 Wax emulsion’s resistance to registering the
and the Moon are wondering where you can be. Me
perturbations of a moving hand holding a brush,
and the Moon are longing for your company. . . . I’ve
its sui generis effect, together with the manner
asked the Moon to find you somewhere behind the
in which its opaque solidity and pictorial weight-
stars”; and “The Moon is grinning at me for fall-
iness showcase its status as matter that has been
ing in love with you. . . . The Moon is grinning at
worked, underscored radio’s dual aspect as simulta-
me for giving my heart to you.”96 In each case, the
neously mysterious and machinelike. Radio, like the
lyrics posit phenomena that would necessitate un-
phonograph, employed machines— at the origin
precedented and perhaps occult forms of commu-
of the radio broadcast and at the receiving end of
nication and exchange. Of course popular music is
things—but the fact that its transmission was wire-
and has always been rife with personification, and
less, the quality that made it amenable to telepathic
impossible scenarios like moons and people having
analogies in the first place, also set it apart from
a chat have appeared in modern American song
record playing in that the latter was manifestly
with consistent regularity. But the fact that Dove’s
and often obtrusively wired. Sound, in radio, was
paintings, which triangulate radio, telepathy, and
literally airborne, something that Dove may have
speech in a seeming attempt to imagine transcend-
analogized by way of the mechanism of suspension
ing the confines of conventional communication,
that defined the wax emulsion technique, with
originated in lyrical narratives of unconventional Sound
179
180
or otherworldly exchange is worth noting. This is
ing together earth and sky. Its color-shifts (from
especially the case because in both of these paint-
dark gray to a lighter-gray hue as it leaves the yel-
ings Dove articulates not just a connection among
low center of the moon and begins to traverse the
all parts— through the matte character of wax
gray and black bands that encircle it) as well as its
emulsion and the various flattening effects I have
physical transmutations (from continuous line to a
described—but also a link between the moon and
series of dots to a spiraling loop) evoke the idea of
the earth, one that entails the visual integration
a connective tissue among entities that responds
of a celestial body and the earthly sphere by way
to the qualities of each as it encounters them in
of motifs of encounter and exchange of the very
turn, consequently taking on the characteristics of
same kind as those found across Dove’s work from
all and establishing a collectivity or unity among
the 1920s and 1930s, including his pictures of the
them. As the thread that forms this bond, Dove’s
sun and the weather as well as those of the urban-
meandering line calls to mind radio waves, and it
industrial landscape, a visual vocabulary that in
also evokes the bonds among subjects formed by
such pictures articulated and incarnated the oper-
radio listening as well as the phenomenon of voice
ation of translation and, consequently, intercon-
translated and transmitted via radio waves work-
nection. Think of City Moon (fig. 51), for instance, in
ing to knit together the myriad persons that hear
which a series of triangular forms incline upward
it into a sonic whole. In radio’s early years, when
toward a yellow moon that responds with a mis-
signals were weak and reception irregular, listen-
chievous smile, calling to mind the teasing moons
ers pursued and tried to “catch” transmissions, a
of Dove’s radio paintings, or Golden Sun and Naples
practice called “DXing” or “DX fishing.”97 Improve-
Yellow Morning (figs. 9, 10), where suns enter into
ments in technology made DXing for the most
conversation with earthbound nature.
part unnecessary by the 1930s, but Dove undertook
In Me and the Moon, an off-center and radiant
a similar sort of searching during this period. As
white-yellow orb extends its circumference by way
he reported in a 1936 letter to Torr: “Brought ra-
of concentric bands of alternating black, gray, and
dio out and connected turned it on and first thing
dark gray-green. These bands echo the striations of
got Beethoven. Paul [Dove’s brother] wasn’t trying
the shape that dominates the upper half of the can-
for anything. Tried all eve until 9 P.M. and noth-
vas, a roughly rectangular plane twisted at its center
ing but trash.”98 Dove’s words reflected the sense of
so that it resembles a sheet buffeted by the wind or,
wonder prompted by fishing sound out of the sky
alternately, the wings of a butterfly. This twisting
that characterized the radio imaginary in the 1920s
action proffers a slight nod to the third dimension,
and that persisted into the decade that followed.
pushing the rectangular plane into space by virtue
His remarks also suggest that the ribbons coursing
of its torque, but the whole remains emphatically
through Me and the Moon might have for him served
surface oriented. An ooze of yellow appears along
not just as symbols of radio waves or analogs to the
the top of the twisted shape, as if pressing upward
idea of forecasting, where the present casts a glance
from behind and dripping over the rectangle’s front
into the future, as in Dove’s Partly Cloudy, but also
edge. All this unfolds against a backdrop of black
as metaphorical fishing lines, a web of threads cast
sky and deep-brown ground. Each part—ground,
into the sky hoping to hook and reel in broadcast
moon, sky, and clouds or stars—intersects with the
sound. The diagonal line in Dove’s pencil study for
delicate ribbonlike line that meanders across the
Me and the Moon (fig. 113) that connects the crest-
canvas surface, taking root at the lower right and
ing shape at top right to the waves beneath it looks
left and ascending with delicate sways and loops,
very much like a fishing line with a float, or “bob-
some of them filled in with yellow or gray, toward
ber,” attached, represented by the circle Dove drew
the top where it disappears behind the yellow ooze.
at the line’s terminus and then labeled “red,” the
This line bisects the moon on its way up, stitch-
color most often used to enhance the visibility of
Chapter Three
sportfishing floats, now and in Dove’s day.99 Dove’s
preternatural communication, and the act of let-
usual placement of his signature at bottom center
ter writing. In creating such a collection of links,
in Me and the Moon likewise registers in a manner
he articulated within the space of two sentences a
particularly apt to the idea of skyward fishing, its
set of equivalencies very close to those generated
position suggesting an earthbound subject making
by Me and the Moon among sky, earth, waveforms,
contact with the moon, stars, and sky, casting his
and radio broadcasting as well as a transposition of
net to see what he might grab hold of and hear. In
self analogous to the painting’s own casting of Dove
the song “Me and the Moon” the protagonist poses
through space and time. The doubled directional-
a question to the moon, so it is not for nothing that
Stieglitz’s sky transposed ity of Dove’s missive—
Dove produces a formal correspondence between
to Dove’s terrain, Dove’s thoughts transmitted to
the leftward and descending arc of the “D” of his
Stieglitz’s home—together with the possibility that
name and the leftward declination of the ribbon
Dove took up paper and pen in response to an actual
line above and slightly to the left of his signature,
photograph or the memory of one, underscores the
implying that “Dove,” the “me” of the paintings and
implied materiality as well as the mutuality of such
thus of the songs that inspired them, generated
a translation of thought, its status as a materially
the ribbon line so as to establish contact with and
based and materially generative instance of trans-
communicate through the nighttime sky, translat-
action and interchange, one that takes visual form
ing his person across time and space by virtue of
in Me and the Moon as solidly spreading pigment and
capturing distantly originating and widely travers-
decisively interweaving lines.
ing sound, and perhaps even drawing an analogy,
No such lines wend through The Moon Was
through the idea of “fishing,” between radio waves
Laughing at Me (fig. 111), but interlocking shapes and
and those of the sea.100 In August 1924 Dove wrote
an overall green cast, created by dark-green hues at
to Stieglitz and O’Keeffe, in residence at the Stieg-
the surface as well as by green-toned underpaint,
litz family home at Lake George, New York, with
produce a puzzle-like whole, creating a single, bur-
news about his painting as well as an account of his
geoning form out of autonomous entities (ground,
move via the Mona with Torr from New York to the
sky, and moon). Exemplary of this formal inter-
Long Island shore. Wedged between an anecdote
connection are the pinkish, fingerlike shapes at
about a lost mooring and details about their new
lower right that interlace with their brown, equally
Halesite locale, the following sentences, accorded
fingerlike counterparts, as if wedged or snapped
their own paragraph in Dove’s letter, stand out:
into place. Many of Dove’s abstract canvases boast
“Your sky has been really quite wonderful here. It
zoomorphic forms, and that is certainly the case
seems as though I could think into those clouds and
here: a birdlike creature, wings spread and head
you would get the thought.”101 By “your sky,” Dove
and beak silhouetted against the moon, comes to
may have been referring to the sky at Lake George,
roost in the canvas’s left half, while what looks to
the sky over Halesite, or the sky in one of Stieg-
be a dog squats contentedly at right, his flapping
litz’s photographs of clouds. One cannot know for
ear constituted by a triangle of yellow and his face
sure, but identifying the exact referent seems less
and snout by an amalgam of ruby red, yellow, and
important than noting that Dove here character-
green. Rather than a picture of a bird or a dog, Dove’s
izes the sky as a possible medium of transmission,
painting skews more toward the idea of animate
one that might through the mechanism of clouds
creatures in conversation with the moon—visually
carry his thoughts upstate to Stieglitz’s summer
reinforced by the sharing of contours between the
home. With such a proposition, assuredly a fanci-
moon’s concentric circles and the body parts of the
ful one, issued in a letter to Stieglitz, Dove concep-
bird—in order to call to mind the kind of super-
tually conjoined a multitude of things: looking at
natural connectivity that radio for him exemplified.
nature, the earth’s atmosphere and its phenomena,
Dove associated communication technologies with Sound
181
wizardry and otherworldly noise (recall the “tunk-
what would have been in Dove’s estimation yet one
ing” of his resident ghost and Mr. Thomas’s magic
more model or means for the imagining of unprec-
eye), in keeping with period descriptions of radio’s
edented forms of communication and exchange.
otherworldly or occult origins or effects, includ-
The presence of other models of transmission and
ing the manner in which radio broadcasts seemed
translation registered in the forms of The Moon
to produce sound out of nowhere, or from an un-
Was Laughing at Me underscores this idea: the pho-
known realm—radio, wrote the New York Times in
netically efficient, symbolic marks of shorthand or
1922, “brought to the ears of us earth dwellers the
the tap-taps of Morse code as evoked in the pro-
noises that roar in the space between the worlds.”102
cession of near-vertical lines that stretches across
It makes sense, then, that in a painting inspired by
the bird’s pink-yellow “wing,” or the diagrammatic
radio listening Dove would envision a form of ex-
representation of the phases of the moon by way
change, between animals and the moon, unheard
of concentric circles that proceed from an inner
of on earth. Equal in its fantastic nature to the ra-
orange to an outer sea green, effects analogous to
dio “hauntings” regularly reported or described in
those of radio waves or the transmission of current
popular fiction during the first three decades of the
over wire as signaled by the traversing lines in Me
twentieth century, such a picture, with its animals
and the Moon.
and its weighty, waxy paint, remained firmly in con103
tact with solid ground.
182
According to Cassidy, Dove’s Swing Music (Louis Armstrong) (1938) (fig. 114) was not inspired by radio
It may also be the case that Dove, in conjuring
listening, as were the two moon paintings. Rather,
the idea of a conversation among the heavens, a
she reports, Dove created the painting either from
dog, and a bird, wished to evoke the new forms of
a phonograph recording of Armstrong’s music—
language that radio had brought into being, what
perhaps 1936’s “Swing That Music”—or from his
one historian of the medium has called “radio talk”
memory of the movie Artists and Models, starring
or “acoustic shorthand.” Such radio talk provided
Jack Benny and Ida Lupino, which opened in New
monikers for radio’s operations and technical as-
York in August 1937 and was seen by Dove and Torr
pects, such as the strings of capital letters and
on October 24, 1937.105 The film’s musical program in-
numbers known as call signs or call letters that
cluded “Public Melody Number 1,” a musical sketch
designated station “addresses,” or the locutions
performance set in Harlem featuring Louis Arm-
formulated to accommodate the exigencies of ra-
strong on trumpet and the singing of Martha Raye.
dio listening, in which things described could not
The scene begins with gunshots and people scatter-
be seen and images could not supplement words,
ing, then Raye descends a fire escape to the strains
104
thereby necessitating novel manners of speaking.
of Armstrong’s trumpet; we see the shadow silhou-
Dove was familiar with this new language, one that
ette of Armstrong playing before he emerges onto
was neither text nor image and represented a new
the street to accompany Raye. The “hot” trumpet
category or form of speech. He fashioned his own
playing is posited in the number as “public melody
locutions in this tongue, as in “ ‘W-H-O-Q (or some-
number 1,” a play on the phrase “public enemy num-
thing) DOVE’S HALL Geneva— Graham McDove
ber 1,” and Armstrong combines his trumpet play-
speaking,’ ” and he expressed admiration for the
ing in the scene with dialogue and scat singing. The
radioman Mr. Thomas’s knowledge of radio “codes,”
first mention of Dove painting from Armstrong’s
an appreciation that would have been rooted in
music occurs in March 1938 when Torr noted it in
Dove’s own interest in notational systems such as
a diary entry; several subsequent entries track the
weather maps, telegraphic code, shorthand, and
progress and completion of the picture, which Torr
musical scores. Perhaps, then, animal-moon com-
called in several places “Louis Armstrong Music.” By
munication in the radio paintings figured for Dove
the time of Dove’s annual exhibition that year, the
the new speech generated by radio technology,
painting had acquired its current title.106
Chapter Three
When Dove began painting his Armstrong pic-
note the conjoined red and brown sawteeth at
ture, one could have heard that musician’s music on
lower right—produce a point-counterpoint rhythm
the radio, so it may have been the case that radio
across the canvas plane, with bright-red accents,
broadcasts aided in inspiring Dove’s work, along-
including Dove’s signature, making the whole siz-
side Artists and Models and phonograph record-
zle and flash. Cassidy associates these blasts of red
107
Whatever the source, there is good reason to
with a trumpet’s blare, and there is most certainly
include Swing Music (Louis Armstrong) in a discussion
a sense of the air being filled at an instant with
of paintings that originated in radio listening, for it
raucous sound, a sonic effect subsequently overlain
hews closely to Me and the Moon and The Moon Was
with layer after layer of new and unpredictable re-
Laughing at Me in terms of formal vocabulary and
frain: the improvisation of instrumental jazz or the
appearance, and it shares its medium, wax emul-
random and nonsensical syllables of scat singing,
sion, with these two works, although in Swing Music
of which Armstrong was a master, as exemplified
Dove combined wax emulsion with oil paint, as he
by his 1926 recording of “Heebie Jeebies,” one of
did in a number of other works. As in The Moon Was
the earliest instances of scat, as well as his perfor-
Laughing at Me, in Swing Music shapes erupt at the
mance in Artists and Models.108 Lobes of gray, white,
ings.
surface and spread laterally, as if feeling their way
and blue at top center seem as vestiges of the color-
exuberantly through space. Interlocking forms—
filled loops formed by the meandering line in Me
Fig. 114 Arthur G. Dove, Swing Music (Louis Armstrong), 1938, emulsion, oil, and wax on canvas, 44.8 × 65.7 cm (175⁄8 × 257⁄8 in.), Alfred Stieglitz Collection, 1949.540, The Art Institute of Chicago.
Sound
183
and the Moon, and five sections of tonal banding or
tory singing of Armstrong, which hovered between
striation in Swing Music recall the banded and twist-
human speech and pure musical sound, much as
ing rectangle and the concentric strips in the ra-
pigment lies suspended among layers of wax in the
dio picture. These include the triplicate bands that
painting based on his musical work, was for Dove
constitute an oblong form at upper left that looks
yet another possible model of a new kind of lan-
very much like a bird; tonal variations of green that
guage or system of interchange.
surround the crimson splat just left of center; the strips forming a current of purple, plum, lavender, and gray that snakes toward the lower right corner, terminating in pendant drops held together by sur-
In comparison to the record and radio paintings,
face tension yet threatening at any moment to fall;
Dove’s attempt in Fog Horns (1929) to visualize the
the blocks of tan and brown that segment the tri-
idea of sound appears relatively straightforward,
angle form at center; and the brick-red and brown
closer in effect to the sonic registrations of Senti-
stripes that detail the leftmost edge of the tipped
mental Music (figs. 4, 106). Tonal gradations of purple
square of deep blue-purple at the upper right.
and plum fashion four circular forms, lighter at the
Intimations of human and animal forms in
edges, darker at the center, that march with surety
Swing Music akin to the bird and dog forms in The
across the canvas’s horizontal span. The effect pro-
Moon Was Laughing at Me suggest a space seething
duced is one of looking into the bells of a row of
with sound but also with life. Patches of gray, lav-
brass instruments, as if Dove meant to make most
ender, and lavender-gray combine in the upper left
literal the idea of a foghorn. It is also one of sound
to create a birdlike form, its eye and beak trained
approaching a listener, or a listener approaching a
toward the upper edge of the canvas. Along with
sound, such that what began as a faint hum winds
a putative Armstrong silhouette formed, according
up as a roaring blare. Perhaps Dove meant to render
to Cassidy, by the black silhouette at upper right,
this particular acoustic phenomenon, named after
the upper right quadrant features several shapes
the Austrian mathematician and physicist Chris-
that look very much like human profiles, includ-
tian Doppler, who first described it in 1842. Called,
ing one with an elongated oval for an eye and, in
of course, the “Doppler effect,” it involves an appar-
another instance, two profiles that share a com-
ent change in the frequency and wavelength of a
mon facial contour: the nose and upper lip of a red,
wave that is perceived by an observer moving rela-
right-side-up profile becomes the neck and chin of
tive to the source of the wave, which explains what
its dark-brown and upside-down counterpart, al-
one hears as the waxing and waning of a sound (of
most like Dove’s personal transposition of the well-
a siren of a fire engine or ambulance, for instance)
known duck / rabbit or old woman / young woman
as it approaches and then moves on. The concen-
optical illusions, both of which were published in
tric bands, originating in a deep purple-black and
109
When looking at these
lightening in hue as they spread outward, diagram
illusions, one seesaws between “rabbit” and “duck”
the illusion of transforming sound in a manner
or “young” and “old” but cannot perceive both as-
analogous to similar circle forms in Moon (fig. 5)
the United States by 1915.
110
184
Other Sounds
pects of the composite illustration at once. Insert-
that visualize the idea of a lunar phase, a process
ing a reference to emblems of the limits of human
of waxing and waning undetectable by the naked
vision into a painting like Swing Music, which shares
eye. In Fog Horns, the implied distance between the
with the radio pictures features evocative of new
three large concentric circle motifs and the much
forms of communication and intersubjectivity,
smaller one at right further articulates the idea of
might have been for Dove a way to signal that it
sound traveling in space and seeming to transmute
was with something other than conventional cog-
along the way. What to do with Dove’s evocation
nition that he was here concerned. The improvisa-
here of sonic transfiguration despite the fact that
Chapter Three
the hearing of foghorn sound is not usually subject
cabulary he devised for the purpose of recording
to the Doppler effect remains an open question. It
weather within which circular forms predominated.
could be that his attribution to foghorn sound of a
Horizontal bands of tonally varied gray in the upper
set of properties not usually associated with such
half of the painting directly register the silver-gray
an acoustic phenomenon was meant to press the
misty creep of fog as it rolls in or out, with the lower
painting past the realm of the straightforward and
half of this stack of bands also conjuring a sweep of
the empirically accessible and closer toward the ter-
sea. The intersection of the outermost circles of the
rain of telepathy and tunks.
front two horns with whitish-pink paint that ap-
Dove’s Fog Horns also begs the question of synes-
pears to represent a rise of shore or a cresting wave
thesia, in which a stimulus usually perceived by one
calls to mind the manner in which forms go in and
sense presents to and stimulates another, as when
out of focus when surrounded by moving and trans-
a person perceives a color when he or she hears a
muting banks of fog. That weather and sound come
especially because synesthetic particular sound—
together here in a painting about foghorns and the
experience embodies the effects of interconnection
sea is especially interesting because of course fog-
and serial substitution that preoccupied Dove. Yet
horns speak in code, the duration, frequency, and
one would be hard pressed to find evidence for an
sequence of their blasts communicating informa-
engagement on Dove’s part with this phenomenon
tion about the conditions confronting ships in the
and its interlocutors in the period, and his pictures
vicinity. One cannot know for sure if Dove knew
111
the exact code employed by his local foghorn. The
Rather, in a painting like Fog Horns Dove brings to-
diaries first mention Dove at work on the paint-
gether three major fixations—weather, the sea, and
ing in February 1929, so his locale would have been
sound—thus intimating the connections he would
Halesite, first in a room in the Ketewomoke Yacht
draw among the three in his record and radio paint-
Club and then, by April, aboard the Mona, and thus
ings. Because a foghorn is a sound-producing in-
within hearing distance of the nearby foghorn on
strument—an actual horn that relies on vibrating
Huntington Harbor.112 This may or may not have
air to generate its sonic blasts—and because each
been his particular referent. Yet given his assiduous
of Dove’s circle motifs look, as I have said, like the
weather notating and his evident knowledge of the
inside of the bell of a brass instrument and thus
verbal and visual vocabularies of meteorology, it is
also like a view onto the inner surface of a phono-
likely that he at least knew of the existence of fog-
graph horn, one surmises that Dove drew an associ-
horn signaling and found it as interesting as he did
ation among these three sound technologies or de-
other systems of translation and communication,
vices: brass instrument, foghorn, and phonograph.
from telegraph talk and shorthand to musical no-
The concentric bands in Fog Horns call to mind the
tation and the phonograph. The variant sizes of the
concentric grooves of a phonograph record, as do
horns in Fog Horns might then refer to variations in
similar motifs in the paintings made from records,
foghorn speech, akin to the manner in which talk
and the implication of foghorn sound moving
between a bird or dog and a celestial body refers
through space calls to mind wireless radio trans-
in the radio paintings to radio’s own novel modes
mission, with its signals borne on air or through
of communication. If so, the painting as a whole
the ether, for which fog might be an analog here.
thus offers an early formulation of the models of
All this reinforces the idea of Dove hypothesizing a
translation and communication on offer in the
connection between unrelated apparatuses; so too
record and radio paintings. In this way, then, Fog
does the fact that the many invocations of sound
Horns stands as a precursor expression of Dove’s hy-
and its sources arise in the space of a painting about
pothesis that a painting, with its capacity to defy
fog, a weather condition Dove regularly made note
the laws of nature and to combine or put into rela-
of in his diaries and ship’s log using the visual vo-
tion incompatible or disparate operations, forms,
in the end do not really support the association.
Sound
185
and beings, might manifest a new mode of seeing,
In June 1940, Dove wrote to Stieglitz to report
saying, knowing, and being in the world, one ex-
that he was feeling better than he had in a long
emplified by his reconfiguration and hybridization
while, having the previous year suffered a heart at-
of painting and music in the record paintings. That
tack and received a diagnosis of Bright’s disease, a
Fog Horns is hauntingly beautiful, resonant with the
condition afflicting the kidneys; from the diagnosis
sonorous tones of the featured horn and possessive
on, he was never fully well, despite his assertions
of a kind of transfixing power despite its small size,
to the contrary.113 In his letter, Dove assured Stieg-
is not beside the point. The intersection between
litz that his physician had declared that he was “in
the plum bands and the pink-white rise evokes ob-
the best shape since first taken ill.” He also offered
jects obscured in a fog, but these moments of inter-
an explanation for a recent setback: “He [the phy-
section and overlap also conjure the idea of encoun-
sician] allows that I would not have had this last
ters and thresholds crossed, suggesting that Dove
setback had a lady not tried to kill her two boys and
meant this painting to intimate or summon a world
succeeded with herself just outside here in the early
other than his own and to conjure capacities not yet
morning. Having ears like an animal it was a bit
within reach on earth, deploying ethereal beauty to
vivid for me.” In a subsequent letter, penned almost
make the gesture eminently striking and clear.
a year later, Dove wrote to Stieglitz about a painting
Fig. 115 Arthur G. Dove, Neighborly Attempt at Murder, 1941, oil and wax on canvas, 51.12 × 71.44 cm (201⁄8 × 281⁄8 in.), Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, Gift of William H. and Saundra B. Lane and Robert Dawson Evans Collection, Bequest of Mrs. Robert Dawson Evans, by exchange, 1990.374. Photograph © 2016 Museum of Fine Arts, Boston.
186
Chapter Three
listed as number 10 in the catalog to his exhibition
is supported by Charles Van Wyck Brooks, son of the
at An American Place: “Do not think I would bother
critic Van Wyck Brooks, who recalled the incident
to satisfy just curiosity. The drawing was made of a
as told to him by Dove when he visited Dove and
dead tree without remaining consciously aware of
Torr in Centerport in 1946, just a few months before
the tragedy that had occurred there to which I had
Dove’s death. Dove described frequent shouting and
114
listened.”
The painting in question, Neighborly Attempt at Murder (1941) (fig. 115), earned its title by way of
fighting on the part of the occupants of a neighboring house. “One night,” Brooks wrote, “instead of shouts there were shrieks.”
Dove’s experience of overhearing the act he described in his 1940 letter. Despite his insistence
For minutes and minutes, perhaps hours, there
that he did not have the attempted murder in mind
were shrieks, first of rage then of terror. Later
when he undertook to create the work, the fact of
Reds learned that the woman had fought off the
his titling it as he did suggests that in the end the
man and succeeded in killing herself, and had
painting for him spoke of that awful episode. This
almost succeeded in killing the two children.
Fig. 116 Arthur G. Dove, Fire in the Sauerkraut Factory, 1936–1941 (drawn in 1936, painted in 1941), oil on canvas, Bequest of Seymour Lawrence, University of Mississippi Museum and Historic Houses, 1998.15.4.
Sound
187
Arthur had lain in bed, unable to move. The next
visual effects. Dove took photographs of the 1934
day he was unable to speak. The second day he
fire, making sure to preserve its sensational look for
was still unable to speak. On the third day, Reds
future use.119
assembled paints and canvases for him, and he worked without a word until all was set down.115
Neighborly Attempt at Murder (fig. 115) dazzles in another way, in a manner similar to that of Swing Music (Louis Armstrong), but in exaggerated fashion.
Other work on view in the 1941 exhibition de-
Roughly curving forms erupt at the surface, jos-
tailed disastrous or violent events: Italy Goes to War
tling and hurried as they spread laterally across the
(1940) and Fire in the Sauerkraut Factory (1936–1941)
canvas plane, while earth-toned strips and shards
116
Dove made an emphatic note of Italy’s
vye for space with green and blue blobs and spikes.
declaration of war in his diary entry for June 10,
Loose brushwork, minimal underpainting, and vis-
1940, and elsewhere in the diaries and also in let-
ible ground throughout indicate a canvas made
ters he lamented the wages of war, including local
quickly. One confronts in this painting a quality of
rationing and the experience of friends overseas,
explosiveness rarely seen in Dove’s work, save for
and he expressed his disgust at Nazism. The ag-
the few canvases that depict fire or war, an effect
(fig. 116).
gressive, bomb-blast feel of Italy Goes to War regis-
exacerbated by the near-white form at center, which
ters as much, as do the other war-themed pictures
has the look of being pinned against the front of
in Dove’s body of work, including U.S. (1940) and
the picture by a blast detonated just behind it. The
1941 (1941) (figs. 93, 94), both of which conjure the
sharp points of what look like grass blades at lower
look but also the sound of an explosive, either its
right and two adjacent, daggerlike forms toward the
whistling descent or the shattering boom of its im-
top of what Dove characterized as a dead tree, make
117
There is no indication that the sauerkraut
this scene seem to screech, far more shrill in tone
factory fire had an impact on Dove equal to that of
than its scat-singing counterpart despite the soft-
overhearing attempted murder or the fact of inter-
ening effects of the wax medium in sections of the
national warfare, but he rendered it just as dramat-
painting, and partly the result of roughly scraped
ically and sensationally. His description of a fire he
and nervously wiry brushstrokes visible throughout.
witnessed in 1934, on which the painting is likely
I spend time here with Neighborly Attempt at
based, further connects Fire in the Sauerkraut Factory
Murder because, unlike the radio pictures, which re-
to his paintings of war, especially because he em-
fer to, even if they do not directly illustrate, recog-
ploys a military metaphor to describe the event. “It
nizable things, and thus remain fixed to visual
was a beauty of a fire,” he wrote to Torr, “with the
experience, Dove’s 1941 painting, like the record
high tension wires running white violet fireworks
paintings, was created from listening rather than
all over the building white light ran out the wires to
from looking, from the experience of the ear rather
a switch box on a pole and set off an octave higher
than the eye. Or, rather, and more precisely, it was
color pinwheel in violet orange. The people would
created from overhearing, which makes its sonic
all scatter when it went off. Sounded as though
impetus somewhat different than that of the record
someone had run a zipper down between two rows
pictures, which originated in Dove’s conscious and
pact.
118
In the resulting painting, with
deliberate interaction with a phonograph appara-
its foreground fireball, a spiky spiral of yellow and
tus with the purposeful aim of generating musical
bright purple-pink, and its massive and shooting
sound. It could be that Dove’s report to Stieglitz
licks of red, orange, pink, and yellow flame, be-
that he did not consciously begin the painting as a
neath which trees and telephone poles wither and
murder scene reflected the fact of its origin in an in-
melt, Dove recounts the conflagration with the
advertent reception of sound. This sonic sneak at-
exuberance of someone interested in the event for
tack, described by Dove as “a bit vivid for me” given
its drama but also for the spectacular quality of its
his especially acute “animal” ears, presented to him
of machine guns.”
188
Chapter Three
an experience vastly unlike his usual listening reg-
a gift but forcibly conferred, and muteness rather
imen. As a result of its seeming agency, of the one-
than converse results. What one faces here, then,
sidedness of its acting on him, among other things
is a painting that describes the opposite of what
making him unable to speak, this sonic ambush
Dove hoped his pictorial project might achieve,
diverged drastically from Dove’s other, purpose-
something wholly other than that for which he
ful and generative listening: to the phonograph or
strove when he put needle to record or ear to ra-
the radio, sometimes in the company of others; to
dio and then brush to canvas, or when the memory
friends and family over the phone; to the “tunks”
of a Louis Armstrong tune or the intonations of a
that he heard in his home and in his machines. It
foghorn pressed him to paint. It is as if in 1941 he
followed that he had to register this surreptitious
took a look back over his previous endeavors and
sound, as had his unsuspecting ears, as something
attempts and, going forward, sounded a cautionary
akin to the explosions of a factory fire or the blast
note, one that reminded him of the ambition and,
of a bomb.
perhaps, the impossibility of his project even while
Within Dove’s art and world, then, Neighborly At-
acknowledging the progress he had made over the
tempt at Murder presents something like a negative
years. If nothing else, this retrospective glance
example, one analogous to the dystopia that stalks
called to mind an earlier attempt to imagine a less
Dove’s pictures of flight and global geography: a
nefarious or troubling form of agency or will. It is
model of communication gone awry, of translation
to Dove’s exploration of this form of sentience in
and exchange among entities that exemplifies any-
his assemblages through the inanimate things from
thing but an intersubjective ideal, where sonic in-
which they were made that I now turn.
formation is not pleasurably shared or received as
Sound
189
Fig. 117 Arthur G. Dove, Long Island, 1925, assemblage: paint, shells, twigs, leaves, grasses, pebbles, and painted paper on panel, 41.91 × 57.15 cm (16½ × 22½ in.), Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, A. Shuman Collection—Abraham Shuman Fund, 62.1128. Photograph © 2016 Museum of Fine Arts, Boston.
4
Things Dove’s Assemblages Between the years 1924 and 1930, Dove created a series of works, over two dozen, that have been variously called “collages” or “assemblages.” Fashioned out of found, collected, scavenged, or purchased objects, these three-dimensional works, like Robert Rauschenberg’s combines, to cite a well-known example, occupy a category somewhere between painting and sculpture, their apparent lineage reaching back to Picasso and forward to Joseph Cornell, Neo-Dada, junk sculpture, and more recent experimentation with assemblage in large-scale installation formats.1 Dove characterized the blurring of boundaries between media in an undated, typewritten note that in working out a definition of sculpture addressed the capacity of painting as well. “Sculpture in a different sense,” he wrote, “raised or lowered to meet the attention or feelings as forms recede from the eye. That can be done with just paint.”2 This description of “different” sculpture, as a format alternating between high and low relief, matches the both/and quality of the assemblages, my term of choice for Dove’s three-dimensional works. Some of the assemblages exist vigorously in space, their complex configurations creating the effect of a deeply cut sculptural relief. In Long Island (1925) (fig. 117), for example, Dove combined branches, leaves, seashells, pebbles, dried grass, a magazine clipping of a car, and brightly colored paint to create an energetic and complex surface, while a boxlike frame accentuates 191
the depth of the work. Other assemblages hew as
status as made from actual objects, never attempt-
closely as a sculpture might to the planarity of a
ing to trick the viewer into thinking they are any-
painting, in some cases approximating the look of
thing but combinations of literal things.3 And for
a painted, two-dimensional surface through subtle
the most part, they appear designed to be displayed
collage effects. Draped over a metal ground dotted
on the vertical, like a traditional easel painting, if
with sand, blue-gray chiffon in Sea II (fig. 24) con-
not necessarily hung on a wall. Dove exhibited the
jures sky, sea, and waves but also broad strokes of
assemblages throughout his career, but they ap-
thinly applied, soaking paint. Despite the variance
peared en masse at two exhibitions in particular,
among them, all the assemblages announce their
in the 1925 Seven Americans exhibition organized by Stieglitz at the Anderson Galleries and in Dove’s 1927 one-man show at the Intimate Gallery, which included the suite of record paintings. The pamphlet for Seven Americans included Dove’s poem, “A Way to Look at Things,” while Dove’s “An Idea” appeared in the pamphlet that accompanied the 1927 exhibition.4 Dove reported that Stieglitz, on first seeing his assemblages in 1924 in advance of the 1925 exhibition, called them “one of the finest things he’s ever seen—way beyond everything he had expected,” adding, “Wait until Duchamp sees them.”5 Dove selected his materials for the assemblages from a wide range of object types. An incomplete, unsystematic list includes sand, chiffon, linen, metal, wood, glass, tinfoil, newspaper clippings, sheet music, twigs, human hair, pine cones, shells, buttons, string, dried flowers, cork, chicken wire, Christmas wrapping paper, bark, cross-stitch, a folding wooden ruler, nails, a denim shirt, sandpaper, a camera lens, clock springs, a watch face, shoe insoles, gardening gloves, velvet, a change purse, glue, moss, monkey fur, and bone. In many of the assemblages, Dove combined such materials with more traditional artistic media, including oil paint and graphite, and several of the works employ a metal base or ground. The subjects of the assemblages vary. Some are landscapes or seascapes, some evoke natural phenomena, some depict objects, others
Fig. 118 Arthur G. Dove, The Critic, 1925, assemblage of paper, newspaper, fabric, cord, broken glass, watercolor, and graphite pencil on board, 19½ × 13 × 2¼ in. (49.5 × 33 × 5.7 cm), Whitney Museum of American Art, New York, purchase, with funds from the Historic Art Association of the Whitney Museum of American Art, Mr. and Mrs. Morton L. Janklow, the Howard and Jean Lipman Foundation, Inc., and Hannelore Schulhof, 76.9. Digital image © Whitney Museum of American Art.
192
Chapter Four
are idea based or associational, and yet others are “portraits” of family members or friends, including Torr, Stieglitz, and the Strands. All fall into a subject category only roughly. The Critic (1925) (fig. 118), for instance, lampoons art criticism as a genre but also suggests a portrait of a particular critic, and Grandmother (1925) could be a portrait of Dove’s
own grandmother or, with its Bible concordance
brother were architects in Port Washington. He
title page, needlework, and pressed flowers and
drove in to Huntington in a sleigh one winter and
ferns, may intend a more general summoning of
stayed so long in a café there they had to bring a
6
grandmotherly associations. And Rhapsody in Blue,
wagon to take him home. He came home to his
Part I (fig. 100), which by virtue of its attached clock
boat one day with two bottles, making his wife
spring has been counted among the assemblages,
so mad that she threw them overboard. He dived
occupies multiple categories simultaneously, its ab-
in right after them and came up with one in
stract vocabulary and distinctive origins resisting
each hand. When tight he always sang “Shall We
any categorical pinning down.7
Gather at the River.”11
Dove created his assemblages while living shipboard, on the Mona. In a letter to Dorothy Rylander
As others have pointed out, in the assemblage the
Johnson, author of the only comprehensive pub-
kingfisher bird fashioned out of pieces of wood, the
lished study of these works, Georgia O’Keeffe wrote
snippet of sheet music, and the wooden ruler refer
that she believed that Dove worked in the medium
to Dusenberry’s aquatic talents, drunken singing,
of collage “because it was cheaper than painting
and professional life, respectively. Like the camera
and also it amused him—once he was started on
lens in Portrait of Alfred Stieglitz that refers to Stieg-
it one thing after another came to him very easily with any material he found at hand.”8 Torr offered a slightly different explanation. “One day,” she recalled, “he said ‘I’m tired of putting brush strokes on canvas.’ After the next walk we took on the other side of the water in Halesite he collected leaves and things and made his first collage. He got some handsome old wire on Marshall’s dump.—Put it, a blue chinese silk from a belt of mine in a beautiful white plaster rectangle.”9 Whatever the initial impetus, the assemblages clearly bear personal, biographical meaning. The “portrait” assemblages depict friends and family, while the landscape and seascape configurations evoke Dove’s Long Island environs. Others, including Rain, Clouds, and Starry Heavens (figs. 25, 89, 133), register Dove’s fascinations, including the nighttime sky and the weather, or his pleasures, as in Goin’ Fishin’.10 Dove’s own description of Portrait of Ralph Dusenberry (1924) (fig. 119) indicates that the items included in the work refer particularly to its subject, who was a good friend of Dove’s, and to Dove’s impression of him: Apropos of the hymn in the “Ralph Dusenberry,” the Dusenberrys lived on a boat near us in Lloyd’s Harbor. He could dive like a Kingfish and swim like a fish. Was sort of foreman on the Marshall Field Place. His father was a minister. He and his
Fig. 119 Arthur G. Dove, Portrait of Ralph Dusenberry, 1924, oil, folding wooden ruler, wood, and printed paper pasted on canvas, 22 × 18 in. (55.9 × 45.7 cm), Metropolitan Museum of Art, Alfred Stieglitz Collection, 1949, 49.70.36. Image copyright © The Metropolitan Museum of Art. Image source: Art Resource, NY.
Things
193
litz or the monocle and newspaper clippings in
music included in Ralph Dusenberry, at the local Sal-
The Critic that designate reactionary art critics, the
vation Army. Similarly, Dove’s entry for December 7,
objects in the portrait of Dusenberry act as iden-
1924, reports that he “found willows” for use in the
tifying accoutrements. Such objects appear in all
assemblage Rain. In addition to describing Dove’s
the assemblage portraits, serving to evoke the per-
collecting of “leaves and things” and his scaveng-
sonality and pursuits of people significant within
ing of wire from a dump and silk from one of her
12
Dove’s personal or professional life. The works are
belts to make an early assemblage, Torr reported
in this way autobiographical, as much self-portraits
their collecting of shells, driftwood, and stones “for
as they are pictures of family or friends. The assem-
paintings” in her diary entry for October 7, 1926, and
blages also functioned as agents within Dove’s re-
again in the entry for August 18, 1930, and she noted
lationships or as markers of his ties to others. The
on January 26, 1926, that Dove took a walk “looking
crafting of Ralph Dusenberry began a few days after
for materials” and had returned with some rusted
the Dusenberrys visited Dove and Torr on the Mona
metal.15 Dove created a freestanding sculpture from
and culminated several weeks later when Dove
weathered wood collected near his home and exhib-
showed the portrait to Dusenberry, who report-
ited the piece, titled Silver Cedar Stump, in his one-
edly loved it. O’Keeffe purchased Rain and gave it
man show at Stieglitz’s Intimate Gallery in 1929.16
pride of place first in her New York apartment and
Dove used various terms to refer to his assem-
then in her home in Abiquiu, where it accompanied
blages: “things,” “stuff things,” “sculpture paintings,”
Dove’s Golden Storm as an emblem of the friendship
“painting sculptures,” “caricature paintings,” “por-
13
between the two artists. A letter to Stieglitz, writ-
traits,” even, simply, “paintings.” In many cases, he
ten in 1925 while Dove was at work on several of his
employed two different terms to refer to the same
assemblages, including The Sea I and Sea II, makes
work, calling, for example, Alfred Stieglitz a “thing”
clear that Dove understood these works to be re-
as well as a “portrait.”17 Yet the term “thing” predom-
lational mediums. “You always do such wonderful
inates throughout the diaries and Dove’s correspon-
things,” Dove wrote, “that thanking you seems su-
dence, as it does in his essay “An Idea,” suggesting
perfluous. The only way is with work even though
that this was his generic term of choice for all the
it be ‘sticks and stones.’ I seem to get on with them
assemblages, even if it did not preclude experimen-
14
194
better than ‘words.’” Here, Dove invokes a popular
tation with other names for use in describing them.
proverb (“sticks and stones will break my bones but
In a June 1925 letter to Stieglitz, for example, Dove
words will never hurt me”) to describe his facility at
wrote excitedly that “one of the ‘things’ of the sea
material expression over and against verbalization,
is as good as ‘Rain,’ I think,” referring to either The
and he describes his creations as material missives
Sea I or Sea II, which he had created the previous
for communicating his debt to Stieglitz.
month, in May.18 As he did that of his paintings,
As Torr suggested in remarking on the origin of
Dove detailed in writing the process of creating
Dove’s assemblage practice, the assemblages also
the assemblages, but instead of reporting on prim-
served to register and record, diary-like, Dove’s hab-
ing, painting, and framing canvases, he recounted
its of looking, finding, and gathering. The diaries
his gathering and assembling of objects, including
indicate that Dove frequently went out “looking for
trips taken to stores to purchase materials. He char-
ideas” and also for materials for use in crafting his
acterized the process of fashioning one of the as-
works, as evidenced by the wide variety of things
semblages, Miss Woolworth, as a matter of her being
included in them. He recorded in his ship’s log trips
“borned.”19 Dove used this term metaphorically no
to Huntington in October and December of 1924 to
doubt; in 1929 he dubbed his works his “children,”
purchase materials for Alfred Stieglitz, Starry Heavens,
saying that if it were not for Stieglitz’s support they
and Ten Cent Store, and on October 20, 1924, he noted
would be “stillborn in the mind.”20 But his use of an
his purchase of “Shall We Gather at the River,” the
image of human reproduction to refer to the crea-
Chapter Four
tion of an assemblage is in keeping with the cate-
more intent on understanding what happened af-
gorical instability he instituted by way of his many
ter the fact of that inspiration. Claims that Dove’s
labels; the assemblages are paintings, sculptures,
innovative abstractions and constructions arose
caricatures, portraits, and things all at once, and
sui generis from the mind and hands of a solitary,
they oscillate playfully between the category of art
primordially original genius are specious, no ques-
and the status of a material entity or living being.
tion, but equally misleading are accounts that fash-
Dove’s assemblage practice had its precedents,
ion Dove’s assemblages as an intricate mixture of
of course, including contemporaneous experiments
influences, an empty cup into which was poured
with portraiture. The list includes Cubist collage,
a cocktail of the avant-garde’s heavy hitters, with
the constructions of Picasso and Joan Miró, Dada
Duchamp and Surrealism as the dominant notes.
photomontage and the readymade, the Surrealist
Dove indisputably existed within a modernist and
object, Paul Klee’s fantastic and playful composi-
avant- garde genealogy. The Museum of Modern
tions, Francis Picabia’s mechanomorphic portraits,
Art included Ralph Dusenberry in its 1936 exhibi-
Charles Demuth’s poster portraits (which Stieglitz
tion Fantastic Art, Dada, Surrealism, after all.24 The
featured alongside Dove’s assemblages in the 1925
literature has made Dove’s heritage perfectly clear,
Seven Americans exhibition), Gertrude Stein’s por-
dwelling on what might have influenced him and
traits of Matisse and Picasso published in Camera
why: experimental portraiture’s unseating of like-
Work in August 1912, Marius de Zayas’s caricatures,
ness, Cubism’s play with illusion and signification,
and the Merzbilder of Kurt Schwitters. All share
Duchamp’s multifaceted embrace of the object,
material qualities and conceptual concerns with
Surrealism’s habits of finding or collecting as well
Dove’s assemblages and, as has been discussed quite
as its flirtation with chance and automatism and,
sufficiently in the literature, Dove surely drew on
of course, its auto-or psychobiographical bent, the
certain of these practices for inspiration. Dove’s
avant-garde’s sustained and vigorous exploration
assemblages also anticipated work to come, includ-
of sculpture as a radically additive process, and so
ing the boxes of Joseph Cornell and the combines
forth. But it is not with genealogy that I am here
21
of Rauschenberg. Whether there exists a genetic
primarily concerned, and Dove himself was equally
link, so to speak, between Dove and these other
without such genealogical investment. Dove of
practitioners of collage and assemblage of course
course alluded to and evoked his artistic past, as all
remains an open question. In “The Pasted-Paper
artists do, and his drawing on multiple precedents
Revolution,” Clement Greenberg describes Picasso
or contemporaneous practices in creating his own
and Braque mixing sand and other substances into
version of assemblage was itself an expression of
their paint as a way to call attention to the “tactile
the networks, interconnectivity, and forms of socia-
reality” of their pictures, thereby enhancing their
bility that he sought to call forth in his art. It would
corporeal presence. It may be that Dove, who em-
thus be disingenuous to claim that his assemblages
ployed both sand and sandpaper in his assemblages,
came out of nowhere, but the somewhere from
was attuned to such an effect in the Cubists’ work,
which they did come, as regards influence, was not
but it is possible that he was not.22 By the same to-
their most salient point.
ken, one could argue that Cornell’s boxes along with Jackson Pollock’s drip paintings occupy a branch at the apex of Dove’s family tree, yet one could just as easily discount such a familial link.23
A Case Study On December 15, 1924, Dove wrote in his diary that
I concern myself only briefly with questions of
he had purchased a sewing machine for Torr, who
influence in this chapter, for although I am inter-
was a regular sewer and mender. Two years later,
ested in other artistic practices that may have had
on December 8, 1926, Torr wrote that Dove had be-
a role in inspiring Dove to do what he did, I am far
gun work on the assemblage Hand Sewing Machine Things
195
Fig. 120 Arthur G. Dove, Hand Sewing Machine, 1927, oil, cut and pasted linen, resin, and graphite on sheet metal, with artist- made frame, 147⁄8 × 19¾ in. (37.8 × 50.2 cm), Metropolitan Museum of Art, Alfred Stieglitz Collection, 1949, 49.92.2. Image copyright © The Metropolitan Museum of Art. Image source: Art Resource, NY.
(fig. 120), which he undertook while in the midst
operated sewing machine in black paint on a rect-
of creating his series of paintings from records.
angle of sheet metal. His version of the machine is
Work on Hand Sewing Machine commenced just a
stripped down, deprived of what would have been
few days after he started the Rhapsody in Blue pair,
in real life its more exaggerated curvilinear profile,
made while listening to Gershwin. By February 1927,
its floral decal decorations, and its gold-painted
he had finished and framed Hand Sewing Machine,
manufacturer or model name. To the painted image
just a few days after completing Orange Grove in Cali-
of the sewing machine, Dove added four pieces of
fornia and a little less than a month after attach-
linen fabric: a V-shaped swatch at the center of the
ing a clock spring to the surface of Rhapsody in Blue,
composition comprising two distinct fabric pieces
Part I. Along with the record paintings, Hand Sewing
separated by the arc of the hand crank and, toward
Machine was exhibited in Dove’s 1927 show at the
the top, a rectangular swatch with a semicircle
25
Intimate Gallery.
196
cut out from its left edge. All but the semicircular
Among Dove’s assemblages, Hand Sewing Ma-
swatch boast real machine stitching at their lower
chine veers closer to collage than to sculpture. Dove
edges. Black paint overlaps a portion of the small-
painted the basic form of a 1920s-vintage hand-
est, leftmost fabric piece, making it seem to disap-
Chapter Four
pear under the machine’s arm and then reappear in
color dots the surface, albeit sparingly: underneath
the semicircle created by the left edge of the ma-
the join of the machine’s arm and head, where Dove
chine and the upper half of the silver hand crank.
has streaked silver-yellow and bright blue, and on
Scratches extend across the surface of the alu-
the machine’s base, where dots of yellow, gray, blue,
minum ground, suggesting that Dove sanded or
and red indicate loose threads or snips of cloth.
otherwise worked the metal plate. A section of un-
The composition as a whole connotes movement
painted aluminum configures the faceplate at the
and action, as intimated by the repeated, rhythmic
front of the machine, which sits underneath the
forms and the Cubo-Futurist fragments but also
needle and conceals the bobbin, while short, precise
by the glint and gleam of the incised metal surface
strips of black paint articulate the small, rectangu-
which sets the field in motion as the viewer moves
lar cavities in the faceplate that receive the plung-
in front of it or as light conditions change. Even
ing needle. Dove fashioned the needle mechanism
the slightest shift in the direction of the beholder’s
from unpainted metal ground adorned with deli-
gaze triggers a kinetic effect, a shimmering across
cately applied black paint to indicate contours and
the sheet of metal but also a seeming flutter of fab-
what appears to be metallic paint to emphasize the
ric and bits of thread as well as the vibration of a
solidity and strength of the needle arm and presser
machine at work.
foot. Used to render a metal mechanism, the metal
Hand Sewing Machine exemplifies Dove’s assem-
paint and aluminum ground make that mechanism
blage work. In it congeal the disparate but related
oscillate between the real, as in real metal, and the
properties and procedures of the over two dozen
represented, as in a picture of a mechanical appara-
assemblages he created between 1924 and 1930, so a
tus. The same can be said for the metal shaft that
parsing of its pictorial parts serves to generate the
connects the wooden crank handle to the circular
terms and concepts fundamental to the arguments
crank, for Dove renders it, like the faceplate, by leav-
I make about the assemblages in this chapter. Each
ing bare the actual metal ground. A related effect
of the sections that follow begin with such a pars-
attends the wooden handle itself, which, rendered
ing before moving into a more general and com-
in oil paint, verges on the status of trompe l’oeil.
prehensive analysis of the meaning and methods
This suggests an homage to the trick-the-eye nails
of Dove’s assemblage practice, understood in light
of Picasso and Georges Braque, and fittingly so,
of his project as a whole as I have described it but
as this would be the very part of the machine one
also on their own terms, including those terms es-
would grasp if one could, were it a real thing and
tablished by the nature and limits of the sculptural
not simply a collaged conjuring of the machine’s
medium. My first chapter considered the thematics
26
appearance and operations. A vertical succession
of language, notation, translation, transmission,
of squares above and to the right of the needle that
encounter, and instrumentality that Dove produced
appear to have migrated from a Cubist or Futur-
in his art and across the activities of his life, with
ist composition suggest a mechanism in motion,
the circle and the wave as exemplary figures within
the up and down pump of the needle caused by a
this cluster of concepts and operations. The second
hand grasping the handle and winding the crank.
chapter undertook to explain the exact nature of
The staccato rhythm finds an echo in the staircase
Dove’s engagement with translation as constitut-
pattern forming the upper right edge of the central
ing a preoccupation with the idea of a network and
swatch and in the row of vertical semicylinders that
its attendant effects of interconnectivity and inter-
sits between this staircase edge and the needle arm.
subjectivity in which weather served as a model of
Similarly, semicircular scratches to the left of the
both pictorial representation and material action.
crank elicit its circular motion, as do the unpainted
And my third chapter considered Dove’s explora-
silver arc that splits the uppermost swatch and the
tion of the sonic in light of the insights developed
downward arc of the central piece of linen. Vibrant
in the first two chapters, arguing that the record Things
197
and radio paintings and other of his depictions of
operational aspects, all of which I signal here by
sound, as well as Dove’s practice overall, must be
the word “hand”: through the term’s association
understood in terms of materiality, embodied re-
with the bodily and touch as well as its status as a
lations, and the creation of novel representational
chief point of contact between the body and other
modes which in turn served as blueprints for new
material entities.27 I have noted Dove’s use of in-
modes of relation. Circles and waves, weather and
struments—a straightedge, a phonograph, a radio,
weather science, sound and sound technology, and
and a barometer, among others—and I have also
now “things”: in this fourth and final chapter, I elu-
noted the sheer ordinariness of this use. Less ordi-
cidate how Dove’s assemblages do and do not fit
nary was Dove’s translation of that use into artis-
within the interpretive paradigms generated thus
tic form, in the paintings made from records and
far even as I attribute to them the quality of a cur-
the radio and in his pictures of weather, all of them
riculum vitae, a summing up of the nature, or “life,”
marked by an insistence on carrying the materiality
of Dove’s work as well as the capacity for predicting
of record playing, radio listening, weather watch-
where he would want that work to go next. Put far
ing, and so forth, over into these works and, also,
more simply, if Dove took the properties of language
an insistence on intimating the body as part and
to be a model and potential medium for his art; if he
parcel of their material and operations. Hand Sew-
did so because language, understood broadly to in-
ing Machine exists suspended between image and
dicate myriad forms of notation, possessed capac-
thing, a state captured by one critic’s description of
ities like translation and interconnection that he
the work as “a treatise in design and color, and yet
wished to incarnate in his work; if these capacities
real enough to make a shop girl shudder.”28 Just as
allowed for the gathering of putatively distinct or
the record paintings register both a body engaging
incompatible entities and phenomena into produc-
a machine and the operations of that machine, and
tive systems so as to achieve both a new kind of
as the weather paintings register the many bodies,
pictorial form and a superintegrated, supercharged
instruments, terrains, and graphic records of the
condition or mode of being, then the assemblages,
discipline of meteorology, Hand Sewing Machine as
as “things,” can be taken to be material propositions
a consequence of its doubled identity inventories
for these new forms: of language, of art, and of be-
the operations of a body making use of a machine
ing. Acknowledging the sheer ambition of such
to produce a result, in this case a new or mended
an undertaking—the hope and hubris with which
item for the body’s own use, raw fabric and thread
Dove conducted his search for the new in art and
translated into a functional item. The sewing ma-
life—this chapter forecasts my closing observations
chine’s circular crank and the trick-the-eye invi-
in the epilogue, in which I contemplate Dove’s em-
tation to grab its handle and give it a turn call to
brace, seemingly paradoxical, of mistranslation and
mind a hand winding a phonograph so as to cause
blocked communication, his embrace of the failure
a record to spin, in each case activating a needle so
to connect, within his formulation of an intersub-
as to create the desired effect, be it stitching or the
jective art.
reproduction of sound. Like the spiral motifs that populate the record paintings and that transform
Hand
198
those paintings into incarnations of the properties, parts, and procedures of the phonograph, or
As both an image of a thing—a sewing machine—
the motifs that instrumentalize the weather paint-
and a thing itself, one that flaunts its objecthood,
ings, the metal ground of Hand Sewing Machine es-
Hand Sewing Machine advertises Dove’s investment
tablishes a sameness or equivalency between the
in materiality, by which I mean very basically the
thing represented and the representation, between
material, object- filled world, human and animal
the metal parts, especially the faceplate of the sew-
bodies included, and this world’s phenomenal and
ing machine, and the work itself. Both the faceplate,
Chapter Four
where needle, thread, and fabric converge, and the
face in the Steinbergian sense: it does so literally,
metal plate, on which Dove combines paint, graph-
receiving many forms of input—oil paint, pencil,
ite, fabric, thread, and scratched or sanded lines,
fabric, and thread—that it transforms into a fin-
serve as a ground of production, the surface that
ished assemblage, as if a graphic synthesis of data,
gives rise to a completed work through procedures
as well as figuratively, in that as an assemblage it
of conversion or recombination.
represents but also materially executes the work of
One cannot know whether Dove created Hand
a sewing machine, which receives disparate mate-
Sewing Machine on the horizontal or vertical, but
rials so as to convert them through combining and
the equivalency established between faceplate
binding procedures into a functional whole.
and metal ground suggests that for this work he
Such transmutation calls to mind the transla-
had the horizontal plane in mind. The machine-
tions carried out by a phonograph, radio, weather
stitched fabric pasted to the surface of the assem-
instrument, or weather map as well as the horizon-
blage calls to mind the horizontal passage of cloth
tal surfaces that support or receive these translating
over the faceplate as it is fed under the presser foot,
devices and their material outcomes. The tabletop
further tipping Hand Sewing Machine toward a hor-
work of Dove’s sewing machine—the work it de-
izontal orientation. In “Other Criteria,” Leo Stein-
picts, executes, or exists as a result of—also stands
berg employed the term “flatbed picture plane” to
alongside other forms of work performed by Dove,
characterize the transformed nature and content of
including his artistic work as well as his manual la-
certain art of the 1950s and 1960s as exemplified by
bor, to which he and Torr gave equal weight and
the work of Robert Rauschenberg. Inspired by the
space in their correspondence and diaries. Notes
flatbed printing press, Steinberg’s flatbed picture
about the progress of Dove’s art appear together
plane encompassed a shift in orientation from the
with regular and detailed reports on Torr’s sewing
vertical, which corresponded to erect human pos-
and mending work as well as her other domestic
ture and evoked visual experience, to the horizontal,
labors and in combination with accounts of Dove’s
an orientation that, as Steinberg put it, “makes its
home and automobile repairs, boat care, labor in
symbolic allusion to hard surfaces such as tabletops,
the field, and crafting of supports and frames for
studio floors, charts, bulletin boards—any receptor
his pictures. Dove and Torr devoted at least as much
surface on which objects are scattered, on which
ink in the 1920s, while living aboard the Mona, to
data is entered, on which information may be re-
recounting the constant upkeep of their boat—
ceived, printed, impressed— whether coherently
scrubbing, stripping, sanding, painting, varnish-
or in confusion.” This new orientation, Steinberg
ing, patching, rewiring, and reorganizing—as they
wrote, did not analogize the human experience of
did to their artistic undertakings.
seeing nature, but, rather, served as an analogue for 29
Dove appears to have relished working with
Of course, Dove’s Hand
his hands. Paul Dove, Dove’s brother, recalled that
Sewing Machine accommodates only inexactly Stein-
when they were boys, Dove “made many quite com-
berg’s account of the reoriented picture plane, and
plicated amusing things for me. Windmills run by
I do not suggest that Dove’s assemblages foreshad-
electric motors, even a camera which took excellent
owed or anticipated Rauschenberg’s combines. But
photographs on glass” as well as other “electrically
the shift from wall to tabletop and from vision to
operated toys” and “telegraph instruments.”30 Dove
operations described by Steinberg provides an apt
regularly made his own frames, and he found en-
characterization of the substance and gist of Dove’s
grossing the properties and potential of artistic
sewing machine assemblage. This is the case be-
materials and media, prompting his regular con-
cause Hand Sewing Machine insists on its own be-
sultation of technical manuals for advice regarding
longing as much to the realm of work as to that of
formulating and mixing his supports, mediums,
art, and also because it functions as a receptor sur-
and paints. As they do his music listening and
“operational processes.”
Things
199
music making, the diaries assiduously record the
a process in and of itself, in the physical act of using
details of Dove’s constant experimentation with
the hands to manipulate or translate information,
media, including brush and ink, wax emulsion, and
material, or phenomena, and he was clearly curious
crayon, and his letters to Torr describe his various
about the very physicality or embodiment of such
experiments with varnishes, emulsions, and pig-
an act, in part because he found so compelling the
ments and detail his insights regarding their partic-
properties of materials themselves, which he ex-
31
ular qualities and capacities. Dove corresponded
plored and with which he gained fluency during the
regularly with artists and nonartists alike regard-
act of making. It follows that he would have imag-
ing materials, including an eight- page letter to
ined his assemblage work and, by extension, his ar-
Elizabeth McCausland detailing his selection and
tistic work as a whole, as unfolding analogously to
preparation of pigments, and on one occasion, he
other of his manual undertakings and, also, that he
sent O’Keeffe a “medium to try” used by “the boys
would have wished for his assemblages, by way of
in Egypt.” He himself tried out unconventional me-
their material, their operations, and their effects,
dia, sometimes on request, as appears to have been
to make that analogical relationship manifest.33
the case when he received a shipment of sheets of
The remarks of Waldo Frank, writing about Dove in
Bakelite, an early plastic used in the manufacture
1926 after having seen his exhibition at Stieglitz’s
of radios and other electrical devices, at the request
Intimate Gallery, which included assemblages as
of its inventor, Leo Baekeland, “with a view to de-
well as paintings on metal and glass, reflect such a
termining the suitability of the material for paint-
reciprocity among actions and occupations, artistic
ing.” Dove exchanged numerous letters with a Bing-
and everyday. Dove, Frank wrote, “is a craftsman,
hamton, New York–based physician by the name of
sober slow, exact: the proper sort for the mute busi-
Oswald H. Boltz regarding “Temperol,” a painting
ness of birth. He is probably more free of philosoph-
medium that Boltz had invented. And on one oc-
ical systems than the ordinary motor mechanic; he
32
is certainly more free of the prophetic gesture than
The fact that, as a person, Dove made things
the usual advertising agent. This perhaps explains
and performed various kinds of work sets him apart
why his paintings . . . live so humbly within their
from exactly nobody. But the fact that he took the
home-made frames.”34
casion, Dove even tried his hand at textile design.
time to record these acts certainly does. And the
200
A sampling of Torr’s diary notes from a two-
seamlessness among these various forms of mate-
week period during the time Dove was at work on
rial engagement or making on Dove’s part speaks
the record paintings and completed Hand Sewing
volumes. To read Dove’s diaries, notes, and corre-
Machine evokes the collective noise of Dove’s pro-
spondence as a collective is to move from one form
cesses, those of his various forms of work, including
of handwork or manual labor to another without
painting and frame making, as well as the sounds
noticeable interruption, as if the ultimate purpose
of his music listening: “A[rthur] started paintings
of these many texts was to produce a narrative of a
from Stravinsky records”; “A. grinding sewing ma-
body variously inhabiting the physical world and at
chine. Concert in evening”; “A. sand papered and
work with things in this world. Without suggest-
varnished 3 frames, the 3 ‘music’ paintings—they
ing that Dove drew no distinction between, for ex-
look beautiful”; “A. cut class & framed ‘Sewing Ma-
ample, making a painting and painting his boat, or
chine’”; “A. working on Stravinsky thing but tore
crafting an assemblage and repairing a boiler—of
it up.”35 Dove’s description in a letter to Stieglitz of
course he would have—one can surmise that these
his and Torr’s move to a larger farmhouse on the
various forms of handwork and labor, because they
Geneva property generates a similar intermingling
had in common a commingling of body and mate-
of actions, media, and phenomena across myriad
rial or machine, existed for him on a continuum.
aspects of their daily life: “This room here is rather
Without a doubt Dove was interested in making as
fine, the kitchen. The walls were gone to pieces, so
Chapter Four
we used linseed oil and aluminum paint, over old
equally to Dove’s assemblage practice, not least be-
paper, plaster, holes and all.—Silver has covered
cause he referred to the assemblages as “things.” “I
many sins. . . . There are white ceilings here, white
would like to make something that is real in itself,”
doors, a black surbase [strip of molding] and what
Dove stated elsewhere, “that does not remind any-
36
shall be a Mars Violet floor.” A series of substitu-
one of any other thing, and that does not have to
tions transforms the kitchen’s walls into a primed
be explained.”38 It is impossible to know what Dove
and painted canvas, the room as a whole into a gal-
meant, exactly, by “real in itself,” or his intentions in
lery, the floor into a smear of deep red-violet pig-
stating his preference for “things” over “something
ment, and the labor of home improvement into
about things,” although in a typewritten version of
the manufacture of art. Likewise, in Dove’s diary,
the second statement he added the phrase “like the
the sounds of Dove’s handwork— scraping, tear-
letter A for instance,” suggesting a call for a mode
ing, painting, sanding—overlap and merge with
of signification in which signs and referents came
concurrent musical sounds. Taken together, Torr’s
close to a state of nondifferentiation.39 His com-
diary entries and Dove’s letter highlight not just
ments contain an implicit rejection of likeness and
the coincidence but the easy entanglement or in-
illusionism even as they stop short of calling for a
terchangeability of Dove’s various endeavors, the
wholesale plunge into nonobjectivity. In valorizing
blending of art making, handwork, and music play-
“pure painting” and “things,” Dove conjures neither
ing and listening in his daily life. Dove of course
absolute abstraction nor does he advocate for an art
did not set out to make this point in his letter, nor
of the readymade. Rather, he appears to stake his
did Torr when she recorded Dove’s activity, but both
claim halfway between the two, at a point defined
still serve to document not only what the two reg-
by substitution and recombination, where things
ularly did but also the significance they assigned
do not look like other things because they remain
to various activities in their lives, thus further illu-
themselves (fabric, shells, metal, leaves, twigs, mon-
minating and confirming the perceived seamless-
key fur, and so forth), but at the same time are not
ness among these pursuits. Torr’s effortless shift-
themselves, exactly, because they have been made
ing between myriad undertakings asserts a sense
to substitute for something else (chiffon poses as
of continuity among all acts and their objects, a
paint and waves, a metal sheet reconfigures as metal
network of various states of sensing and forms of
sewing machine or telegraph machine parts).40 As
action that places sanding a piece of wood and the
materials, these things are malleable but undergo
scratch and scrape that resulted on a continuum
no literal change, as if readymades granted the ca-
with listening to a Stravinsky record. In this way,
pacity to be something else, the same capacity that
sanding transforms into a sound technology, and
allows paint to take the form of a body or a land-
listening to a record on a phonograph into a form of
scape, but not the properties necessary to morph
handwork, thereby revealing all the parts of Dove’s
into and inhabit the form of that thing. As such, the
material practice to be crucially of a piece.
assemblages as a group constitute a demonstration
In October of 1929, Dove wrote in a letter to
on a very large scale of Dove’s dedication to both
Stieglitz that he was “more interested now than
materiality and to the native properties of mate-
ever in doing things than doing something about
rials. They spell out and make literal Dove’s belief
things. The pure paintings seem to stand out from
that art’s ideal state consists in its entanglement
those related too closely to what the eye sees there.
with the world and, also, that art’s entanglement
To choose between here and there—I should say
with the world can serve as a model for forging
here. The recent philosophy and fiction also tend
material connections among diverse physical and
37
to strengthen that idea.” These remarks ostensibly
phenomenal entities. The state of interconnection
refer to abstraction in painting and have been inter-
or constitutive relation embodied by a piece of fab-
preted in the Dove literature thusly. Yet they speak
ric intimates such a bond, as in the piece of fabric Things
201
202
glued to the surface of Hand Sewing Machine that is
dicated, would be to create a literal representation of
simultaneously a discrete, self-contained, single ob-
ruggedness, such as “a stump or tree or some rock.”41
ject and a system. As a combination of elements and
It should be clear by now that line was import-
qualities—real fabric, represented fabric, a likeness
ant for Dove, for it served as a fundamental, almost
of paint, an intimation of canvas support or table
primal connective tissue within his practice, as a
top—this fabric swatch is simply itself even as it
figurative as well as a literal binding tie. Recall the
creates on its own accord a compound whole or in-
simultaneously casting and suturing lines in Me and
tegrated complex.
the Moon as well as the ribbonlike forms whipping
As further explanation: In the “Notes” printed
about the sky in Sun Drawing Water and Seagull Motif
in the pamphlet that accompanied Dove’s 1929
(Violet and Green). Consider also the emphatic lines
exhibition, which included his weathered wood
throughout Dove’s paintings, including R 25-A and
sculpture, Silver Cedar Stump, Dove presented three
A Reasonable Facsimile (figs. 20, 21), that serve as bor-
examples of the sort of motifs he sought to create
ders or points of intersection between forms trans-
in his art, forms that would sustain the properties
lating from one state or hue into another. And bear
of line he wanted to produce. For the purpose of
in mind the myriad graphic permutations of lines
his discussion, he chose “ruggedness” as the idea
that Dove invoked or utilized across his practice,
he wished these motifs to express, an admittedly
among them shorthand, geometry, record grooves,
“blunt way,” as he put it, to illustrate his point. Each
signatures, electrical wires, and the isolines of a
motif combined color notes and a particular qual-
weather map. Think, too, of Dove’s insistent charac-
ity of line. The first paired “Prussian blue black; raw
terization of line as the thing that served to instan-
sienna with a touch of light gray, and transparent
tiate substantial and essential relations between
brown mixed with burnt sienna and a bit of white”
entities—between pictorial forms, between minds,
with a line motif as constituted by “the lines in a
and between conditions of being—so as to produce
lump of coal.” The second motif paired “raw sienna
complex, interconnected systems out of disparate,
with a touch of white; silver, burnt brown wood
conventionally incompatible parts. Immediately
color dark” with a line motif comprising “the line
following his account of his three exemplary motifs
in a grain of wood.” The third and final motif com-
in the 1929 “Notes,” Dove further refined his sense of
bined silver and ultramarine ash with “pure straight
the significance and capacity of line. He described
line,” unattached to an object such as coal or wood.
his effort to “put a line around, in, and through an
In the first two examples, Dove located the motif’s
idea” so as to summon a unifying and interconnect-
linear component in a thing, most likely referring
ing condition of light. Coming on the heels of his
to the representation of that thing in a painting
insistence that while the exemplary motifs must
that featured the colors specified for that particular
not consist in an act of imitation—painting a pic-
motif. But his language—“a grain of wood,” “a lump
ture of a stump, tree, or rock—they might still incor-
of coal”—evacuates any distinction between repre-
porate the lines already present in material objects,
sentation and the real, leaving the impression that
such as those in coal and wood, thereby eliminating
he might as well be talking about actual objects, real
the middle term, representation, and going straight
wood and real coal, and about finding ideal motifs
to the source, Dove’s formulation of putting a line
in these objects’ actual forms and characteristics.
around, in, and through an idea grants an impos-
Dove closed his discussion of exemplary motifs in
sible status or capacity to line. That is, it posits line
the “Notes” by explaining the effects that would
as the entity responsible for bringing into being an
arise from them. “This would seem to be enough to
actual, material exchange between an artist’s work
work with,” he wrote, “and let these forms as orga-
and its referents in the physical world, one imag-
nized motifs go through each other and take care
inable only within the confines of Dove’s theoriza-
of themselves.” The undesirable alternative, he in-
tion of line as a thing that can be extracted literally
Chapter Four
from objects and put into art. One should not paint
I would even suggest that in the act of making his
a lump of coal or a piece of wood, Dove said, but
assemblages, Dove in fact turned over the problem
one might directly incorporate the objecthood or
of intersubjectivity to things, even if temporarily,
the properties of these things into one’s work, using
for a period of five to six years, to stuff extracted
line as an extranormal medium of exchange.
from the inanimate, object world, in an attempt to
And Dove did, as evidenced by Silver Cedar Stump,
find a model for use in fathoming a state of radi-
a sculpture created not by imitating the appearance
cal interconnection. With the assemblages, rather
of wood through the manipulation of marble, clay,
than making things act like humans by imagining
or bronze, or even wood, which might be carved to
or incarnating their capacity for animation or life,
look like another version of itself, but by extracting
thus enabling their consort with humans and their
pieces of wood from the world, leaving them un-
capacity to interconnect, he mined things for their
changed save for a bit of combining and rearrang-
properties and capacities, among them a form of
ing, and setting them alongside a group of paintings
agency, if not aliveness, so as to bequeath those
in a gallery space. The wood here is neither wood as
properties and capacities to us, with “us” conceived
such nor a representation of wood; it consists of an
of as objects or things in our own right. This en-
extraction of wood and the enlisting of that wood,
tailed a surprising and seemingly paradoxical shift-
in its literal, material form, into the service of mo-
ing of the burden of intersubjectivity away from the
tif making. Transformation does occur; the wood is
living to the nonliving, the rejection of an animate
not the wood itself, even as it is just and precisely
blending and interrelating in favor of imagining a
this. It is now a motif of the sort that Dove wished
kind of across-the-board death—not a matter of
to create in his painting, one fashioned out of the
ceasing to exist, exactly, but a tilt toward the inan-
material, in a literal sense, of the world, out of the
imate and its qualities nonetheless.42
lines, namely, of that wood’s grain. Hence it exists as
I will say more about what I mean by this tilt
a sculpture that exemplifies what painting, accord-
in the following sections. But before moving on, I
ing to Dove, should do. Silver Cedar Stump hovers
return to Rain (fig. 25) and offer it as a final example
between representation and reality—it is neither/
of Dove’s material swerve. In this assemblage, Dove
nor—and it also exists suspended between the arts,
placed a large handful of twigs between two panes of
between painting and sculpture, for it suggests that
glass; drops and strings of rubber cement on the top
good paintings might be created out of something
pane double as rain, as do the downward-pointing
other than paint, that things, in their capacity to
twigs and streaked metal ground that supports the
be themselves and not themselves simultaneously,
whole. Despite his reputation as an artist keenly at-
could aid Dove in navigating his way out of the bind
tuned to the living rhythms of the natural world,
of abstraction, a vocabulary ever in thrall to the idea
in Rain Dove arrests motion and stymies growth.
that art is an act of representation, even if what is
Extracting the twigs from nature renders them life-
represented is not the world. Things could aid him
less, a state that Dove appears to have accentuated
on his way toward what he himself called, in the
by orienting their upper ends downward in direct
“Notes,” “extraction, gravitation toward a certain
opposition to their natural pattern of growth. Of
direction.”
course, as Dove noted in the diary, he harvested the
By evoking in this instance gravitational force
twigs used in Rain from a willow tree, a type that
to characterize extraction, his chosen term for the
would come to have special significance for him, so
fundamental operation of his art, Dove makes clear
their downward plunge in the assemblage makes
that it is within the object world—the world of
perfect sense.43 Yet the inevitable allusion to weep-
things, of stuff, of materiality and the properties
ing, as in weeping willow, in conjunction with the
of materials—that he wished to remain, that the
sleeting rain puts the viewer in mind of mourning.
objects of that world held great promise for him.
By ensuring that the rubber cement, which fixes the Things
203
twigs to the lower pane of glass, remains clear to
by Stieglitz’s Equivalents, greatly admired by Dove,
view, Dove further emphasizes not just the quality
which excerpted a square of sky and displaced it
of a particular material—the binding agent’s vis-
onto a two-dimensional, paper surface, transform-
cous compliance when wet, its squishy resistance
ing that patch of sky into a graspable thing. In the
when dry—but also the arresting and immobiliz-
case of the assemblages, however, Dove extracted a
ing effects of assemblage. This effect stands analo-
thing in order to make a thing, swerving far closer
gous to the pinning of entomological specimens to
toward the guise of a naturalist collector than
a display mount or the subjecting of a once-living
Stieglitz ever did. Like Dove’s notes and poems, in-
creature to the permanent paralysis of taxidermy, a
cluding the verse that inventoried the contents of
technique evoked by the material of other of Dove’s
his kitchen table, the assemblages extract, gather,
assemblages, including the gleaming white-yellow
and array, making the world over into a kind of at-
breastbone nailed to a wooden plank in The Intel-
tenuated or fractional still life or nature morte.
lectual (1925) and the thin strip of monkey pelt pre-
On the last page of Dove and Torr’s diary for
44
served in Dove’s Monkey Fur (1926) (figs. 128, 144).
1924, under the handwritten heading “Idea,” Dove
Even the metal plate of Hand Sewing Machine, most
jotted a few lines, grouped like stanzas, including
likely aluminum, conjures lifelessness, for it is com-
the following cluster: “Rainy day—/ Willow tree on
posed of an element that was at one time a vital
glass, rain drops, another / glass country beyond—.”
if not literally animate part of nature, now ossified
This sounds like a straightforward description of
through the processes of ore extraction and indus-
the twigs, rubber-cement drips, and two panes of
trial manufacture and cut to size. The mourning of
glass that compose Rain, and it is likely that Rain,
Rain points directly to such loss, but only to cele-
which was reported “finished” by Torr just a few
brate it as the potential for a new form of life.
pages earlier in the diary, in the entry for December
In a letter to Stieglitz, written while Dove was
13, inspired Dove’s words here.46 It may also have
on a camping trip with his son, William, and some
been that an actual rainy day compelled Dove’s
of William’s friends, including Charles Van Wyck
musings, drawing his thoughts toward his assem-
Brooks, son of Van Wyck Brooks, Dove described
blage but also out his window, both of which—a
looking at the scenery as a matter of extracting
depiction of rain, a rainstorm seen through a pane
ready-made motifs from it for use in his art, visu-
of glass—easily qualify as the thing described in the
ally excerpting items from their surround. “It is
verse. Or perhaps neither assemblage nor weather
quite peaceful here and almost too much on the
precipitated the writing of these lines. Whatever
side of beautiful scenery,” he reported, “but there
the case, the short poem eclipses the possibility
are some stronger things. A sluice gate for instance
of distinguishing between things in the world
of rusty used iron, warm grey weathered wood, and
(the “real”) and things extracted from that world
a strip of blue grey water which I have been at this
(something other than the real). In this way, Dove’s
45
204
morning.” Like countless artists before him, Dove
lines serve as a cipher for Dove’s assemblage work
sought motifs in the landscape, but rather than rep-
as a whole, illuminating this work’s stubborn fix on
resenting them in their natural state and context,
materiality along with its desire to put stilled ag-
he extracted them (a gate, a strip of water, a piece
glomerations of materials on display. The ease with
of wood), literally so in his assemblages, removing
which the reader of Dove’s words slips between, on
them from proximate terrain, arraying them with
the one hand, imagining Dove seeing, sensing, and
other object-motifs, and putting them on display
then recording his impression of looking through
by nailing, gluing, or tying them down, anchoring
his window onto a rainy day and, on the other, en-
them to an array as so many gems, fossils, or but-
visioning a set of objects that in combination re-
terfly specimens in a natural history museum. One
constitute the materials and phenomena of that
could compare such extraction to that performed
selfsame rainy view, confirms Dove’s intention with
Chapter Four
the assemblages to create more than a connection
construed his assemblages as templates for being
or continuum among humans and things. This ef-
so as to leave one wondering just what might arise
fortless back-and-forth between life and its lack,
from such agglomerations—not the death of paint-
between a human seeing things and those things
ing, to be sure but, rather, a new form of subjec-
existing in and of themselves without being per-
tivity partially predicated on the capacities of the
ceived, points toward Dove’s wish to intermingle
inanimate world and, thus, on the absence of usual
or exchange human properties and capacities with
forms of life, conventionally understood. Stieglitz’s
those of the material, object world, to array bod-
Equivalents isolate portions of the sky much as do
ies alongside things, and to make bodies in the vein
the eye miniatures discussed by Grootenboer, as if
of things, within an extraordinary network arising
in their transposition of reality they too possess the
from just such material interchange. In her essay
ability to look, a sky’s-eye perspective that fashions
on Stieglitz’s Equivalents, Rosalind Krauss writes
the photograph-as-object into a subject standing in
that Stieglitz’s images assert “the photograph as
equivalent relation to its viewers, ready to engage
an absolute transposition of reality.” Photographs
and interact.
are this, she says, not because they do not resemble reality in size, scale, or hue, but “because as a set of marks on paper made by light” the photograph has
Sewing
“no more ‘natural’ an orientation to the axial direc-
But what exactly did Dove want from the object
tions of the real world than do those marks in a book
world and its putative lifelessness? What made at-
47
that we know as writing.” Dove’s assemblages anal-
tachment to and extraction from materiality—from
ogously transpose the human subject’s relationship
things, from work, from material phenomena—for
to the real by conjecturing an exchange between
him de rigueur? There exists an extensive literature
people and inanimate things, one that imagines the
on the nature and properties of material artifacts—
de-centering of the human by way of the human
things, objects, material culture, or whatever one
translating into object, or at least assuming the ob-
chooses to call them—and on their status and func-
ject’s hypothesized capacities as a model for exis-
tion within human society and culture. Most of this
tence. Dove’s attachment to the Equivalents as well
writing, the bulk of it from the fields of philosophy,
as his preoccupation with language and notational
sociology, anthropology, literature, and the history
systems, including myriad forms of writing, surely
of science, Dove would not have or could not have
arose from his sense, articulated down the line by
read. Yet having spent several years thinking about
Krauss, of both photography and writing as tem-
Dove, his works, and his words and having as a re-
plates for such game-changing transposition and
sult arrived at the conclusion that, for Dove, things
translation, blueprints for a shifting of the axis of
really mattered— and also capitalizing on the
relations among living and nonliving things. Han-
happy coincidence that he called his assemblages
neke Grootenboer has described a similar effect of
“things”—I have turned to this literature in search
transposition as generated by miniature eye por-
of both concepts and terms so that I might make
traits, popular in Europe in the late eighteenth and
sense of and productively characterize the status
early nineteenth centuries. Eye miniatures elim-
and desired function of materiality within Dove’s
inate the features of a subject’s face in favor of a
assemblage practice.49 Following from my first ques-
single, painted eye that, in its framed isolation,
tion concerning just what Dove wished to cull from
converts into a material thing that stares back at
the properties of the object world, I pose another,
the viewer. Because of this reversal of agency, eye
more specific query, one encouraged by the wealth
portraits, she writes, “offer little to remind us of the
of writing on this world, and, of course, by Dove’s
genre of portraiture; we may wonder what is left
assemblages themselves, and one assemblage in
here of painting as such.”48 In like fashion, Dove
particular: What does a hand sewing machine do? Things
205
Well, it sews. That is, it joins things together
Woolworth) (1922), a gouache-and-charcoal view on
by employing a needle to pass thread repeatedly
paper of a tumult of buildings against a cerulean
through pieces of material, usually fabric. As the
sky, presents a more proximate parallel. The paper
needle moves, the thread is pulled through the
cutout of a sunburst sewn with thread to the pic-
fabric so as to form stitches that bind one piece
ture’s lower edge suggests a viewer looking down
to another. Dove’s paintings made from radio lis-
on the city from a point far beyond the earth’s at-
tening, Me and the Moon (1937) and The Moon Was
mosphere, perhaps alongside one of Dove’s mock-
Laughing at Me (1937), produce an effect of stitch-
ing moons. Dove, too, made sewing a literal subject
ing by virtue of the shapes and lines that weave
of his work, in assemblages like Grandmother, which
through and bind together their parts, pointing
includes a section of needlework, and Hand Sewing
both to the threads that connect and collectivize
Machine, which represents the action of a hand-
widely dispersed radio listeners as well as to more
cranked needle, boasts actual machine- stitched
general connective tissues, including the earth’s
fabric, and serves as an operational analog to
sound, atmosphere and the varieties of waves—
Dove’s assembling work. Sewing as subject matter
light, and so forth—that travel through it. Dove did
underscores Dove’s formulation of stitching as an
not sew together the parts of his assemblages, of
imperative process within his practice and marks
course, but his fastening of one element to another
the assemblages as particularly salient testing
with a binding mechanism, such as glue, staples, or
grounds for the potential of sewing for his work, al-
nails, in order to create a whole made of many parts
beit in slightly different fashion than Man Ray and
resembles the procedures of sewing: the gathering,
the others. When Dove witnessed a fire in 1934, he
cutting, aligning, and fastening involved in mak-
breathlessly described it in a letter to Torr. “It was
ing a piece of clothing or a patchwork quilt. Sewing
a beauty of a fire,” he wrote, “with the high tension
of course served as both a motif and a technique
wires running white violet fireworks all over the
for members of the Dada and Surrealist groups.
building white light ran out the wires to a switch
Think of Man Ray’s L’Enigme d’Isidore Ducasse (1920),
box on a pole and set off an octave higher color
which features a sewing machine draped in a wool
pinwheel in violet orange. . . . Sounded as though
blanket and secured with string. Man Ray’s work
someone had run a zipper down between two rows
drew its inspiration from the line in Les Chantes
of machine guns.” Dove enlisted several media in
de Maldoror (1869), written by Ducasse under the
his attempt to capture these effects: “Made drawing
pseudonym Comte de Leautréamont and made fa-
of it and two photographs with the little camera.
mous by the Paris and New York avant-garde, con-
Made 3 small paintings after lunch of same to get
cerning a chance encounter “on a dissecting table,
motif clear. . . . Went out and made other drawing
of a sewing machine and an umbrella.” Consider
again and am going to try that sewing without a
also Mr. Knife and Miss Fork (Answers all the wishes of
needle stuff.”51 Dove’s invocation of sewing in his
René Crevel) (1944), in which Man Ray attached an
description of picturing a fire characterized by
embroidery frame stretched with netting onto a
the dazzling traverse of current and “white light”
cloth ground; André Breton’s poem-object Jack the
across electrical wire and a sound like a violent zip-
Ripper (1942), where stitches of embroidery thread
pering demonstrates the appropriateness of char-
secure a postcard to a piece of paper; and Marcel
acterizing his practice in terms of stitching while
Duchamp’s Network of Stoppages (1914), where the
also making clear that for him, such stitching was
chance-derived curves of the 3 Standard Stoppages
to be understood as a connecting and conducting
(1913–1914) multiply and assume a diagram for-
line or wire. Likewise, the machine stitching in
mat, each line pinned to the canvas with several
Hand Sewing Machine does double duty, threading
John Marin’s
through the pieces of fabric but also appearing to
Lower Manhattan (Composing Derived from Top of
fasten those pieces to the metal plate underneath,
staple-like “stitches” of red paint.
206
50
Chapter Four
thus underscoring the role of sewing as a process,
in the wake of the passing white-hot charge and
material as well as figurative, in Dove’s assemblage
the grounding of that charge through a transfer
art, one akin to the transport of electrical charge
of energy from bolt to earth, the Zs thus acting
and sparks over high tension cables or the gnash-
as sutures that bind together earth and sky. Over-
ing of a zipper’s teeth as they are pressed together
seeing the whole transaction is a circular flare of
to form a linear length of interlocking bonds. In
yellow paint, moderated by a touch of black, that
an untitled study he made some time between 1941
hovers above the flash—a diminutive echo of the
and 1946 (fig. 121), Dove slashed a zigzag of bright
larger circles that populate Dove’s paintings, here
blue across a crackling sky and then repeated the
a summary condensation of the intense energy of
Z form twice in the ground below, once in crim-
the entire scene.
son and then in midnight blue. Probably meant to
In a handwritten essay under the heading “What
connote lightning, the slicing color wraps around
I should like to do at present is,” Dove described his
a graphite armature, tracking Dove’s thin pencil
goal as a draughtsman. “In drawing,” he wrote, “to
lines as it moves in space. Alternately taut and pli-
keep any pencil on the paper and the line a continu-
able, these pencil lines in combination with their
ous unit sensitive to every thought going on within
aura of blue evoke a charge zipping across a wire.
whether objects, ideas, or their meeting places. Then
The earthbound Z forms underscore its reverber-
as you go over it the color and form should develop
ating force, and double as charred paths laid down
the consciousness of that line.” This, he said, would
Fig. 121 Arthur G. Dove, [Landscape], ca. 1941–1946, watercolor, gouache, and graphite on cream watercolor paper, 315⁄16 × 4 in. (10.00125 × 10.16 cm). Courtesy of the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, Philadelphia (www.pafa.org). Gift of Mr. and Mrs. William Dove, 1985.55.3.
Things
207
Fig. 122 Top, Arthur G. Dove, Barn Next Door, 1934, watercolor and black ink on paper, 5 × 7 in. (12.7 × 17.78 cm), The Phillips Collection, Washington, DC, acquired 1934. Any reproduction of this image shall not be made without written consent of The Phillips Collection, Washington, DC. Fig. 123 Bottom, Arthur G. Dove, Over Seneca Lake, 1935, watercolor and pencil on paper, 5 × 7 in. (12.7 × 17.78 cm), The Phillips Collection, Washington, DC, acquired probably 1937. Any reproduction of this image shall not be made without written consent of The Phillips Collection, Washington, DC.
“tell me much more of what was going on within
line demarcates the barn’s façade, forward roofline,
just as your life tells you eventually what you have
and side wall before it dissolves into the inky black
52
done and why you have done it.” Extraordinary in
of the tree at right. In Over Seneca Lake, only three
its ambition, such a drawing practice would regis-
lines, rendered in pencil, constitute the foreground
ter every thought or thing it encountered, creating
forms—likely shoreline, trees, and water—and the
out of the trajectory of a continuous ink or pencil
relative consistency of Dove’s line throughout the
line a collection of ideas, sensations, and objects on
scene creates the effect of continuous, conjoined
par with the collected experiences and encounters
contours. In another of Dove’s watercolor sketches,
of a lifetime. Many of Dove’s watercolor drawings
Barn IV (1935) (fig. 124), a single line originates at
feature attempts to produce multiple forms out of
the paper’s left edge and terminates at lower right.
an unbroken line, including Barn Next Door (1934)
In between, it traces the lowest edge of the barn
and Over Seneca Lake (1935) (figs. 122, 123). In Barn
roof, outlines the triangle of the roof’s peak, loops
Next Door, comprising an exquisite amassing of
around to form the outline of a tree, and zigzags
undulating forms and whipping lines, a single line
a bit to denote what looks like the terminus of a
of ink forms the dominant contour of two trees
path or road. And in Trees on the Pond (1941) (fig.
that face one another across a meadow and ren-
125), single lines serve to fashion three agglomer-
ders a hilltop and part of the barn structure mid-
ations of trees, earth, water, and reflections, each
way along its route between the two; another lone
looking as much like a living being or a whimsical,
Fig. 124 Arthur G. Dove, Barn IV, 1935, watercolor and ink on paper, 47⁄8 × 67⁄8 in. (12.3825 × 17.4625 cm), The Phillips Collection, Washington, DC, acquired 1937. Any reproduction of this image shall not be made without written consent of The Phillips Collection, Washington, DC.
Things
209
Fig. 125 Arthur G. Dove, Trees on the Pond, 1941, watercolor and ink on paper. Photo courtesy Alexandre Gallery, New York.
benevolent monster as it does lakeside vegetation.
brush dipped briefly in watercolor, a calm, sensu-
The rightmost “tree” could almost be a sailboat,
ous spreading of red and green, and it was over.53
its “rigging” coterminous with the circling loops that form the foliage and the trunk of the tree to
A Barn Here and a Tree There (1940) (fig. 126) wittily
the left, its wake a back-and-forth streak of black
acknowledges Dove’s exploration of linear conti-
line and a radiance of reddish wash. Charles Van
nuity through its title and its conjoining, semicir-
Wyck Brooks once watched Dove create one such
cular line, slightly broken at the base but handily
watercolor drawing, called Hollyhock, and his rec-
bridged by Dove’s signature, and it also gives the
ollection of Dove’s working method when making
effect of Dove here and there stilling his hand in
the drawing accords with the suturing effects I am
order to sense a moment, to employ the phrase used
describing here:
by Brooks. The brown wash that hovers over this linking line produces the effect of an aura or an
210
I was in the same room with Arthur Dove in the
electrical charge, connoting the idea of an instru-
summer of 1935 when something impelled him
ment registering input or transmitting energy or, to
to begin the single black line on a piece of paper
put it as Dove might have, a linear unit sensing the
which grew in zigzag, curling, dropping, climbing
“thoughts” of the things through which it passes
to its completion. The hand that drew followed
and developing a form of consciousness as a result,
some deep inner rhythm, pausing here and there
or flashes of light zipping across a network of em-
in its course to sense a moment before looping
blazoned high tension wires and sending pinwheel-
off. There was no haste, no hesitation. Then a
ing sparks flying through the air. Dove described
Chapter Four
Fig. 126 Arthur G. Dove, A Barn Here and a Tree There, 1940, watercolor on paper mounted on board, 47⁄8 × 67⁄8 in. (12.38 × 17.46 cm), Carnegie Museum of Art, Pittsburgh, Bequest of Mr. and Mrs. James H. Beal, 93.189.28. Photograph © 2013 Carnegie Museum of Art, Pittsburgh.
such linear vitality early in his career, in 1913. “I
sewing machine, established materiality—objects
must make my line vital,” he said, having begun to
and their engagement by a body—as an axial pre-
fear, after seeing some of his pictures on view at 291,
cept of his practice. Although Dove made it many
54
that his line had gone “dead.”
years after he created his Hand Sewing Machine as-
It may be unexpected to spend time with
semblage, a watercolor sketch from 1941 (fig. 127)
Dove’s drawings in a chapter devoted to his as-
depicting the same subject (and perhaps the same
semblages, but these drawings and many others
machine), reinforces this idea. As in many of his
within Dove’s body of work plainly illustrate his
other watercolors, Dove binds the forms of this
interest in fashioning sewing, or the idea of sew-
image together with a continuous line. Beginning
ing as a matter of stitching together or suturing,
in the lower left corner, this line delineates the base
as an artistic procedure. He was devoted to line as
of the machine before looping around to form a cir-
just such a stitching device, which in the drawings
cular repository for a light-green wash, and then
and sketches threads and gathers multiple objects
continues on to render the machine’s trunk, arm,
and forms: drawing as stitching one might say. This
and head. From the arm, the line proceeds upward,
devotion carried over into his thinking about his
creating another circle, this one inhabited by semi-
three-dimensional work, as evidenced by his three-
circular shards of pale yellow and gray, and then
motifs-of-ruggedness thought experiment and by
it expands its looping motion so as to create a se-
Silver Cedar Stump, and also by the fact that many
ries of bulging forms in the top half of the picture.
of his drawings served as templates for his painted
It goes without saying that a sketch of a machine
works, transferred from paper ground to canvas by
that sews, fashioned by way of a line that creates
a hand-held, hand-cranked device, the pantograph,
and then stitches together its parts, has something
which, like the phonograph, the radio, and the hand
to say about the fundamental status of stitching Things
211
Fig. 127 Arthur G. Dove, The Hand Sewing Machine, 1941, watercolor on paper, Herbert F. Johnson Museum of Art, Cornell University, Gift of Mr. and Mrs. Morris G. Bishop, 54.073. Photography courtesy of the Herbert F. Johnson Museum of Art, Cornell University.
212
and suturing within Dove’s practice and also about
but also of accumulation, sometimes bereft of ap-
the fundamental materiality of these operations
parent meaning.56 A tabletop inventory, a rapid-
as Dove conceived them. And I would venture that
fire line-by-line accounting of what photography
other of Dove’s agglomerating or accumulating
does (or does not) mean, a Steinian portrait poem
habits and acts reinforce this coupling of line and
of Stieglitz, a catalog of nonaffinities in “A Way to
things under the sign of sewing such that, along
Look at Things,” a string of aphorisms posing as a
with circles and waves, stitching served for him as
letter to the critic Edward Alden Jewell: these very
an essential and elemental gesture and motif across
different texts by Dove have in common a listing
multiple parts of his production.55
effect, a quality of arranging verbal items and,
Take, for instance, Dove’s poetry and prose,
by extension, their material referents in vertical
discussed at length in the first chapter, the para-
stacks on a page, one after the other, short bursts
digm for which I would identify as the list, as in
of things and thoughts rather than a wending, in-
a one-by-one series of related or unrelated items
terlacing narrative. One could argue that narrative
such as names, things, or numbers, or an ordered
prose approximates a whole stitched together from
set of information or data, but also in the sense of
parts just as well as does a list-like poem. But there
a list as an open-ended and at times incongruous
is something about the arbitrariness of lists, espe-
collection—that is, as an instance of enumeration
cially those crafted by Dove, which press together
Chapter Four
and fix to one another disparate components so that they are made to appear as if by nature essentially related, even if they are not and even as they maintain their singularity and original form, that puts one in mind of Dove’s stitching in his drawings and in his assemblages. This is the case especially with the assemblages, where pieces of the world are at once themselves and made to be something else by virtue of the assemblage structure, with its list-like if not vertical or one-by-one collecting of things and “ordering” of those things as a group or a set, and with the work’s title as the list’s heading: as, in the case of Rain, “metal, sandpaper scratchings, glass, glue, twigs, more glass, frame” or, for Hand Sewing Machine, “metal, scratchings, paint, graphite, glue, stitched fabric, frame.” Some of the assemblages, such as The Intellectual (fig. 128), actually look list-like. In this work, Dove stacks things on the vertical, one object succeeding another from top to bottom: magnifying glass, bone, moss, bark, pocket balance scale, fabric, and wooden plank, all contained within a shadow box frame that serves as a metaphor for the structuring and interrelating effects of an enumerating and accumulating list. Dove’s accumulating and suturing of objects together in his assemblages along with the threading and conjoining lines in his drawings and watercolors, then, are list-like in the sense that they bind together objects or forms from disparate locales so as to produce interrelationships, connections and associations (but not necessarily meaning) that arise from the condition of their being physically interlinked, a phenomenon that Umberto Eco has termed “transforming a list into form,” analogous verbal or material examples of which would include a house inventory, a taxonomy, a cabinet of curiosities, or a museum gallery.57 Lists, of course, abound in Dove’s diaries, ship’s log, ledger, and unpublished notes: lists of painting titles, media, weather conditions, weather abbreviations, wave types, and sailboat rigging, among other things. The notes themselves often take list form, one thought after another proceeding down a page like bullet points, and Dove’s periodic thoughts about his art appeared frequently in list form under
Fig. 128 Arthur G. Dove, The Intellectual, 1925, wood box with magnifying glass, bone, moss, bark, and a scale on varnished cloth mounted on wood, 17 × 71⁄8 in. (43 × 18.2 cm), The Philip L. Goodwin Collection, The Museum of Modern Art, New York, NY, USA, 101.1958. Digital image © The Museum of Modern Art / Licensed by SCALA / Art Resource, NY.
Things
213
the heading “Ideas.” Lists featured prominently in
have relatively recently turned their attention to
the work of Dove’s two favorite authors, Stein and
the material practices of intellectual inquiry, con-
Joyce. The run-on sentences and suppression of
sidering how the materials engaged, generated, and
punctuation in Stein’s portrait poems rejects con-
stored in the course of producing information and
ventional narration for a list-like accumulation of
knowledge might shape that production; scien-
objects, impressions, and ideas, and the inventory
tific instruments and imagery but also footnotes,
of Leopold Bloom’s kitchen shelves, bedroom draw-
lists, indexes, commonplace books, almanacs, and
ers, and books in “Ithaca,” the second-to-last chap-
other forms of compendia have been subjected to
ter of Joyce’s Ulysses, opens with a list of Bloom’s
scrutiny as material participants in inquiry along-
and Stephen’s conversation topics, each annotated
side the contents of that inquiry.61 Taking my cue
with its own catalog-like list, and ends with Bloom
from this scholarship and, of course, from Stein, I
cataloging the day’s events and budget, offering
understand those practices that accompanied, sup-
the reader a collection of lists within lists.58 If one
ported, or recorded Dove’s art making, such as his
takes the diary or log format to have a structuring
weather notating, poetry writing, and diary keep-
and ordering effect similar to that of a list or an
ing, to be a vital and material part of his artistic
almanac’s collection of lists, Dove’s daily tempera-
production. That is, I take these practices to be ar-
ture and barometric pressure notations as well as
tistic media in their own right, rendered by Dove as
his other regular notes on the weather may be con-
if objects, as if inanimate—although never really
ceived as list-like in their repetition and accumu-
this—so as to integrate as vital components among
lation. Thought of in this way, the diaries and the
canvas, paint, wood, shells, metal, fabric, or sand
logs may themselves begin to look like the assem-
in the intersubjective complexes Dove fashioned
blages, accretions of items over time in the form
through his assemblage work. Conversely, the quo-
of a physical, graspable thing, while the very act of
tidian nature of the materials selected by Dove for
collecting data and storing it in a book calls to mind
the assemblages finds an equivalent in the every-
the gathering, amassing, and framing of objects so
day quality of Dove’s diary keeping: in the routine,
as to create an assemblage. In both cases, diary and
workaday tenor of the entries as well as in the sta-
assemblage, Dove interweaves and interconnects
tus of the daybooks as objects among many others
people, terrains, ideas, sensations, data, and things.
that populated Dove’s and Torr’s daily life. And the
He transforms geography (the sites from which he
act of making an assemblage recapitulates, in the
collected his materials as well as the terrains con-
most basic sense, what humans do in the everyday:
nected by weather systems) and temporality (the
exist in space and interact with other things. As
passage of days and weeks that constitute a year)
William Seitz, who organized the important 1961
into concrete, tangible form, an operation Leo G.
exhibition The Art of Assemblage at the Museum of
Mazow has illuminated in relation to the daybooks
Modern Art, wrote of the practice of assemblage,
of Dove’s contemporary, the artist John Covert, and
“Physically, its method can be as direct as filling
that one could liken to the materialization of a si-
a cupboard or setting a dinner table.”62 Even the
multaneity of past, present, and future in the form
constellation-like color sample diagram that Dove
of a forecasting weather map or a work like Partly
created in the pages of his copy of Color and Its Ap-
59
214
Cloudy (fig. 76). The sheer repetition of data input
plication to Printing (fig. 66) functions as a kind of
from day to day in the diaries might be likened to
list, an annotated visual cataloging of materials,
the devices of repetition and excess in Stein, which
experimental processes, and results, its color blots
serve to obscure meaning and thus objectify her
stitched together by a network of intersecting lines
prose, the relentlessness of her piling up and ad-
much like the threads of ink and paint that string
joining of words transforming her texts into quasi-
together forms in Dove’s sketches and paintings or
sculptural works.60 Scholars from multiple fields
the metaphorical stitching that created a compi-
Chapter Four
lation of objects and materials in the assemblages
Heidegger’s insistence on ontological definition
themselves.
and differentiation, has retained his emphasis on
The devices of listing and stitching that recur
the effect of gathering or grouping. Considering the
across Dove’s production locate Dove’s practice—
status and meaning of objects within social con-
his painting, sculpting, writing, notating, and so
texts and social relations, this body of scholarship
forth—in the physical, material realm, in a world
identifies connecting and grouping as two of the
where things or their verbal equivalents are physi-
chief operations of things. In Outline of a Theory of
cally collected, combined, and arrayed. And it was
Practice (1977), Pierre Bourdieu, for example, argued
in this everyday, material realm that Dove per-
for the primacy of objects and their ordering within
ceived the potential for crafting an art of unprec-
processes of socialization. The contributors to the
edented interconnection, drawing on brute matter
influential essay collection edited by Arjun Appa-
as a model for the network of intersubjectivity he
durai, The Social Life of Things: Commodities in Cultural
wished to chart with his work, one created by oper-
Perspective (1986), examined the status and value of
ations of translation, transfer, and converse: mak-
things in the context of human transactions such as
ing actions into media, and assemblages of media
gift giving, trade, and other forms of exchange and
into activated, apparatus-like beings. Weather and
argued that use and circulation define the meaning
sound technology supplied suitable templates, and
of things even as those things, as commodities in
things proffered another, a point underscored by
contexts, grant meaning and value to social and po-
Dove’s referring to his assemblages as none other
litical relations, classifications, identities, and sys-
than “things.”
tems. In a similar vein, Alfred Gell in Art and Agency:
The scholarly literature on the object world
An Anthropological Theory (1998) rejected aesthetic
has concerned itself with defining the essential
interest as the driving force behind the production
nature of things as well as with characterizing the
of art in favor of the capacity of art to distribute and
status and function of things within human soci-
circulate through its effects the ideas and thus the
ety. Things, of course, exist—they are “what we en-
influence of its makers.65 In his account of scientific
counter,” wrote Leo Stein in The A-B-C of Aesthetics
practice, Bruno Latour has focused attention on the
63
(1927). But as those writers concerned with ques-
relationships that arise among entities or agents,
tions of things and the social have described, things
human and nonhuman alike, within a social net-
also act and interact, not necessarily as animate
work such as a scientific laboratory or a classroom;
beings but as agents that by virtue of their being
he describes the actions and products of said net-
adjacent to humans (as with the material of nature)
work as resulting from the relationships formed
or created and set into circulation by humans (as
and re-formed therein, between a teacher and a
with the material of culture) serve to engage the
student, say, but also between that student and
senses, the body, and the mind as well as to estab-
the contexts as well as the artifacts that he or she
lish all manner of points of contact, pathways, and
engages in the classroom (pedagogical theory and
networks among humans and objects. In formulat-
textbook publishing, for instance, but also a desk,
ing a distinction between an “object” and a “thing,”
a computer, a chalkboard, a periodical table, and
Martin Heidegger famously located the essence
so forth). These entities and relationships are not
of thingness in a capacity to gather and enfold, to
static, but ever changing and migratory; networks
combine the manifold—“earth and sky, divinities
consist of temporary and unstable collections, com-
and mortals”—and offer it as a single outpouring
binations, or arrays, “contingent compositions” of
64
or unity. Subsequent writing on the object world,
humans and nonhumans, to borrow the words of
concerned with finding a middle ground between
the social scientist and scholar of human geog-
imagining objects as animate beings and exposing
raphy Nigel Thrift. Similarly, following Heidegger’s
them as mere discursive constructs, while rejecting
example of the gathering jug, Latour proposed that Things
215
artifacts themselves make up multiparticipant and
meanings and creating unanticipated experiences
motile webs of associations, complex and entan-
and effects by way of the properties and operations
gled sets of relations among multiple terms or en-
native to them: for example, the seeming self-
tities. Such an understanding of things presumes
operation of the instruments considered by Joel
reciprocity between the human and the material
Snyder in his essay in the volume or the apparent
worlds as well as a blurring of the assumed bound-
capacity of a Rorschach test card to evaluate a sub-
ary between subject and object, between an ani-
ject and articulate a diagnosis, as described by Peter
mate being and the artifact he or she engages. In
Galison in his contribution to Daston’s book. Or, as
describing the human/nonhuman interface, John
Matthew C. Hunter and Francesco Lucchini have
Frow likened objecthood to a “mode of being” and
put it, not all things but, rather, a certain species of
called for a return of things as “quasi subjects” to
them, dubbed “clever objects” in their account, are
the human, an acknowledgment that things and
streetwise, situatedly canny rather than premedi-
persons have properties and behaviors in common
tatedly intelligent, clever in part because they may
that avoids the fantasy of animism and resembles
not mean to be, because they possess agency with-
only a little the concept of the fetish, commodity or
out explicit intention, stealthily, even lazily.67
otherwise; things have lives but they are not alive,
Again, Dove did not read Heidegger or “thing
their properties may shape outcomes—each thing
theory,” nor was he privy to studies in material cul-
has its own script or code—but never on purpose
ture from the fields of art history, philosophy, and
66
or by willful choice.
216
the social sciences. I had not read this literature in
As such, all participants in a network, human
full until I began to suspect that Dove was intent
and otherwise, count as social actors or agents. Ap-
on doing something out of the ordinary with ob-
plying the concept of agency to the object world,
jects and that he intended to exploit the proper-
Latour and others have described how human and
ties of those objects in accomplishing that task. It
nonhuman entities in a network are equally com-
was through an encounter with recent writing on
plicit in producing effects; humans and nonhu-
the object world that I came to see that certain of
mans coproduce one another, Latour has written, a
the questions addressed in this writing were Dove’s
characterization echoed by the anthropologist Dan-
questions also: What can an object do? What prop-
iel Miller who argued that “persons and things ex-
erties reside in it? To what use might those prop-
ist in mutual self-construction” and also by Thrift
erties be put? What effects might be generated by
who spoke of the coconstitution of the physical and
gathering and grouping objects? What happens
mental worlds. Even the most innocuous seeming
when humans and objects encounter one another?
objects, stated Latour, “act,” “do things,” and “make
What insight might be gained through paying at-
you do things”; they possess, in Bill Brown’s charac-
tention to the operations and effects of physical
terization, a potency and a power to organize the
matter, including the things used to construct an
humans who make and use them. Hubert Damisch
assemblage but also materials such as paint, wax,
has used the term “theoretical object” to describe
and glue? Hardly for him the product of intense
a thing that “obliges you to do theory but also fur-
and systematic philosophical reflection, these que-
nishes you with the means of doing it,” producing
ries arose out of Dove’s curiosity about the world
“effects around itself” in the course of one’s en-
and what he could do with it, and from his expe-
gagement with it; art, in other words, pursues phil-
rience working with the material of that world.
osophical inquiry—it thinks. Similarly, in her in-
If we consider Dove’s assemblages alongside his
troduction to the essay collection Things That Talk:
closest period kin, Dada and the Surrealists, Dove’s
Object Lessons from Art and Science, Lorraine Daston
preoccupation with the materiality and opera-
wrote that things, without literally speaking, “press
tions of matter becomes even clearer. The objects
their messages on attentive auditors,” asserting new
of Dada and Surrealism have been characterized in
Chapter Four
the scholarly literature as receptacles or stand-ins
“Introduction to Metaphysics.”69 That is, Dove’s un-
for human desire, pleasure, or torment, or as sub-
derstanding of intersubjectivity, as incarnated in
stitutes for the body or body parts, but Dove’s as-
the assemblages, in dispensing with conventional
semblages are not these things at all, even if a chief
hierarchical classifications of subject and object
link between him and his counterparts would be
positions (human as subject, thing in the world
the attempt to create through assemblage “a tool
as perceived object), in substituting language as
for doing things,” to use the art historian Julia Kel-
notation or sign with language as operation and
ly’s apt phrase, and thus a shared interest in the
process, and in redistributing the properties and
potential generative power of combining objects
capacities of these positions (human agency and
and images from everyday life into incongruous
sentience, an object’s networked omnipresence
68
wholes. In objects, Dove saw a medium and mech-
and alchemy in the world), reorganized relations in
anism for connection; he recognized the ability of
the world as such. Dove once described to Stieglitz
objects to group, gather, and stitch together—as
the experience of seeing “some tall black birds” at
with the phonograph, which agglomerated bod-
the Bronx Zoo. They made him and Torr wonder, he
ies producing sound, recording machines, record-
said, “if we had seen all of nature. They are amazing.
stamping presses, plastic discs, playback apparatus,
Almost portraits of thoughts.” 70 Dove’s formulation
and a listening body materially engaged with that
for describing the birds mapped his blueprint for
apparatus—and he perceived in this ability a for-
relations writ large; at once magnificent specimens
mula for creating. He also identified in the collu-
of the avian realm, beings seeming in excess of
sion of body and device—body plus phonograph,
the known natural world, and emblems of an idea,
barometer, radio, daybook, camera, line drawing,
the birds coalesce the variant conditions of being
pantograph, or hand sewing machine— the po-
a creature, being a person, being a thought, and
tential to translate the procedures and capacities
being a thing. Dove’s formulation, that is, entailed
of such devices to the animate world. Thus Dove’s
imagining an exchange between a multiplicity of
assemblages skew closer to Gilles Deleuze and Felix
categories of being and forms of expression or ac-
Guattari’s sense of an “assemblage” as an agglom-
tion where things could behave as if animate and,
erating multiplicity characterized by connectivity,
perhaps more importantly, humans would take on
multidirectionality, heterogeneity, and the absence
the qualities and capacities of nonhuman things,
of fixed subject and object positions (language, as
thus embodying, through assimilating object prop-
an assemblage, for instance, must be approached
erties and positing thingness as a template for hu-
in terms of everything related to it), even if Dove’s
manness, new relational capacities and new modes
practice does not share their particular social, po-
of being in the world. This is the tilt toward death
litical, and philosophical investments. The assem-
to which I earlier referred and that Stieglitz’s Equiv-
blages also hew to a more historically proximate
alents, if inadvertently, held out for Dove as a new,
theoretical formulation of the nature of thought:
object-like state. One almost feels that Dove read
Henri Bergson’s characterization of thoughts as
Bergson and said, “Ok, I’ll build that.” Combinations
things (as opposed to the idea of things as either
of disparate media in the assemblages, including
the cause or effect of thoughts) and, importantly,
the entanglement of painting and sculpture and
not things merely, but things phenomenally, always
their mutual transfer of qualities, as well as the
in process and by nature constantly multiplying
range of names Dove gave to his “things” (paint-
and proliferating as they develop and move, not
ings, portraits, sculpture paintings, painting sculp-
through symbols or signs—not through language
tures, and caricature paintings) underscore Dove’s
as such—but through the very coincidence or one-
fixation on translation and exchange as strategies
ness of a thought and that thought as a phenom-
within his art but also, as the essential properties of
enal object, as articulated by Bergson in his 1903
things, as model operations for existence. Things
217
Christopher Pinney, following Latour, has ar-
barometer, radio, or phonograph. Not “abstraction”
gued against the “human-besotted” and demateri-
but “extraction” and “gravitation” were the terms
alizing vision of reality offered up by the literature
that Dove used to describe his work. In extracting
on material culture which, to his mind, privileges
the properties of one thing and transferring them
the human at the expense of the thing, reducing
to another—making ideas and actions into objects
the thing to an expression or construction of so-
and making objects into agents, say, by facilitat-
cial formations, its “life” simply a living out of the
ing an exchange of their basic operations—Dove
life of humans within human culture; Ian Bogost,
fashioned the fundamental operation of his art.
countering what he sees as the overly human-
He also provided, perhaps unintentionally, a new
centric casts of Heidegger, Latour, and theorists of
way to fathom the practice of abstraction, as some-
artificial intelligence and the posthuman, among
thing other than a distilling, monomaniacal drive
others, articulates something similar in Alien Phe-
away from the world. The pairing of the two terms,
nomenology in proposing a model of thingness ab-
“extraction” and “gravitation,” encapsulates Dove’s
71
218
sent human-object relationality. Pinney’s insight,
intentions as I describe them here: in combination,
and Dove’s too, consists in recognizing that the
extraction, as a human action aimed at objects, and
route between humans and things is a two-way
gravitation, as a nonhuman, phenomenal force ba-
street; and like Bogost, Dove, while not dispensing
sic to material, physical existence, constitute an
with the question of human subjectivity cast in re-
artistic practice driven by human and nonhuman
lation to other subjectivities, took equally seriously
alike, by an animate being but also by the prop-
the idea that the human point of view might not
erty that governs the behavior of physical bodies
need to be paramount. For Dove, this meant work-
on earth, granting objects weight and compelling
ing to produce a symmetry among entities: mak-
diffuse matter to coalesce, much as Dove compels
ing works of art behave like language, that animate,
materials to transmute, conjoin, and settle in the
motile connective tissue fundamental as a translat-
process of making his assemblages.72
ing and communicating force within human lives,
Dove’s Flight (1943) (fig. 88), discussed in the sec-
be it letter writing, weather notating, DX fishing,
ond chapter, evokes the metal parts and mechani-
diary writing, list making, or record listening; and
cal workings as well as the sensation of flying and
also endeavoring to envisage making humans more
the viewpoint granted by flight. The painting also
instrument-like, this double transfer or translation,
articulates an instance of exchange between a hu-
as he understood it, from human to thing and back
man and a machine and iterates the possibility of
again, being the way to achieve comprehensive in-
an inanimate object’s self-action, like a barometer
tersubjectivity, a radical integration of and bond-
or a body affected by gravity, along with the poten-
ing among unlike entities, which for him was not
tial for a human body itself to function as a self-
a cultural phenomenon but materially and opera-
acting instrument, registering data, amalgamating
tionally based. The most basic action performed in
entities, or producing effects automatically. Flight
the creation of the assemblages—the assembling of
thus exemplifies the absolute exchange between
materials—solidifies this idea. Dove created, found,
human and nonhuman I am describing as a chief
scavenged, purchased, and repurposed material for
process within Dove’s practice and in the case of
the assemblage works, rendering objects mobile
the assemblages in particular. I return to the idea of
and putting them in circulation by virtue of his
a human-machine collaboration here because Dove
collecting, assembling, and, ultimately, display-
created the bulk of his assemblages on his boat, the
ing, with each activating procedure (each verb)
Mona. Although I resist attributing the material
an analog for one operation among the many—
characteristics of the assemblages to the cramped
together forming a list—that engaged, activated,
conditions of the Mona and the scarcity of materials
and impelled an instrument or machine such as a
on board, as some scholars have, I take seriously the
Chapter Four
idea that an act of making might have been shaped
then, the assemblages would have instantiated a
by its taking place on a waterborne boat. Dove and
condition of collaboration between the human
Torr lived on the Mona because they had limited fi-
(Dove) and the nonhuman (the Mona), with Dove’s
nancial means, but I would not be surprised if Dove
animation of material a concrete metaphor for the
perceived the situation as a potential experiment,
boat materially shaping the actions of the humans
or came to see it as such over time, as he got down
on board, for the transfer of the boat’s operations
to making his work. It certainly was not the case
to Dove’s own limbs and hands. As such, the assem-
that he disliked his floating quarters. When he and
blages embodied the idea that in inanimate objects,
Torr moved back aboard the Mona in 1929 after a
including those of the natural world—driftwood,
winter on Pratt’s Island, Noroton, Connecticut,
sand, and water, as well as radios, barometers, and
where Dove served as a caretaker, Torr reported
so forth—one might locate a model and the pro-
Dove saying that “he’d never been as happy any
cedural means to activate an animating and inter-
where as here.”73 Making on the Mona would have
penetrating network among all things and beings.
been cramped, but it also would have been shaped
Dove’s fascination with technologies of sonic
in some way by the motion of the boat as it bobbed
transmission arose in part from the manner in
in the waves. Already keenly attuned to the chang-
which those technologies transformed how things,
ing conditions of the weather, Dove was likely at-
phenomena, and people are made present to others,
tentive to the qualities of his new environment and
how a telephone, say, transformed one’s encounter
to the fact that the literal ground of his production
with and thus one’s relationship to the person at
was now a mobile, ever-transmuting one. Perhaps
the other end of the line. This fascination, then,
he turned to working with objects in response to
was part of a larger preoccupation on his part with
this shift in conditions, a possibility supported by
the ability of things to reconstitute relations and
the title that Dove gave to his essay “Pencil Notes
to refashion materiality. Things, while not alive,
on a Boat,” which perfectly expresses the contents
have lives of their own, and they develop and dis-
of the essay, a series of notes that unfolds in list-like
play new properties and intentions when extracted
form, as well as the implied water-bound condition
from their original contexts and relocated to an as-
74
semblage where they remain themselves but also
Constructing the assemblages and crafting their
play the role of something else, just as live music
frames would have unfolded alongside other, very
transmutes into itself and not itself when subjected
similar work: scraping and painting the boat, sizing
to recording and playback or as gusts of wind are
and cutting patches to repair its cracks and leaks,
both wind and something else when registered,
or scrubbing its floors and decks. After their return
measured, and graphically mapped. From the inher-
to the Mona in 1929, Dove and Torr spent an after-
ent properties of pigments and binding mediums,
noon “reducing chaos—finding permanent places
which Dove spent hours investigating, analyzing,
for things, chucking out. Agreed that moving is a
and describing, and which are themselves members
great clearinghouse and upsetter of the stagnation
of the object world, to the innate operations and
of inanimate objects,” suggesting an association
effects of a phonograph, which he explored over the
between returning to the boat and the act of setting
course of five listening-based paintings, the quali-
of the making of these notes, penciled “on a boat.”
75
things in motion and animating them. Perhaps,
ties and capacities of matter were for Dove model
then, Dove intuited an analogy between the man-
procedures for use in establishing a substantive and
ner in which the boat set things into motion, in-
material analogy among beings, things, and works
cluding his own body, and his own activation of ob-
of art and thus summoning a living system of con-
jects in the course of creating an assemblage, and,
nections and intersubjective exchanges within his
conversely, that the assemblages and their matter
practice.76 Like the envisioning of the invisible,
in turn activated him. In a manner similar to Flight,
the ineffability and elusiveness of weather, and Things
219
the wireless transmission of sound, this system in
performer and creating a sonic bond between any
Dove’s conception would be wondrous. Far from a
individuals who might together be listening. The
straightforward, possibly nefarious making over
swooping and spiraling lines and the metal clock
of existence into machine, Dove’s object-inspired
spring in Dove’s Rhapsody in Blue, Part I, which counts
and monumental complex of interrelations would
among the assemblages, grant visual form to the
make a grasp for sublimity, not by abandoning or
linear origin of amplified, diffusing sound and fash-
transcending the material and the everyday but,
ion that line-based sound as a material that stitches
rather, through a vital, instrumental, entity-based
together the disparate parts of the canvas, analo-
sociability that stitched or wove a collective out of
gous to the manner in which sound waves, those
dispersed and disparate things, humans included—
of the phonograph but also radio, stitch together
not as observers only, but as material, coequal, es-
entities in real space and time. Probably it was such
sentially collaborating and cognizing parts.
a process that Dove described when he refashioned
The innate properties of things, the binding
Kandinsky’s description of translation into a for-
capacity of lists and lines, and the stitching elic-
mulation of movement from point to line, from line
ited by creating an assemblage: together these were
to plane, from plane to solid, and, finally, from solid
to fashion a monumental and all- encompassing
into life and the present, or maybe he recognized
system of connection and interchange. Making
this process as resident in the Weather Bureau’s
a painting while listening to a record materially
maps, especially in their spiraling and expanding
manifested such a combination, for it entailed the
isolines, which stitched together terrain as well
collaboration between a body and a machine as well
as stitched equivalent numerical values together
as the combining of multiple parts to produce the
across terrain. Dove’s portrait assemblages produce
end effect, including the parts of the machine, the
a similar effect. They literally as well as figuratively
disc and the phonograph, and the various materials
stitch together the parts of a personality, and they
of the painter. But not only this: the phonograph
also fashion a simultaneously literal and figurative
embodied precisely what Dove wished his lists and
relationship between humans and things. They
lines to achieve, that is, the stitching together of all
evoke a person by linking associated objects such as
things—to repeat, a threading whereby the human
a musical score and an expandable wooden ruler in
would bear an essential, exchange-based relation to
Ralph Dusenberry or a camera lens and a clock spring
the nonhuman, and vice versa, as if both belonged
in Alfred Stieglitz, but they also create that person
to the same (or perhaps a new) species group. As
out of those objects, instantiating through a ges-
Douglas Kahn has pointed out, sound has since an-
ture of substitution a literal exchange between hu-
tiquity been associated with line, including cases
man and nonhuman, a suturing of the two that re-
like the one-stringed Pythagorean monochord in
places the one with the other and reduces duality to
Plato’s Republic; instruments that graphically reg-
singularity, an operation of the same kind as gath-
ister sound in linear form, such as the phonauto-
ering together the time, space, bodies, and instru-
graph; and the ubiquitous likening of sound waves
ments of a live musical performance and pressing
to concentric circles on the surface of water. Recall
these things into lines etched on a plastic disc. The
that the term “phonography” had its origins in such
threading and weaving together of objects in the
a graphic context, and the traverse of the phono-
portrait assemblages and the stitching together of
graph’s needle as it moves back and forth within
bodies and space in the music pictures, along with
a record’s grooves draws a type of line, tracing a
the many and varied operations of gathering resi-
zigzagging path that through the operations of
dent in Dove’s entire body of assemblages, suggest
the phonograph transmutes from “drawn” line into
that the work of assemblage itself was for Dove the
77
220
sound. This sound-from-line unfolds in time and
work of stitching together everything in the world
fills the surrounding space, connecting listener to
into its own system-like, pan-sociable whole.
Chapter Four
Machine
devices, were for him things in the world alongside a whole slew of other sorts of objects and artifacts.
Dove liked to paint, hammer, stitch, and glue, but he
What attracted him to machines as subject and me-
was into metal, too. His regular use of metal-based
dium were their qualities, properties, and effects—
pigments, the metal clock spring he attached to one
namely, their ability to translate and transmit as
of his record paintings, the metal that proliferates
made possible by their metal parts. If Dove wished
throughout his assemblages, and the multiple com-
to create out of the stuff of the world a monumen-
positions he created on metal grounds demonstrate
tal network of interconnections, a vast and compre-
as much. In my discussion of circles and waves, I
hensive system from which would arise a condition
characterized Dove’s metallic pigment as a medium
of radical intersubjectivity, he would have to bring
of reflection and connection as well as a metaphor
something to that world. Whatever that something
for making, and in particular for making a picture
was, it could not simply imitate the fact of the
with a camera. The metallic paint in Silver Sun (fig.
world as a network, which it already was and had
6), for instance, represents the phenomena of ra-
been known since Lucretius to be. For Dove did not
diation and reflection but also produces the effect
set out to recapitulate the conditions of existence
of reflection in actuality, suggesting that the paint-
in his creations, a mimetic folly on a monumental
ing itself could have an operational capacity akin
scale. Instead, he wished to reconfigure those con-
to that of photography. In my analysis of Dove and
ditions. To do so he had to create an entity simul-
weather, I pointed out the analogy drawn between
taneously alien to and of a piece with that world.
metal media and the instruments of weather
For this reason he created works of art. Of course
science. And in my chapter on sound, I described
the world as network made it possible in the first
the metal pigment and metal parts of the record
place for Dove to adopt certain of its features, such
paintings as serving to establish a material con-
as the weather, as models for his practice and for
nection between Dove’s paintings and the machine
his creation of proposed novel forms. But systems
that inspired their making. In what follows, I build
in order to do their work need power, they need fuel,
on these observations and say more about what
they need a charge—without a starting spark and
metal did for Dove.
a sustaining flame they remain static networks of
The assemblage Hand Sewing Machine places
stitched-together yet inert, immobile parts. And
Dove’s practice within the domain of work and,
those parts remain just that, parts, unless they are
specifically, within the realm of manual labor.
substantively and essentially interconnected with
Through the piece of equipment depicted and the
other parts through a literal transfer or exchange
composition’s metal ground, Hand Sewing Machine
of properties or effects, something more than a
also establishes a fundamental link between Dove’s
stitching or suturing and in excess of naturally
art and the operation of a machine. And the fact
extant networks, an operation approaching tran-
that Dove chose to represent a hand-cranked de-
substantiation, if not in the biblical sense, whereby
vice indicates an interest in the kind of collabora-
one substance verges on changing into another but
tion between a body and a machine I have already
does not go all the way. One needs a medium and
described. Dove neither worshipped machine cul-
also an activating mechanism to bring about such
ture nor condemned it. He put no great store in
a transfer or translation—call it material or oper-
the promises of mechanization and industry, but
ational mimicry—and for Dove it was metal that
by the same token, he never displayed or expressed
would do the trick.
anxiety about machines and their ever-expanding
In a typewritten note from 1928 or 1929, Dove
role within American society, his exuberant nature
wrote, “It would seem that Ezra Pound has summed
paintings notwithstanding. Machines, by which I
up a good deal in one word: ‘Charged.’ That is a good
mean all manner of apparatuses, instruments, and
word as applied to anything from a battery to a perThings
221
son or a work of art. Once in a while a word comes
Latin poetry. An experimentalist, Pound strove to
along that you are glad about and that seems to
retain the particular impact and distinctiveness
78
be one of them.” Dove’s enthusiasm for the term
of another language in its English translation by
“charged” drew on Pound’s analysis of the crea-
expressing its character through English’s own
tion of meaning through words, which Pound ex-
distinctive forms, including archaic locutions and
pounded at length in his ABC of Reading (1934) and
colloquial speech. This ensured, for example, that
in two earlier essays, “The Serious Artist,” published
the particular charge of a text in Italian, the very
in 1913 in the London-based periodical the New Free-
thing that made it unique but also great, would be
woman, and “Cavalcanti: Medievalism,” an analysis
sustained throughout the process of its transla-
of the thirteenth-century Italian poet Guido Cav-
tion into English, where it would be reconstituted
alcanti that appeared in 1928 in the American lit-
through other equally charged expressive forms na-
79
erary journal the Dial. The serious artist, Pound stipulated, as opposed to one that creates bad,
Just as he reformulated Kandinsky, Dove aug-
vulgar, and false art, works with precision, control,
mented the meaning of Pound’s “charge,” positing
and economy and possesses a “faculty for amalga-
it as a potential quality of not just language but also
mation” by which he draws on the genius of past
of persons and things, and all manner of things to
writers in creating his own original work. That work
boot: batteries as well as works of art and every-
generates discovery and holds “a sort of energy,
thing in between. The term “charge” designates a
something more or less like electricity or radioac-
fundamental characteristic of matter and also re-
tivity, a force transfusing, welding, and unifying.”
fers to a quantity of electricity, as in the charge of
Great literature, Pound elaborated in ABC of Read-
a battery. The condition of being charged, then, as
ing, “is simply language charged with meaning to
a criterion adopted by Dove, might be satisfied by
the utmost possible degree.” He described how one
everything that exists, given that all matter boasts
could charge a word with meaning—for example,
electrical properties arising from interactions
by conjuring a visual image, inducing the effect of
among subatomic particles. But Pound spoke of
sound, grouping words together to enhance their
words charged to the utmost possible degree, and
verbal impact, or evoking the intellectual or emo-
neither he nor Dove would have intended “charge”
80
tional associations of words and word groups. It is
in their use of the term simply to reiterate its defini-
worth noting the congruence of Pound’s formulae
tion within particle physics, although I am sure that
for great writing, which called for bringing things
Dove, champion of the vernacular and the everyday,
into relation and recombining their properties, as in
appreciated the fact that all things shared the qual-
text and sound, and Dove’s artistic and notational
ity of having a charge. What Pound and Dove had in
strategies as I have described them, which created
mind was something like a blast or an eruption, an
hybrid forms from multiple representational oper-
expression of force in the form of a sizeable release
ations and modes. In his essay on Cavalcanti, Pound
of electricity or, alternately, a hefty electrical charge
put it this way: “We appear to have lost the radi-
not yet expressed, as in the flow of electrical current
ant world where one thought cuts through another
across a wire or the latent voltage of a battery or an
with clean edge, a world of moving energies ‘mezzo
unactivated electrical circuit. Hot-blooded words
oscuro rade’ . . . the glass under water, the form that
and hot-blooded art—this is what Pound and Dove
81
222
tive to the new language.82
seems a form seen in a mirror.” Even more to the
envisioned. The strangeness and shock of certain of
point is the fact that Pound developed his concept
Pound’s translations exemplified such a condition:
of highly charged, powerfully expressive language
a line from Guido Calvacanti’s “Donna mi prega”
in the context of his own translation work—that
given as “In that every high noble vertu leaneth to
is, through his translation of past literature, in-
herward,” or “corna caldast” from the Anglo-Saxon
cluding Chinese, Anglo-Saxon, Italian, Greek, and
poem “The Seafarer” rendered “corn of the coldest”
Chapter Four
and “bitre breostceare” as “bitter breast-cares.”83 So
arm, as current would within wire, perhaps meant
did Dove’s fire-whipped wires and his heavy metal.
to embody both electricity and theosophy’s white
Dove’s Telegraph Pole (1929) (fig. 17) perhaps
light or Dove’s own “condition of light.” The critic
best conveys such a charge. The subject, telegra-
Edward Alden Jewell captured this doubling when
phy, calls to mind powerful currents traveling over
he described the forms as “delicate spirit-shapes of
great distances as does the metal plate on which the
electricity.”84 The leaf forms also evoke the corona
whole is painted, and overall Dove’s forms conjure
of violet light that can sometimes be seen at night
the crackle and hum of conduction. Leaflike forms
along lines that transmit high-voltage current, an
flicker and twist within the boundaries of the cross-
oft-remarked phenomenon in the weather litera-
shaped pole as if current on the run. Perceived as
ture of the day and similar to “St. Elmo’s Fire,” the
negative shape or scraped off paint, they also call
electrification and glow of elevated objects such as
to mind clouds or spirits and thus appear to hover
the masts of ships at sea, a weather vane, or the spire
within the wooden material of the pole’s horizontal
of a church during a storm, also much-discussed at
Fig. 129 Arthur G. Dove, Cross and Weather Vane, 1935, oil on canvas, 88.3 × 62.6 cm (34¾ × 245⁄8 in.), Alfred Stieglitz Collection, 1949.538, The Art Institute of Chicago.
Things
223
Fig. 130 Arthur G. Dove, A Walk: Poplars, 1912–1913, pastel on silk mounted on board, 215⁄8 × 177⁄8 in., Daniel J. Terra Collection, 1999.47, Terra Foundation for American Art, Chicago, IL, USA. Photo Credit: Terra Foundation for American Art, Chicago / Art Resource, NY.
224
the time—phenomena suggested also by the elec-
between them vibrate ecstatically with sound.85 It
trified “Z” in Dove’s small study of lightning (fig.
must have been paintings like Telegraph Pole that in-
121). Semicircular, concentric bands of green-toned
spired his brother, Paul, to note that Dove painted
and metallic paint radiate from the top of the cross
everything from knotholes in tree trunks and the
in Telegraph Pole like waves of heat generated by the
wind in the willows to the moo of a cow and “the
current passing through the scene and also call to
sound in telephone wires.”86 Two rectangular slabs
mind sound waves. In this way they evoke what was
of metal intersect toward the base of the compo-
dubbed in the period the “hum,” “singing,” or “sizzle”
sition; depicted as bolted together, their outward
of a telegraph or telephone wire that accompanied
splay, which terminates at the arm of the pole,
the wire’s nighttime coronal glow, an effect also
gives the feel of an apparatus desperately trying
captured by the American artist Charles Burchfield
to contain an assemblage of tightly bound pieces
in a watercolor entitled Song of the Telegraph (1917–
threatening to burst apart, perhaps blown and bent
1952) in which telephone poles and the wires strung
by stormy gusts or assaulted by errant electrical
Chapter Four
Fig. 131 Arthur G. Dove, Tree Forms, 1932, oil on canvas, 281⁄16 × 201⁄16 in. (71.3 × 51 cm), Ackland Art Museum, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Ackland Fund, 65.25.1.
charge. Dove left the metal plate bare in order to
to electrical current and conduction in his work,
configure these two constraining slabs; scratches
to charging that work, so to speak. Even pictures as
in the actual metal surface that depicts them un-
powerfully organic and earthy as A Walk: Poplars
derscore their literal potential as metal material to
(1912–1913) and Tree Forms (1932) (figs. 130, 131) carry
conduct the flow of electrical current and to emit
such a charge. With its snaking, stretching, inter-
the preternatural glow produced by that moving
twining limbs and its explosive bursts of orange
charge. Echoes of Telegraph Pole and other of Dove’s
and brown, Tree Forms evokes in equal parts autumn
paintings in Dove’s Cross and Weather Vane (1935)
foliage and the buzzing, crackling flow of an elec-
(fig. 129), including the concentric circle motif, the
tric current across cables or wires. In A Walk: Pop-
cross form, the weather vane-cum-lightning rod,
lars, disc-shaped forms partially outlined in black
the metal- gray and green palette touched with
migrate across a yellow limb-like form suggesting
brown and rust red, and the writhing, burgeoning
the pulsating intensity of a powerfully conducting
shapes, underscore Dove’s interest in giving form
charge. Two diagonally sloping and precisely renThings
225
dered lines, one at the lower left and the other on
vivified materiality, a superconducting complex par
the upper right, also call forth the idea of a trans-
excellence. As early as 1913 Dove expressed a desire
mitting cable or wire, an effect exacerbated by the
to give vitality and life to his line, to make it “live,”
streak of crimson that runs along the topmost line
as he put it, and he stipulated that he must draw
as well as the plush materiality of Dove’s thickly
equally on his own vision and on objective exis-
worked pastel, which calls to mind the quality of
tence in order to do so.88 This suite of works, which
pastel-as-instrument in works like Sails and Team of
combine linear motifs and lines from the world—
Horses (figs. 67, 68) and makes the image itself reg-
electrical wires, lightning rods, and the limbs of
ister as a conducting medium. Kandinsky triangu-
trees—so as to create vigorously animated compo-
lated line, current, and tree forms in Point and Line
sitions, pictorial spasms of vivacity, accomplishes
to Plane in just this manner, discussing in a section
that task.
of the book entitled “Technics” the interchangeable
Telegraph Pole eloquently combines the preoc-
linearizing properties of several graphic and actual
cupations of Dove’s practice by depicting a subject,
apparatuses, including a diagram of electrical cur-
telegraphy, in which these preoccupations coalesce:
rent, singled out for its translation of numerical
transmission, translation, communication, circles,
values into line; a radio tower seen from below in
waves, weather, the sonic, the “condition of light,”
a photograph by Lázló Moholy-Nagy, described as
interconnecting lines and wires, things, and ma-
a “line-point construction” in space; and a cluster
chines. Like a machine that gathers unto itself
of utility poles, or “masts,” referred to as a “techni-
myriad phenomena, objects, and beings, as in the
cal forest” because of its resemblance to a stand of
case of a phonograph, Dove’s painting, its parts as-
trees and notable for its two-dimensional graphic
sembled on a metal plate, puts everything together
87
Another of Dove’s
and flicks the proverbial switch. No current flows
works, Electric Peach Orchard (1935) (fig. 75), takes
through Telegraph Pole, of course, but metal pro-
the analogy between tree limb and conducting
vides the potential, allowing the painting to em-
line even further, transforming a row of fruit trees
body the possibility of transferring from machine
into lighting rods or telegraph poles, their electri-
parts and communication networks to a work of
cal wires wildly waving and straining to break free
art the capacity to conduct and thus palpably and
from their wooden anchors and reminding one of
powerfully interconnect, to be language as a me-
Dove’s description of the pinwheeling sparks and
dium in a wholly new, cross-species form. Dove’s
leaping currents produced by electrical wires on fire.
assemblages The Sea I and Sea II, both 1925, boast no
The medium of wax emulsion embodies the idea of
obvious ties to machines, telegraphy, or electrical
conduction in this painting, its molecules of paint
conduction (figs. 132, 24), but both are composed on
suspended in spreading wax much like an electrical
metal plates and in both Dove overlays the metal
charge resides in spreading lengths of metal wire.
with chiffon to create the effect of water and clouds
The electrified and interweaving lines of Tree Forms,
as well as strokes of paint. The outcome of this over-
A Walk: Poplars, and Electric Peach Orchard resemble
lay is striking. The glint and sheen of the metal vis-
the lively, interconnecting lines in Dove’s drawings
ible through the translucent chiffon makes the fab-
and sketches, those in which he attempted to de-
ric appear to be interwoven with minute shards of
lineate multiple, disparate forms with a single lin-
glass or glitter, an effect enhanced by the sand that
ear mark. The formal congruity between these two
Dove has glued onto each metal ground. Conversely,
examples of line establishes an association among
the soft blue and delicate weave of the chiffon ren-
drawn line, electrical wires, interconnectivity, and
ders the metal underneath velvety and molten, as if
charge, suggesting that in the phenomenon of elec-
warm and soft to the touch. By making each mate-
trical conduction Dove saw an exemplary instance
rial, chiffon and metal, acquire the properties of the
of stitched-together, essentially intermingled, and
other, Dove enacts a material transfer or exchange
quality when photographed.
226
Chapter Four
Fig. 132 Arthur G. Dove, The Sea I, 1925, collage (gauze, sand, and paper) on metal, 33.65 × 53.97 cm (13¼ × 21¼ in.), Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, Gift of the William H. Lane Foundation, 1990.404. Photograph © 2016 Museum of Fine Arts, Boston.
between the two so as to assert their connection
as charged as the current running through a trans-
or fusion if not their utter identity. Dove’s articu-
oceanic cable or the potential force of a cresting
lation of an interchange between metal and sea, as
wave. In The Sea I, Dove depicts the feel of such a
represented by the chiffon, adds up. Both connote
charge by stretching the chiffon tightly across the
transmission and interconnection, the sea through
metal plate so that its weave in places has buckled,
its waves and its global spread and metal through
creating large wavelike ripples at the right and a
its capacity to conduct; and of course telegraphy
series of semicircles that connote the pulsation or
was at the time associated with the ocean, literally
vibration of matter at lower left, as if someone has
so but also in the form of analogies drawn between
slightly bent and released the metal plate so as to
89
water waves and those of sound. In The Sea I, di-
send a slight shudder through its length. When the
agonal lines scratched into the metal plate, orig-
viewer changes position before this assemblage,
inating at the sun and streaking through the sky,
the assemblage itself changes, the chiffon as well
emphasize the idea of a traversing wave through
as the metal seeming to ripple and swell, suggesting
their depiction of rays of light. The Sea I and Sea II,
a great if latent power resident within this slight-
then, like Telegraph Pole and Electric Peach Orchard,
seeming work.
narrate the nature of the connections after which
Dove’s Starry Heavens (1924) (fig. 133) proffers its
Dove sought—as constituted by literal, material
own version of charged instrumentality. The as-
exchange—and they also articulate the desired re-
semblage features oil and metallic paint on a sheet
sult: a capacity to interconnect and interlace akin
of glass that has been reversed, paint side down,
to that of a telegraph network or the sea itself and
and backed with black paper. Dove purchased the Things
227
Fig. 133 Arthur G. Dove, Starry Heavens, 1924, oil on metallic paint on reverse side of glass with black paper, 18 × 16 in., Michael Scharf Family Collection.
Fig. 134 Left, star chart, in “Astronomical Phenomena in 1917,” Popular Astronomy 25 (1917): 54. Photograph: David Connelly. Fig. 135 Below, “Star Clouds and Black Holes in Sagittarius,” in David Peck Todd, Astronomy: The Science of the Heavenly Bodies (New York and London: Harper & Brothers Publishers, 1922), opposite p. 352. Photograph: David Connelly.
glass in Huntington, New York, near his Halesite
mic composition” comprising an infinite number of
mooring. On the same trip to town, he checked out
independent compositions, all of them originating
two books on astronomy from the library, while a
from points and forming complexes out of clusters
few days earlier he had noted in his diary that he
of many such points. He illustrated this idea with
returned a borrowed telescope (to whom he did
a photograph of the star cluster surrounding the
90
Dove watched the nighttime sky just
constellation Hercules from a book on popular as-
as he watched the weather, and the composition
tronomy published in Leipzig in 1921 that depicts a
of Starry Heavens closely resembles a constellation
bright white mass at center surrounded by bright
chart, or “star chart,” a map of the night sky used to
white dots that disperse and thin out across the
locate and identify stars and constellations, and a
sky-black ground, along with a diagram of a mi-
close cousin to the bureau weather map. A typical
croscopic view of a “nitrate-forming nodule” from
chart, like the one featured in the 1917 issue of the
the root of a plant, an image in which small black
journal Popular Astronomy (fig. 134), depicts within
particles populate a circular field.92 In combination,
the border of a circle the sky viewed from a loca-
the clustering effect of the star photograph and
tion in the Southern or Northern Hemisphere at a
the circular form of the nodule image establish the
particular time of year and shows the brightness
basic components of Starry Heavens. All this makes
and relative positions of stars and constellations.
Starry Heavens far more complex than it appears
In Starry Heavens, Dove adopted the chart’s “con-
at first glance, for in it coalesce three forms of vi-
nect the stars” technique in his rendering of the
sualization or visual notation: the diagrammatic,
Big and Little Dippers, star groupings within the
the photographic, and the representational or mi-
constellations Ursa Major and Ursa Minor, but he
metic. And in addition to being a record of Dove’s
embellished his diagrams so that the clusters ap-
own experience of the sky and stars, the work of-
pear to form actual metal ladles and, in addition,
fers itself as available for use, as was the case with a
he included a representation of the moon. He also
star chart, which users employed recreationally or
included far more stars than the typical constella-
for purposes of navigation, or like an astronomical
tion chart: large, brightly glowing bodies as well as
photograph, employed to edify or, as recorded data,
a dusting of smaller or perhaps more distant ones.
to produce knowledge about the galaxy and beyond.
The dense clustering of stars as well as their all-over
As such, Dove in Starry Heavens cements the work’s
scattering in Dove’s Starry Heavens looks more like
instrumental, or instrument-like, potential, a pos-
the actual nighttime sky than does the schematic
sible capacity augmented by the link to Kandinsky’s
star chart, but these effects also resemble the pho-
analysis of composing and translating operations
tographs of star groupings (fig. 135) that appeared
in nature and by the work’s metallic paint and the
alongside the circular charts in popular as well as
brute materiality of its cut-to-size glass support.
not say).
230
scientific books on astronomy at the time, images
The image of Dove gazing into the night sky
that were hardly more revealing or edifying than
puts one in mind of a visitor to one of Stieglitz’s gal-
the photographs of cloud types included in period
leries who would in turn gaze at a work like Starry
meteorology texts.91 Dove worked on Starry Heavens
Heavens along with other of Dove’s assemblages,
at the same time he was reading the library books
paintings, and sketches.93 There exists an extensive
on astronomy, and it is likely that he used the charts
body of art-critical writing produced about Dove
and photographs that illustrated those books to
during the period of his career; responses to his
formulate a vocabulary for his own rendition of the
art run the gamut from stern disapproval or sat-
night sky. Kandinsky’s Point and Line to Plane may
ire, some of it good natured, to effusive, adulatory
also have provided inspiration. In the section of the
praise. Certain themes recur: Dove’s originality; his
book dedicated to the geometric point, Kandinsky
varying debt (or lack thereof) to Cubism, Futurism,
describes the whole world as a “self-contained cos-
and Surrealism; the resistance of his work to inter-
Chapter Four
pretation, or its sheer meaninglessness or unintel-
Dove wrote, “are placed now perhaps better than
ligibility (“they are just plain pictures that mean
they ever will be again. That is the thing I wanted
nothing at all,” wrote one critic in 1912); the useful-
you to see.” In August of 1928, Dove removed a group
ness or inadequacy of his titles; the subjective qual-
of his paintings from storage and arrayed them for
ity of his images; his efforts to depict the unseen;
review in “a large sort of dance room,” probably at
the affinity between his art and music; the deco-
the yacht club in Halesite where Dove worked for
rative quality of “The Ten Commandments” and
a spell in exchange for the use of a room. Seeing
the resemblance of these works to Francis Picabia’s
them as a group, and alongside a selection of paint-
abstractions; color’s predominance over plasticity
ings by Torr, clearly affected Dove’s sense of them,
and form; ambivalence about the assemblages; the
catalyzing insight as did his viewing of two prints
increasing strength of his output in the late 1920s;
from Stieglitz’s Equivalents series when installed in
94
and his experimental nature. A thorough review of
his Centerport residence. “There were some of mine
this criticism and other forms of response to Dove’s
there that I think would stop traffic anywhere,” he
work gives one a good sense of how that work was
wrote in the letter to Stieglitz. “Two of them I do
received by his various audiences, including those
not think now that I would trade for all the past
critics associated with Stieglitz, the artistic and
ones.”96 In another letter to Stieglitz, Dove detailed
critical community at large, Dove’s friends and as-
the transformation of his work that occurred on
95
sociates, and, to a lesser extent, the general public.
transferring it from his quarters to the Intimate
More difficult to piece together is Dove’s own sense
Gallery, housed in room 303 of the Anderson Gal-
of how he wished his work to be received and what
leries building in New York:
he wanted the experience of the viewer to be when he or she encountered his art in a gallery space. Yet
The effect of 303 on the paintings was quite
Dove said enough about what it was like when he
amazing. The red tree [Red Tree and Sun] is twice
looked at his own work and about the conditions
the size at 303 that it was here. The “Silver Sun”
of that work’s display to suggest that he cared very
about ¾. The “Reaching Waves” about ½ as to
much about what happened on the beholder’s side
here. Sea Gulls [Sea Gull Motif (Violet and Green)]
of things. This makes perfect sense, for if his aim
were about 5 to 1 as to that house in Halesite
was to formulate if not fully execute a condition of
where it was done. “Distraction” 1 = 1. Of course,
all-absorbing intersubjectivity through his art, then
the room is high, superbly so in spirit. Think I
that art would have to somehow gather the viewer
shall use outdoors as a studio this year, to be sure
into its folds. The assemblages, perhaps more di-
that the ceiling is high enough. . . . Still feel a
rectly and overtly than other of Dove’s works, ap-
certain strain in trying to produce when I see my
proximated such a gathering effect.
things there. Hope that will disappear this year.97
Dove regularly staged “viewings” of his own work for himself or family and friends and his ac-
In describing his transformed experience of his
counts of these occasions demonstrate his under-
work when it was relocated to the gallery, Dove
standing that objects and their setting colluded in
spoke as if his paintings had undergone an actual
the shaping of the viewer’s experience. He wrote
change in scale, a material mutation that signifi-
in 1941 to Stieglitz to express his eagerness to re-
cantly altered their effect. He used a fractional ra-
turn to his own exhibition “to study the paintings”
tio to quantify this transformation, much as he had
before the works returned to Centerport and, con-
when he employed a time signature to describe the
sequently, to less-than-ideal viewing conditions. A
tempo of his paintings, in each case implying a vital
1927 letter to Duncan Phillips, on the occasion of
and indispensable relationship between parts, and
Dove’s exhibition at Stieglitz’s gallery that year,
perhaps suggesting a link between the production
articulated much the same thing. The paintings,
of a rhythmic formation and conditions of viewing. Things
231
Dove reported something similar in 1937, writing to
when hung in the rooms of the Dove Block, Dove
Stieglitz that his paintings appeared big when hung
also advised Stieglitz about how to install his show,
on a large wall in the Dove Block in Geneva, prob-
suggesting that the paintings go on the walls and
ably in the former roller-skating rink where he and
the watercolors remain unframed in a portfolio.
Torr resided at the time, and that they appeared to
Frames were important to Dove, and he regularly
“walk forward” when he applied a finishing coat to
made his own, including the one on Hand Sewing
them. A year later, in 1938, Dove reiterated this idea,
Machine. While this was partly a matter of economy,
stating that “the things look big—different. If they
he plainly understood his frames as contributing
look big here, they should there [at the gallery], as
decisively to the experience of his work. In a letter
98
this place is huge.” On at least two occasions, Dove
to Stieglitz, written in 1929 from Noroton, Connecti-
wrote to Phillips and his assistant, Elmira Bier, to
cut, where he and Torr were living rent-free as care-
thank them for sending photographs of his work
takers of a waterside cottage owned by A. W. Pratt,
installed at the Phillips Memorial Gallery. The pho-
Dove described taking a number of paintings out to
tographs, he said, helped him to see his paintings
have a look and concluding that one of them “just
properly and to synchronize his past and present
didn’t work with the copper frames.” So he “evolved
work. Seeing not simply his pictures but his pic-
one from plastic wood” that he believed would
tures translated in scale and appearance through
“stand white walls and clean severity.”101 Many of
the medium of photography generated insight
his frames Dove adorned with metallic pigment or
for Dove much as did encountering his work in a
leaf, such as the rose-tinted silvered frame of Storm
99
Clouds and the silver frames of Clouds and I’ll Build
changed venue.
In a diary entry for August 5, 1942, Dove explic-
a Stairway to Paradise. Some he crafted from metal
itly addressed the viewer’s experience of his work.
rather than wood, such as the copper strip frame of
“Try larger ones,” he noted. “People do not see small
Silver Tanks, or used a combination of the two, such
ones. Seem to want to get into them? Large ones
as Alfie’s Delight (1929), which features a wooden
give onlooker larger idea of himself. Identifica-
frame and a copper-wrapped inner edge.102 Dove
tion.” Here, Dove described a beholder’s desire to
expected the metal of these frames to generate a
see himself or herself in a work, and his musing on a
substantial effect. Recalling a previous exhibition,
possible means to achieve that effect suggests that
Dove wrote in 1931 to Stieglitz that “there was just
this was also a criterion of his. His use of the word
something in those frames that did not blaze the
“identification” suggests such a process of viewer
way it should. Think I have found out that thing. It
self-recognition but also a deeper bond, one involv-
was the effect on the eyes, and after two years of us-
ing a perceived sameness between the viewer and a
ing Japan gold size that they sell in the stores, I have
work of art. Just two weeks later, on August 20, Dove
found out how to do it better with a varnish ground
recorded the oft-cited remark that he strove to work
so that the same frames have twice the speed.” Dove
100
“at the point where abstraction and reality meet.”
assigned metal, more generally, the task of blazing
Dove was concerned of course with the visual vo-
in such a manner. A note he wrote to accompany
cabularies and pictorial strategies of his paintings
the list of works in the catalog for his 1932 exhibi-
and assemblages, and this comment, coming so
tion at An American Place explains his use of media
closely on the heels of his consideration of how
in Black Sun, Thursday as well as his expectations for
to facilitate identification between his art and
metal media. “The more gold is burnished,” he said,
its viewers, may also have addressed the point of
“the blacker it becomes with its own dazzling bril-
meeting between his work and the realm of mate-
liance.”103
rial existence, here in the form of bodies occupying and moving through a gallery space. In the 1937 letter that reported on his paintings 232
Chapter Four
I discuss Dove’s engagement with viewing, his own and that of his audiences, in a chapter on his assemblages because I have become more and more
convinced that, in his attentiveness to the condi-
dios, telegraphs, and laboratory equipment. Rich-
tions and effects of display, Dove easily could have
ardson described the various components of his
imagined the conditions of an exhibition as approx-
proposed factory as working in absolute harmony,
imating the conditions of one of his assemblages,
functioning as a single unit or system, a monu-
perhaps serving to activate their charge, making
mental calculating organism or apparatus consti-
them blaze, so to speak, as he wished the frames
tuted by a network of connections and powered by
of his paintings to do. Conversely, the assemblag-
a combination of human work and the exertion of
es—as agglomerations of materials—would have
machines, consequently generative of a transfer of
for him modeled the work he wished his exhibi-
properties among data, bodies, phenomena, and
tions to do. Both, as superintegrating complexes,
things. Dove’s vision of an exhibition space filled
recast the graphic, material, motile, animating, and
with instrumentalized works of art addressing mo-
interconnecting properties of language and human
bile viewers, themselves newly instrumentalized
interaction as material object and physical, phe-
by way of their engagement with these very works,
nomenal space, making representation, significa-
entailed a fantasy similar to Richardson’s, a dream
tion, and converse over as substance.
104
In response
of a hub or hive of radical and intersubjective re-
to a selection of Dove’s assemblages and paintings
lations and all-encompassing interchange among
on glass and metal on view in 1926 at the Intimate
all things. The metallic frames of Dove’s paintings
Gallery, a critic for the Art News described the in-
provided a material link between the interiors of
stallation in terms that suggest the exhibition was
his pictures and the object world on the exterior,
primed for such an effect. “This is the first time for
the two realms converging in the space of a gallery
a long while that we have seen Dove’s work shown
populated by objects and persons and through the
in the way the artist himself would have it seen,” he
ubiquity of metal paints and parts primed to carry
wrote. “There is no formality in the exhibition. The
a charge. In the case of paintings featuring both
paintings, drawings and things created from other
metallic paint and a metallic frame, such as Silver
things are scattered about, some on the walls, some
Tanks, the charge would prove especially power-
on shelves, some on the floor. All of them show
ful. The assemblages themselves, as emphatically
to better advantage than they have when on pa-
object-like, materially embodied such a Richard
105
Although probably not overly distinct in
sonian dream. There was of course no way for Dove
design from other exhibitions staged at Stieglitz’s
literally to incorporate bodies into his works, al-
galleries, Dove’s shows were especially at stake for
though he intimated such a gesture by including in
him because they performed a very specific sort of
them human hair (Torr’s) in Reds (ca. 1926), the hide
rade.”
work: they gathered together diverse entities—art
of a monkey in Monkey Fur, and an animal bone in
objects, gallery architecture and accoutrements,
The Intellectual. Nor could Dove in actuality spark a
viewing bodies—from multiple locales, the works
charge that would through its conduction suture a
on view list-like in their procession along walls or
collection of gallery-based animate and inanimate
atop ledges and the trajectories of visitors weaving
parts. But the simple act of putting his work in a
among these works serving to stitch together the
space the purpose of which was to compel connec-
parts into a whole. In chapter 2, I compared Dove’s
tions between viewers and the objects on view must
effort to instrumentalize his paintings by way of
have for him, in a figurative sense, come very close.
incarnating within them the properties and op-
And the assemblages themselves, when on view in
erations of weather and weather science to Lewis
this space—established as profoundly present, bla-
Fry Richardson’s fantasy of a “Forecast-Factory,” a
tantly material, and thus right there with their accu-
buzzing network of maps, lighted signs, pneumatic
mulated and metal parts—provided a synoptic map
tubes, human calculators and code specialists, and
of such an exhibition-cum-factory, an object-based
all manner of machines, including telephones, ra-
microcosm, akin to the weather map’s condensaThings
233
tion of weather and the devices that sensed it, of
criticism and practice of those counted among the
what Dove would have loved to achieve on a mac-
membership of Stieglitz’s circle, so I need not re-
rocosmic scale. I have employed the term “diagram”
hash the particulars here; sufficient should be the
throughout my descriptions of Dove’s paintings
reminder that Dove, according to Rosenfeld, was
and assemblages, and I have characterized the prev-
“very directly the man in painting,” just as O’Keeffe
alence of diagrams and diagram-like imagery across
was the female, Dove’s subject matter manifest-
Dove’s body of work. By now it should be clear that,
ing “the mechanism proper to his sex as simply as
along with “map,” the term “diagram,” which con-
O’Keeffe’s method manifests the mechanism proper
notes a concrete, actualizing system (as opposed to
to her own,” by which Rosenfeld meant that while
a merely formal array of parts), lines up well with
O’Keeffe painted from her body, Dove projected
Dove’s ambitions for his works, the assemblages
himself outward, disassociating from his con-
especially. In The Culture of Diagram, John Bender
sciousness in the act of discovering “the qualities
and Michael Marrinan characterize the diagram as
and identities of the object.”107 Ultimately, Rosen-
“a proliferation of manifestly selective packets of
feld’s account of Dove cannot be disentangled from
dissimilar data correlated in an explicitly process-
its gender politics, and in the end he positions
oriented array that has some of the attributes of a
Dove in relation to the bodily in equal measure to
representation but is situated in the world like an
O’Keeffe. But here I would like to isolate one of Ros-
106
Diagrams, they suggest, embody the qual-
enfeld’s chief claims from the paradigms of gender
ities of multiple representational modes and possess
and sexuality that govern his remarks—an artificial
the properties of myriad entities, and they function
detaching, of course, but one executed for the pur-
by transferring and translating data among entities
pose of entering into a discussion of the role played
and forms. This is certainly the case with Dove’s di-
by animals in Dove’s intersubjective art.
object.”
agrams, such as his “Sweets” signature or his “see”
Animals populate the assemblages by virtue
arrow, his rendition of atmospheric and artistic op-
of Dove’s inclusion of their fur, their bones, their
erations in Sun Drawing Water, or his alphabetically
shells, and, in the example of the kingfisher in Ralph
and numerically annotated circle diagrams, all of
Dusenberry, approximations of their forms. They
which combine multiple forms of data into a new
also appear with relative frequency in Dove’s paint-
operational whole—not a static image but a thing
ings, which, as a general rule, do not depict the hu-
charged with potential, chomping at the bit to do
man figure. In the case of a small selection of paint-
its work. Dove’s assemblages, it follows, exist vocif-
ings, animals count as Dove’s primary subject (they
erously as diagrams in the round.
are more prominent in his small-scale sketches, cows especially). Dogs Chasing Each Other (1929) in-
Animals
234
cludes forms recognizable as two dogs on the run, and in Goat (1935) the animal eloquently matches
I will close this chapter with a series of observations,
step with his landscape surround. Dove’s bird-
related to my remarks on metal and charge, partly
watching inspired Blackbird (1942), and an eclectic
inspired by the essay on Dove that Paul Rosenfeld
gathering of grazing cattle features in Cows in Pas-
included in his book Port of New York (1924). Ros-
ture (fig. 70).108 Insects, too, tended to receive a more
enfeld’s remarks present difficulties for the twenty-
literal treatment: for example, in Moth Dance (1929),
first-century reader because they so closely hew to
which depicts a swaying moth, or in From a Wasp
and exploit the gender stereotypes elucidated and
(ca. 1914), which depicts the insect’s head, thorax,
perpetuated by Stieglitz’s photographic practice
abdomen, legs, and wings as a fluttering mass (figs.
and within Stieglitz’s larger critical project, espe-
136, 137). Mostly, however, animals emerge in Dove’s
cially regarding the work of O’Keeffe. Marcia Bren-
compositions slyly or stealthily. They appear as zoo-
nan has thoroughly characterized the gendered
morphic shapes or configurations: for instance, the
Chapter Four
Fig. 136 Top, Arthur G. Dove, Moth Dance, 1929, oil on canvas, 50.8 × 66.4 cm (20 × 261⁄8 in.), National Gallery of Art, Washington, DC, Alfred Stieglitz Collection, 1949.2.1. Fig. 137 Bottom, Arthur G. Dove, From a Wasp, ca. 1914, oil on wood, 22 × 26.7 cm (85⁄8 × 10½ in.), Alfred Stieglitz Collection, 1949.532, The Art Institute of Chicago.
Fig. 138 Above, Arthur G. Dove, Tree Forms II, 1935, wax emulsion on canvas, 20 × 28¼ in. (50.8 × 71.755 cm), The Phillips Collection, Washington, DC, acquired 1936. Any reproduction of this image shall not be made without written consent of The Phillips Collection, Washington, DC. Fig. 139 Left, Arthur G. Dove, Car in Garage, 1934, oil on canvas, Memphis Brooks Museum of Art, Memphis, Tennessee, Eugenia Buxton Whitnel Funds, 76.12.
birdlike creatures in Swing Music (Louis Armstrong)
it stitches the outlines of the two creatures, shown
(fig. 114), Red, Olive and Yellow (fig. 41), and The Moon
in profile—a critic dubbed a similar linear structure
Was Laughing at Me (fig. 111). In Tree Forms II (1935),
in Cows and Pasture “mental line.”110 The continuous
a brown shape dotted with an “eye” assumes the
line suggests a state of species coming into being
form of a quadruped surrounded by three other
rather than animals already extant in the natural
one-eyed animallike figures, and in Car in Garage
world, as do the abrupt transitions from green to
(1934), the combination of a spiky, crest-like shape
black where the threading line bisects the animals’
and a rectangle of yellow encircled by white re-
bodies. The animals’ seeming glare as well as their
sembles the horned head of a rhinoceros (figs. 138,
rightward pitch amplifies the intensity of the picto-
139). Dove pairs two colorful creatures in Lake After-
rial drama of their genesis and ongoing metamor-
noon (1935) (fig. 22), part bird and part horse or fox,
phosis. The Barn Next Door (1934) (fig. 141), a paint-
perhaps, or possibly meant to conjure monsters of
ing based on the watercolor sketch of the same
the deep, whose backward-glancing eyes cast them
name—a pantograph facilitated the transfer—in
109
The two ap-
which a single line defines the contours of multiple
pear coextensive with the central triangular form
forms, features one of the most striking zoomor-
intersecting their noses or beaks and torsos so that
phic shapes in Dove’s body of work.111 By the time
the contours of the three central shapes—animals
they find their way to the painting, the sinuous and
and cone—give the impression of being formed by
snaking branches of the tree on the left side of the
a single continuous line. Even in Cows in Pasture,
sketch have taken on the guise of an animal, per-
which more or less straightforwardly depicts cattle,
haps a chipmunk or a fox, complete with striped fur,
Dove’s animal forms stray from their putative spe-
two ears, an eye, and a tail, and the tree’s trunk has
cies. These creatures array themselves variously for
come to form part of the profile of what could be
the viewer: one from above, at the bottom right,
a bird pecking at the ground. The painting retains
its black silhouette revealing a twisting body and
the sketch’s impulse to interconnect. The lines that
prominent ears or horns; one in a larger-scale pro-
delineate the animals also outline the barn and the
file view, along the right edge, its eye narrowed to
tree opposite them, conjoining the forms but also
a slit; and, at the left, what looks to be a massing
suggesting, through the coincidence of their con-
herd. The animal viewed from above looks as much
tours, a material exchange among them, an oper-
like a slug as it does a cow or steer, especially in
ation similarly suggested by the commingling and
relation to its much larger mate, which itself could
coincident contours of Lake Afternoon. Comparable
be just about any large quadruped, while the crea-
conjoinings occur in Barnyard Fantasy (1935) (fig.
ture peeking its head above the fray at far left might
142), in which two birdlike creatures appear threat-
as well be a bird, its squinting eye trained out of
ened by another creature whose arm (or leg) reaches
the canvas at the viewer, its beak as if pursed. Three
across the lower right quadrant of the picture in
of these paintings—Lake Afternoon, Cows in Pasture,
an attempt to grab its prey. The seeming screech
and Tree Forms II—probably began with a sketch like
of the imperiled birds reverberates through the
the one Dove made around 1930, a striking combi-
canvas, reaching the ears of other beings, includ-
nation of greens and grays that features two loom-
ing a two-legged torso with a single eye at center
ing, animallike forms, underscoring the mutability
and other forms lurking at the margins, their eyes,
of the category “animal” for Dove. In this sketch,
hooves, and hands emerging from a cloudy, yellow-
Composition in Green and Gray (Untitled) (ca. 1930)
gray murk. The title of Dove’s Something in Brown,
(fig. 140), which gave rise to the painting Green,
Carmine, and Blue (1927) properly reflects the brown
Black, and White (1938), likely with the aid of a pan-
creature-like shape at center that stares out at the
tograph, Dove weaves together sections of green,
viewer with a single eye, accompanied perhaps by
black, and gray with a threadlike line that traces as
another “something” just behind it, also one-eyed.112
as sentient, even calculating beings.
Things
237
Dove’s paint, laid down on a metal ground, bursts
work. In the act of painting, Dove moves himself
into slippery squiggles throughout the scene, call-
“out into the object,” the object being for Rosenfeld
ing to mind both the dazzlingly overstimulated wa-
anything other than Dove himself, including both
tercolor compositions of Charles Burchfield and the
animals and human- made things, among them,
slither and squirm of an animal.
he wrote, “rusty pieces of farm machinery” or the
In his essay on Dove in Port of New York, Ros-
acetylene lamp featured in one of Dove’s paintings.
enfeld dedicated a fair amount of space to a dis-
Through such acts of imagined bodily projection
cussion of Dove and the animal world. All Dove’s
into the object world, Dove brings to the canvas
drawings and paintings, he wrote, “bring us with a
“the shy interior life of things” and “a sense of the
queer thrill close up to some of the gross and earthy
thing as it exists for itself, deep in proportion to his
substances from which we moderns involuntarily
experience of it,” establishing through the picture a
shrink; and lay our hands gently upon hairy animal
condition of being the very entity he paints, a state
hides, and rub them over rough stubbly ground, and
that is “binding upon himself” and that sutures his
pass good gritty soil through fingers. They bring to
being to that of another creature or thing such as a
the nostrils the healthy pungence of pastures and of
butterfly, cow, tree, flower, or piece of metal. Dove
barn-lofts.” Through such an encounter, Rosenfeld
wished, Rosenfeld wrote, “to coincide with the ob-
said, Dove induces a condition of “animalism,” by
jects before him, to catch their actual substance,”
which the critic meant the feeling of being or be-
and importantly, he wished to transfer that con-
coming an animal while in the presence of Dove’s
dition of coincidence to his viewers. In painting a
Fig. 140 Arthur G. Dove, Composition in Green and Gray (Untitled), ca. 1930, tempera, watercolor, and black ink on paper, 37.9 × 38 cm (1415⁄16 × 1415⁄16 in.), Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, A. Shuman Collection—Abraham Shuman Fund, 62.66. Photograph © 2016 Museum of Fine Arts, Boston.
238
Chapter Four
Fig. 141 Above, Arthur G. Dove, The Barn Next Door, 1934, oil on canvas, 20 × 28½ in. (50.8 × 72.4 cm), Philadelphia Museum of Art, Collection of C. K. Williams II, 274-2009-45. Fig. 142 Right, Arthur G. Dove, Barnyard Fantasy, 1935, oil on canvas, 78.4 × 58.8 cm (307⁄8 × 231⁄8 in.), Yale University Art Gallery, Gift of Duncan Phillips, B.A. 1908, to the Collection Société Anonyme, 1949.85.
herd of cows, for example, Dove “felt from within
hence the assemblage format, hence the weather,
the rich dull animality of their beings” and strove
the circles, the waves, the sound, and the lines. And
to create a picture that would bequeath that ani-
hence the animals, which, by way of their material
113
One
encounters and exchanges chart the course of a
feels that Rosenfeld would have deemed the title
viewer’s incorporation into and activation within a
of Dove’s watercolor sketch From Cows (1937) wholly
gallery installation. Because viewers presented the
apposite. Rather than a picture of cows, Dove pre-
only literally mobile entities in the gallery, perhaps
sents a cluster of vibrant, earthy forms, only one of
Dove’s animals, as living, mobile beings themselves,
them possibly animallike. The title suggests a motif
also signaled those viewers’ capacity to activate the
taken from life and then abstracted, but it also con-
space and its contents, sending a charge via their
notes the world as if seen and experienced from the
traverse through the installation so as to power up
malism to anyone who looked at the work.
114
perspective of being a herd of cattle.
240
the whole and bring it to life.
Rosenfeld’s fulsome account of Dove’s “earthi-
Dove’s animals, as almost animals, zoomorphic
ness” without a doubt struggles under the weight of
forms rather than recognizable specimens, also em-
its own verbosity and rhetorical excess, and the text
body the potential for radical connection, the pos-
may produce snickers from the twenty-first-century
sibility of stitching together entities through a mu-
reader. But if one peels back the layers or vows to
tual exchange of properties and parts. Thing theory
tolerate temporarily the glutting embellishments
and material culture studies have relatively little to
of Rosenfeld’s prose, one realizes that underneath
say about animals, but as scholarship within the
it all the critic made two deeply compelling points:
humanities has made manifestly clear, there exists
first, Dove’s pictures mucked around in the mate-
a long multidisciplinary history of considerations
rial world, and second, the people that viewed these
of the nature of the relationship between humans
pictures found themselves also making contact and
and animals, the potential animalism of humans,
trading places with the stuff of the material realm,
and the possible humanity of animals. From Charles
and with animals in particular. This may not be an
Darwin and Tarzan of the Apes in the nineteenth and
accurate characterization of every viewer’s expe-
early twentieth centuries to biotechnology now, the
rience, but that is here beside the point. Not only
modern period has seen the boundary between the
does Rosenfeld’s description of Dove’s work as facil-
categories “animal” and “human” persistently scru-
itating a human-to-animal translation confirm that
tinized, redefined, and cast into doubt.115 Because
it was possible for someone like Dove, enmeshed
Dove’s animals move in and out of the very cate-
in the same intellectual and social contexts as Ros-
gory of “animal,” congealing as creatures even as
enfeld, to imagine his paintings and assemblages
they morph into other things, they add their two
as doing just this, but Rosenfeld’s characterization
cents to the human-animal conversation by em-
also sheds important light on what Dove might
bodying the possibility of conversion, the potential
have wished to accomplish on the beholder’s side
for a swapping of properties or features between
of the frame. If Dove wanted his paintings and as-
supposedly divergent or incommensurable classes
semblages to model through their operations and
of things, described by Rosenfeld as entering into a
effects a condition of all-encompassing intersub-
state of animalism by trading one’s own body and
jectivity, and if he wanted these works to start up
consciousness for the bodily experience of another,
into life, so to speak, within the context of an ex-
nonhuman creature.
hibition so that the beholder might come to feel
The amorphous forms of Dove’s Reminiscence
himself or herself as one part within a larger system
(1937) (fig. 143) illustrate this point. A series of
or network of entities actively and busily at work
hued shapes along the bottom edge are green-
in the gallery space and beyond, Dove knew he had
equally waves, grass, or a row of grasping hands;
to build just the right machine: hence the metal,
the black shape at the center adorned with a blue
Chapter Four
Fig. 143 Arthur G. Dove, Reminiscence, 1937, oil and wax emulsion on canvas, 14½ × 20½ in. (36.83 × 52.07 cm), The Phillips Collection, Washington, DC, acquired 1937. Any reproduction of this image shall not be made without written consent of The Phillips Collection, Washington, DC.
sawtooth form delineates a human head in profile,
and Reminiscence a novel hybrid form, a condition
complete with a staring blue eye and wavy hair,
of being human and animal at the same time. The
while also serving to designate the eye and ear of
duck / rabbit, old woman / young woman oscilla-
a horse or a sheep, its mouth opened to let out a
tion between human and beast in Reminiscence ar-
neigh or a bleat. Another of Dove’s pictures fea-
ticulated such an exchange as occurring through
tures this kind of human-animal back-and-forth.
an act of seeing that, for Dove, would have entailed
In two separate letters to Stieglitz, one written in
the embodied viewing that transpired in a gallery
1937, the other in 1938, Dove noted that a Professor
space. It is worth recalling here that “having ears
Boswell, at Hobart College, and his wife were the
like an animal,” in Dove’s words, made the experi-
figures featured in Lake Afternoon. Dove most likely
ence of overhearing a murder an especially “vivid”
referred to Foster Partridge Boswell, a professor
one for him, a luridness expressed in the explosive
of philosophy at Hobart at the time, but of course
and twisting forms of Neighborly Attempt at Murder,
the looming creatures in Lake Afternoon present
the painting based on the incident.117 Dove spoke
not portraits of Boswell and his spouse, who were
metaphorically, of course, but the suggestion that
friends of Dove’s and Torr’s, but, rather, a vision of
the particular charge of the overheard event and, by
them transformed from humans into something
extension, the charge of the painting that resulted
116
As he did with his paintings made from
arose by way of a transfer of an animal faculty or
records, Dove produced in works like Lake Afternoon
an animal’s insight to Dove’s person intensifies the
else.
Things
241
Fig. 144 Arthur G. Dove, Monkey Fur, 1926, corroded metal, monkey fur, tin foil, and cloth on metal, 43.2 × 30.5 cm (17 × 12 in.), Alfred Stieglitz Collection, 1949.534, The Art Institute of Chicago.
effect of the human-animal dalliances that Dove in-
and center religious and scientific debates about
timated in his letters to Stieglitz and that he carries
the relationship between humans and animals,
out in Reminiscence and Lake Afternoon.
Dove’s Monkey Fur would have undoubtedly reso-
The assemblages, like the paintings, engage
nated. As the historian Constance Areson Clark has
the animal world and figuratively contravene the
written, “Monkeys were everywhere in the 1920s.”
boundaries among animals, humans, and things.
The Scopes Trial received widespread coverage in
Their breach finds a parallel in Dove’s reading of
the press, drew huge crowds to the courtroom in
animal signs in order to gauge the weather, a grasp
Dayton, Tennessee, and attracted the attention of
at preternatural insight that involved cognizing the
all manner of people trying to make a point or a
world from the point of view of an animal’s state of
buck, among them photographers, moviemakers,
being. I have already mentioned the animal bone in
radio stations, souvenir sellers, chimp handlers,
The Intellectual, the shells of ocean creatures in as-
evangelists, cartoonists, and free-speech activists.
semblages such as Long Island (1925), and the animal
The sensational response to the trial was aided and
hide in Monkey Fur (1926) (figs. 117, 144). Monkey Fur
abetted by the popularity in the 1920s of a genre of
also features a zoomorphic shape. While the piece
entertainment featuring the Stone Age and the ex-
of rusted metal at the center of the composition
ploits of cavemen, ape-men, and other monkey-like
does not look like a monkey, it most certainly as-
prehistoric beasts.118 Thus it is hard to imagine that
sumes the form of an animal. The metal strip has
Monkey Fur would not have in some way invoked for
ears, a snout, a longish neck, and front and back
both Dove and his viewers the period’s ubiquitous
legs, while the encircling strip of monkey hide
conversations about humanity’s monkeyness and
confirms the belonging of the rusted metal shape
the proverbial missing link between humans and
to the animal kingdom. The bumpy folds of the
apes. And I would wager that Dove included real
rusted surface themselves conjure the roughness
monkey fur in his assemblage precisely in order
of an animal’s skin or its hairy coat. Dove covered
to facilitate the imagining of a material link or an
the heads of the nails that fasten this metal form
actual exchange of properties between people and
to its metal ground with pieces of tinfoil; the bit
beasts, here with the weight of science to back it up.
of foil toward the top serves as the creature’s eye,
Monkey Fur invites the viewer to imagine a
making it seem alert to whatever might be happen-
human-animal encounter or swap. The work also
ing beyond the frame or perhaps busy keeping a
puts one in mind of other procedures that involve
watchful eye on us. The fact that the brassy gold-
the transformation or transmutation of animals,
toned metal ground captures, distorts, and reflects
specifically processes that render animals materi-
back the viewer’s visage materializes the idea that
ally available to and as if conversant with us. The
there exists a substantive connection or exchange
nails, which pin the metal strip to its ground, along
between our world and that of the creature before
with the strip of monkey hide evoke the procedures
us as well as the notion that in the act of looking
of natural history, including the slicing, skinning,
at the work we materially transform in a manner
and reconstituting of animals and animal parts in
analogous to the warping of our reflection, one that
taxidermy as well as taxidermy’s transformation of
parallels the human-animal transformation of the
live creatures into immobile and staring specimens
Boswells. As far as I have gathered, Dove made no
for the purpose of display, a conversion process also
mention of Darwin or period conversations about
called to mind by the corroded state of the metal
evolution in his diaries, notes, or correspondence.
strip which marks it as an entity that has undergone
But coming on the heels of the Scopes, or “Monkey,”
a material transmutation. Stitching and handwork
Trial of 1925, which pitted the schoolteacher John
in Hand Sewing Machine; binding and fixing with
Thomas Scopes and the American Civil Liberties
wire, staples, and nails in the assemblage portrait
Union against the state of Tennessee, and put front
of Rebecca and Paul Strand; working with wood to Things
243
fashion armatures and frames; and gluing, fasten-
nication prevalent among the museum’s diorama
ing, and reconstituting throughout Dove’s body of
scenes. Like the humans in an anthropological life
assemblage work: these operations evoke labor in
group, diorama animals endeavor at the behest
general but also, more specifically, the procedures
of the scientists and artists that created them to
and labor of taxidermy. The shallow shadow box–
suggest continuity between their world and ours,
like format of Monkey Fur and other of Dove’s as-
proffering the possibility of a material exchange
semblages, usually framed and often fronted with
between the space of the diorama and the region
a glass pane, looks ahead to Joseph Cornell’s assem-
just beyond the partition of glass that fronts the
blages but also back to Titian Ramsay Peale’s but-
display, one instigated by the viewer’s fantasy of
terfly boxes. Their status as containers also makes
mutual recognition and bodily participation.
them kin to the display formats of natural history
244
The American Museum of Natural History first
museums, and to a diorama populated with taxi-
introduced such large-scale dioramas in the early
dermy specimens especially. The product of a late
years of the twentieth century and added diorama
nineteenth-century embrace of materialism within
displays to their galleries throughout the 1930s,
the fields of anthropology and natural history that
1940s, and 1950s, including grand- scale exhibits
identified objects as science’s chief pedagogical
such as the Akeley Hall of African Mammals, opened
tool, the diorama aimed to reconstruct an “occupa-
in 1936 and named after the naturalist and taxi-
tional” or “life” group. Knowledge, it was believed,
dermy expert Carl Akeley, who oversaw its construc-
arose through encountering objects situated in fac-
tion. As the museum’s major draw, the diorama halls
similes of their original contexts and in a state of
packed in visitors in the early years much as they do
being used, as in the example of a female manne-
today.120 Dove made regular visits to the museum.
quin wearing native garb wielding a tool in a set-
He particularly admired the butterfly exhibits,
ting constructed to match the built environment
which could have inspired the specimen-pinned-
and living conditions typical to the cultural group
to-a-ground format of many of his assemblages,
to which she belonged. As Bill Brown has described,
and he without a doubt saw the museum’s diorama
such a grouping vitalized material objects and also
halls. Yet rather than making a claim for Dove’s di-
invited imagined participation on the part of the
rect engagement in period museological precepts
viewer, who identified with the life-size, in-context,
and pedagogical strategies, I want to suggest that
at- work bodies on view.119 Knowledge about the
the dioramas on view at the museum encouraged
animal kingdom came about through analogous
him to think about his art in terms of the operations
means in the large-scale natural history diorama,
embodied by the displays, and that this thinking in
which combined uncannily lifelike taxidermy spec-
turn aided in inspiring the assemblages and the
imens procured on scientific expeditions with re-
properties he mocked-up in their physical form. Col-
alistic settings that paired illusionistic backdrops
lecting, gathering, dismantling, reconstituting, fas-
with three-dimensional fabrications of vegetation,
tening, building, painting, arraying, and activating:
soil, rocks, and bodies of water. Diorama designers
the dioramas and Dove’s assemblages have these
pose the featured animal specimens in action so as
operations in common, and they share an impulse
to mimic behavior in the wild. Specimens, for in-
to dismantle the dividing lines between seemingly
stance, often look right at the viewer, such as the
opposed categories or realms, including human and
addax and dama gazelle in the Libyan Desert enclo-
animal, animate and inanimate, life and art, and
sure at the American Museum of Natural History in
even life and death.121 Although he worked in a con-
New York, which respond to a viewer’s intrusion in
text still flush with the possibilities of animation
kind, matching the viewer’s motion with their own
and animism, Dove, far from wanting to talk to the
implied movement and redirecting the gaze back at
animals or wishing to claim that pictures are people
the audience, a fiction of human-animal commu-
too—“paintings should exist in themselves, as well
Chapter Four
as people,” he told Duncan Phillips, but they should
new things they are made to accompany, between
not be people—instead identified a model system in
a whalebone and a magic lantern in the case of a
the life group and the diorama that posited the fea-
curiosity cabinet or, with Dove, between an animal
122
Seeming life suggested
bone and a camera lens or monkey fur and rusted
more so than would an encounter with animals in
metal.123 Curiosity cabinets and other such collec-
the wild the possibility of interspecies exchange,
tions aimed to inspire wonder in their viewers,
a material encounter or transfer that itself was a
to establish intellectual, social, and political ties
model for the translations and transmutations
among their users, and to advertise the knowledge,
that entities underwent within a network by vir-
refinement, and status of the individuals or insti-
tue of their networked status and as a result of an
tutions responsible for creating or curating them.
activating, system-wide charge. The vitalization of
The dialogue generated among visitors to such a
entities within a diorama—the fact of their anima-
cabinet or on the part of readers of publications
tion as produced by their death, by their lifeless yet
detailing their contents played a significant role in
lifelike reconstitution and array, and as a function of
this effort. As spaces of sociability, these contained
their being looked at by a viewer who phantasmat-
and arrayed collections linked individuals together
ically converses or identifies with an anthropomor-
as groups. Their capacity “to call such a society
phized specimen, the very operations that charge the
of friends into existence,” as Lorraine Daston has
display—aided in pressing Dove’s practice toward
written in relation to another kind of wondrous col-
the assemblage format and its requisite gathering,
lection, the Glass Flowers assembly at the Harvard
arraying, and deploying of all manner of objects, ar-
Museum of Natural History, stitches together dis-
tifacts, and things, from body parts to metal, fabric,
parate entities, human and nonhuman, into physi-
paper, and paint. Diorama vitality, as a condition of
cal as well as discursive networks of exchange.124 A
lifeless aliveness, models the transference between
similar claim can be made for natural history diora-
animate and inanimate entities that Dove strove
mas. As simultaneously entertainment and object-
for in his assemblages, and in his paintings as well,
based narratives designed to produce knowledge,
those exchanges between, for example, acts and ar-
the dioramas at the American Museum of Natural
tistic media, bodies and signatures, and artists and
History would have produced multiple forms of
instruments, each of which reconfigured not just
discourse and many different kinds of social bonds.
the nature of the relations among those entities but
Their connecting capacity, then, would have en-
transformed the very nature of their being.
compassed relations between specimens and view-
tured specimens as if alive.
The assemblage effect itself skewed almost as
ers but would also have extended to the cultivation
close to a curiosity cabinet or Kunstkammer as it did
and facilitation of sociability on the human side of
to a natural history diorama, to be sure. But this
the glass.
only reinforces Dove’s intent to collect and array
Dove probably had such a capacity in mind
things in the company of the associations that trav-
when he created his assemblages, and also when he
eled with those things from one context to another
culled zoomorphic forms from the shapes, colors,
as well as his desire to translate those things, as-
and patterns of his painted compositions. Dove en-
sociations, and their original systems of existence
visioned the viewer’s engagement with his work as a
or value—as with a collection of individual items
vital aspect of that work’s operation. The conversa-
stitched together as a list or an animal pelt sewn
tions and exchanges generated among the visitors
back into its animal self—into a new network or
to his exhibitions and the works on view would not
complex. Such an integrated system would retain
have differed in kind from those that transpired in
features of the originals but activate them as some-
other exhibition contexts, although they surely dif-
thing else, emphatically suggesting the existence
fered in content. But Dove plainly put special store
of essential relationships among them and the
in what happened beyond the glass, so to speak, or Things
245
outside the frame. The fact that many of his works
about it,” Mumford observed, “Dove would long
were meant to be funny and were acknowledged
ago have been recognized and valued for what he
as such exemplifies the emphasis he placed on his
is: a witty mind whose art is play, and whose play is
viewers’ response. Recent scholarship and period
often art.” Mumford wrote two years later, in 1936,
writing on Dove both affirm, if at times begrudg-
that in Dove’s new paintings “the world is young
ingly, that humor constituted a signature if not
and unexpected and funny again . . . and cows exist
pervasive quality of his work. Beady-eyed animals,
for more exciting purposes than providing milk and
cartoonish boats, scuffling dogs, creatures from the
meat,” and he described the creatures in Lake After-
watery deep, an inside joke made at the expense of
noon as “Thurberesque,” referring to the humorist
a friend moved to sing when drunk, women’s stock-
James Thurber whose New Yorker cartoons in the
ings, monkey fur: for all Dove’s seriousness about
1920s and 1930s featured a menagerie of surrealistic,
the totalizing, utopian capacity of his art, he still
human-acting animals, with dogs an especial favor-
wanted to make his audience laugh. The droll wit
ite.128 Elizabeth McCausland also remarked Dove’s
on evidence in his letters and the sense of play
humor—a “great capacity for jokes” along with the
demonstrated by his “Sweets” signature, his refer-
same “American tang” as Mark Twain—pointing
ences to his radio persona “Graham McDove” or to
to the “hippity-hop rhythm” of his painting of a
the “tunking” of his and Torr’s ghost, his mash-up
train, the humor of Hound (1934), which depicted
of war news, sex, and potty jokes in his collage for
a dog that “came with the house” in Geneva, and
the Bernsteins, and his witty lament regarding
his “gentle raillery at the foibles and pretensions” of
his ass being shaken off a tractor while plowing a
both nature and humans.129 Elsewhere McCausland
barley field all found their way into his work. One
recounted Dove’s spirited response to the teasing
supposes that this winking spirit inspired Dove to
of his friends over his hearse- like black station
plant a sign on the road leading to his farm in Ge-
wagon: he painted it with vermillion polka dots.
125
Surely Dove’s Dogs
Even paintings without overtly witty motifs struck
Chasing Each Other, which evokes the intensity but
viewers as purposefully humorous. Edward Alden
also the comical ineffectuality of two beleaguered
Jewell called Dove’s titles “roguish” and the non-
hounds, reflects his particular sense of humor, and
objective canvases these titles described at times
the same can be said about the sly feline with car-
appearing “perversely and disconcertingly, full of
toonlike whiskers in the small-scale sketch There
elephants.”130 Although I resist putting too much
Was a Cat Somewhere (ca. 1940), the title of which
weight on the funny in Dove’s work, the fact re-
is by itself more than a little droll, or Face on a Bank
mains that inside jokes, puns, witticisms, and plays
(1940), in which Dove adorned an orange ellipse
on words are themselves a means to sociability, the
that looks nothing like a human head with a merry,
mutual understanding and shared pleasure they
neva that read “Dove Airport.”
winking grin.
126
generate serving to create or reinforce social and
Dove’s humor was duly noted by his friends and
intellectual bonds, as the assemblages themselves
critics, if not always enthusiastically embraced.
did by circulating among Dove’s friends.131 The
Stieglitz told Dove that a curator from the Boston
“jokes” in his paintings and assemblages may have
Museum of Fine Arts called Ralph Dusenberry the
been intended to perform a similar function, stim-
127
Lewis Mum-
ulating rapport by way of inducing a chuckle or two.
ford lauded Dove’s wit in his review of the artist’s
In her discussion of the provocation of particular
1934 exhibition at An American Place, which fea-
modes of viewing and encountering compelled by
tured a number of the assemblages. He has, Mum-
graphic arrangement or installation display in the
ford wrote, “a light touch, a sense of humor, and
1930s, Martha Ward identifies open-ended play in
an inventive mind.” “If we Americans did not so of-
which the viewer actively engages with the forms
ten do spurious honor to Art by pulling a long face
arrayed before him or her as one desired result of
“wittiest thing I’ve seen in America.”
246
Chapter Four
innovative layout design.132 Dove’s silly animals and
away face to face through a network of apparatuses,
preposterous materials provoke an analogous feel-
indicates that he had this sort of interconnection
ing of larking about. In Dove’s work, then, comedy
on his mind when writing his letter to Torr. His dis-
creates ties that bind, the viewer indulging in a joke
patch of northern flicker feathers, scavenged from
with what is on view and with anyone else in on it
his environs and sent to hers, suggests that, to his
too, including Dove himself.
mind, the weight of such a transaction might be
In the 1936 letter to Torr that described his
best shouldered by the world of animals and things,
wish to communicate by way of “television” so that
or that in sending the feathers as a surrogate for
he could see as well as hear the party at the other
himself—putting a bird on the wing when he him-
end of a telephone conversation, Dove enclosed
self, Dove, could not fly, so to speak—he pictured
three feathers. He hypothesized that the feathers
the intersubjectivity after which he sought as in
were “probably a flicker argument,” meaning that
some way involving the translation of properties
he imagined they had been shorn during a tussle
between himself and these other, nonhuman be-
between two northern flickers, a type of wood-
ings.134 Dove followed his assessment of a cat’s in-
pecker common throughout the United States and
ability to leave so pristine the scene of the flicker
Canada whose tail feathers bear the pattern of black
crime with a witty play on words: no cat could have
bars, spots, and crescents observable in the speci-
done this, he wrote, but “I just saw a Watson cat go
mens Dove gave to Torr. Dove figured that the lost
over Gossiptown Bridges.” While it is hard to know
feathers were remnant of a bird scrape because, as
exactly what Dove meant by this, the underlining
he wrote to Torr, “a cat couldn’t have done away
of “Watson” signals a less than literal meaning,
with every thing but 3 feathers.”133 On the one hand,
pointing out that Dove has something up his sleeve
a sweet gesture, on the other, a telling missive: Dove
and giving a heads-up to Torr that she should read
missed Torr terribly during the weeks she spent in
between the lines. And most probably he referred to
Connecticut tending to her ill mother, and his many
the very next sentence of his letter, which conveyed
letters, filled with affectionate drawings (including
a bit of gossip—one of the Appletons left his wife
his “Sweets” doodle) and talk of staying in touch via
for Molly, he reported—thus making Dove himself
radio, telepathy, or a sympathetic “tunking” ghost,
the sly if self-deprecating cat on his way to Gossip-
make obvious his desire to sustain their connec-
town. In a few short sentences plus feathers then,
tion while physically separated. The letters do so
Dove managed to bring about an exchange, both
both psychologically and literally, by maintaining
material and figurative, among humans, humans
emotional intimacy between Dove and Torr and as
and terrain (Hartford, Geneva), humans and things
material entities dispatched over distance that se-
(feathers, a letter), and humans and animals (fight-
cure a material link between sender and recipient,
ing flickers, chatty cats) that amounted to a binding
their trajectory from Geneva to Hartford a kind of
gesture of sociability, one that in its temporal and
stitching together in time and space. Dove’s gift of
spatial reach offered a model of what Dove was after
feathers symbolizes this link. As a material transac-
in his art.
tion, this act of giving also transformed a figurative bond into a material one, the exchange of brute matter, of things, between hands thus securing a web of relationships—among people, feathers, notepaper,
Nature versus Machine, and a Segue to Impossibility
ink, writing, post offices, and geography— much
In the early 1940s, Jackson Pollock declared, “I am
like those fashioned among the myriad parts of
nature.” Not too long after, in 1963, Andy Warhol
Dove’s assemblages or among the audiences and
issued his own such declaration: “I want to be a
equipment of radio or the phonograph. Dove’s fan-
machine.”135 While a convenient pairing for use in
tasy of “television,” which would bring people far
teaching introductory surveys of art in the twenThings
247
Fig. 145 Arthur G. Dove, Cinder Barge and Derrick, 1931, oil on canvas, 22 × 30 in. (55.9 × 76.2 cm).
248
tieth century, the nature- machine binary these
ries marshaled to explain art in America before the
statements imply when treated as a twosome easily
Second World War, including machine and body,
leads to simplified interpretations of each artist’s
industrial fabrication and handwork, materiality
work as well as rather-too-neat chartings of the his-
and discourse, and irony and eros.136 So treating
tory of modern art. Equally curt readings of the art
Dove’s paintings of machines and industry and his
and artists of the so-called Stieglitz circle threaten
proclivity for mill-made metal and manufactured
to arise out of analogous pairings: Duchamp’s ad-
metal parts as serious artistic business rather than
ulation of American plumbing over and against
atypical or insignificant within his larger body of
Stieglitz’s dislike of automobiles, say, or Picabia’s
work, or suggesting that the assemblages really
mechanomorphic portraits versus Strand’s psy-
mattered to him and consisted of more than a brief
chologically penetrating photographs of his close
and Dadaesque detour from the real substance of
colleagues and friends. Rosenfeld’s Dove-O’Keeffe
his practice, as I have attempted to do in this chap-
dichotomy has on its own caused no small amount
ter, means taking Dove and his works at their word,
of interpretive trouble, and the same goes for his
paying attention to what they have to tell us about
Stieglitzian insistence that both artists were firmly
what they were supposed to achieve. A painting
rooted in the natural world and the American soil, a
such as Cinder Barge and Derrick (1931) (fig. 145), then,
pigeonholing perpetuated by a whole slew of bina-
rather than an anxious quelling of industry through
Chapter Four
the imposition of nature’s swelling, organic forms,
through a circuitry constructed of all manner of
might more simply be a picture about machines and
entities, objects, and processes. Likewise, Dove in
the work they do; a crane loading a ship, after all, is
his assemblages gathered the stuff of the world and
a crane loading a ship. The same could be said about
then sent it back out, newly equipped with a charge
Dove’s Red Barge, also painted in 1931, or Sand Barge,
that had the power to circulate and stitch, traveling
137
At the time, Dove and Torr lived on
as would an electromagnetic wave through solid
the Mona in Halesite, on Huntington Harbor, so the
objects and across vast stretches of terrain or at-
trappings of the shipping industry would have been
mosphere so as to weave all parts it handled and
part of their daily life. And shipping, as an activ-
inhabited into an immeasurably immense intersub-
ity that connected multiple locations through the
jective whole, all the way from point, line, and plane
transit and transfer of many forms of matter, would
to solidity, motility, and reconstituted life. And just
have been for Dove an apposite subject. Likewise,
as Richardson’s Forecast-Factory was nothing but
Dove’s “things,” rather than the derivative leavings
a glorious fantasy, Dove’s vision of a translation-
of an artist stuck on a boat, mattered to him just as
borne, materially conjured, and all-encompassing
much as his paintings did. By paying attention to
intersubjectivity was mostly a dream. Humans can-
and taking seriously what Dove and his works have
not talk with the animals or converse with heavenly
to say about themselves, one realizes that Dove sits
bodies, and never will. They have no capacity to see
absolutely nowhere in regard to the great but false
the earth’s surface as it is offered up by a weather
Duchamp-Stieglitz, Culture-Nature divide. Rather,
map or the heavens as imparted by a constellation
Dove’s work, and his “things” in particular, emerge
chart. And people do not really become intimately
as open-minded and as many-folded as Heidegger’s
conversant with the machines they use, know what
jug or Richardson’s Forecast-Factory. Richardson’s
it feels like to be a boat floating on water, or form
proposed weather hive held itself open to masses
viable virtual communities by listening to the same
and masses of incoming information, data of myr-
radio station or visiting the same stuffed ape. But as
iad sorts registered and transmitted by a great
far as Dove was concerned, they could try, and his
diversity of means; it then conducted this data
art could lend a hand.
from 1930.
Things
249
Epilogue
I return at the close of this study to the question Dove was asked in 1938—What is it that you as an artist undertake to do?—and to his r eply: the impossible.1 Given the ambitions of Dove’s practice as I have described them, this might have presented the only reasonable answer. “Impossible” also fit the bill because, as intent as he was on making connections and forging bonds, Dove acknowledged the possibility of mistranslation, embracing it, in fact, as an essential and irreducible aspect of any system. By mistranslation I do not mean the inaccurate rendition of a word or phrase in one language in the form of another, nor do I invoke a state of misunderstanding or a bungled transfer of information that produces confusion or error. I point rather to those things arising within the process of transmission or translation as if on their own accord, generated apart from or in addition to the intentions of the human and nonhuman entities responsible for setting in motion and facilitating the transfer or encounter in question. I mean, for instance, the sonic effects produced by the mechanical works of a phonograph, the pictorial results arising from the inherent properties of a medium such as wax emulsion or pastel, the perturbations and jigs registered by a pantograph as it traces, the transmuted voice transmitted over a telephone wire or in the form of radio waves, the end product of oxidizing metal that forms part of an assemblage, the unpredictable consequences of painting shipboard or in a house rattled and shaken by storm-wrought winds, or the 251
involuntary overhearing of a murder. Unexpected
sistant to the imposition of a system, and regaling
finds on his scavenging sorties, unanticipated re-
audiences with tales of weirdly glowing mastheads,
sults produced by his experiments with pigments
singing electrical wires, or wind’s uncanny ability to
and solutions, unplanned effects of juxtaposition
register itself, Dove drew attention to the extraordi-
generated by his assembling of incongruent things
nary qualities and behaviors that featured distinc-
into a work of art, serendipitous transformations
tively within his endeavor. In the words of one of
of the works themselves when arrayed in a new or
his critics, he dwelled knowingly “on the substan-
unconventional space: all played a welcome and
tial things of this world, but keeping all the while
vital role in Dove’s artistic practice. Just as Dove
a mariner’s eye on the upper heavens lest some
exulted in bringing unseen phenomena to light in
fine passing moment of cloud or shine be lost.”2
paintings such as Sun Drawing Water, Fog Horns, and
In looking to the material and immaterial both,
Moon, giving visual form to physical processes such
he made clear that to his mind any system bent
as evaporation, air flow, and gravity normally well
on calling all-encompassing intersubjectivity into
beyond the grasp of the senses, and just as he strove
being must rely on its own inherent extrasystem-
to conjure perspectives on the world unattainable
atic procedures and effects, that one could fathom
by humans in works such as Flight, Rain or Snow, and
setting about engineering such an interconnecting
Me and the Moon, he was captivated by the prospect
and fully charged complex of beings and things
of things acting on their own, collaborating as equal
but still had to leave some of the conjuring up to
partners within a cluster of entities configured as a
chance. The mismatch between an anticipatory or
network so as to produce an outcome, as was the
hypothetical thought and its object served Dove as
case with a sonic system comprising a complex of
a metaphor for the inevitability and necessity of
live music, recording apparatus, playback device,
mistranslation and the extraintentional, and one
and human listener. Even the overheard murder
suspects that Dove’s sustained fascination with me-
paid pictorial dividends. Analogous to the pursuit
teorology arose as much from its failure to predict
of automatism by Duchamp or the Surrealists, but
future conditions as it did from his interest in the
also crucially distinct, Dove’s attentiveness to auto-
weather as a phenomenon or from the necessity of
matic procedures amounted to a fascination with
knowing what the weather would be. Perhaps the
the unintended consequences of translation and
preposterousness of Pound’s translations, the bulk
the fundamentally productive part those uninten-
of them illegible and bordering on sheer nonsense,
tional outcomes played in transmuting and recon-
attracted Dove to them in equal measure as did
stituting human language and communication as
their “charge.” Something similar might be said for
well as their potential for recasting the nature of
Dove’s love of Joyce, the epitome of a difficult read.
the relationship between humans and things and,
Joyce’s description in “Hades,” the sixth episode of
also, among all things in the world.
Ulysses, of the dead speaking from their graves with
Calling his task as an artist an impossible one
the help of a gramophone might have held partic-
was thus for Dove a way to express the sheer ambi-
ular appeal. The occasion of Paddy Dignam’s fu-
tion of his practice and the preposterousness of his
neral compels Leopold Bloom’s thoughts to turn to
objective. But it also entailed making clear that his
Hades, the land of the dead, and to Odysseus’s visit
project and his intentions were seriously invested
there, during which the dead spoke to him. Bloom’s
in the wondrous, the magical, and the supernatu-
musings point up the absurdity of imagining the
ral, with automatism proving an exemplary figure
success of any indirect, necessarily translated ex-
for those things. Just as the science of meteorology
change:
signaled its own wondrous aspects, marveling as it
252
did at the double identity of clouds, subject to clas-
Besides how could you remember everybody?
sification and codification and preternaturally re-
Eyes, walk, voice. Well, the voice, yes: gramo-
Epilogue
phone. Have a gramophone in every grave or keep
to do,” and he knew full well that he himself would
it in the house. After dinner on a Sunday. Put on
not manage the job.5 Were he a force of nature or
poor old greatgrandfather. Kraahraark! Hello
more plainly a thing, on the other hand, he might
hellohello amawfullyglad kraark awfullyglada-
have been properly up to the task.
seeagain hellohello amawf krpthsth. Remind you
I intend my claims regarding the fundamental
of the voice like the photograph reminds you of
preoccupations of Dove’s practice to serve a dual
the face. Otherwise you couldn’t remember the
purpose. I arrived at my argument about Dove by
face after fifteen years, say. For instance who?
way of careful historical research and with a fair
For instance some fellow that died when I was in
amount of conviction and, as such, I do aim to per-
Wisdom Hely’s.
3
suade. But with this book I also set out to chart a path for revisiting the work of a much-studied art-
Such a lack of correspondence as embraced by Dove
ist like Dove, someone we thought we knew very
extended even to the act of looking at something
well. I care almost less about whether my ultimate
directly and face-to-face: “If you have been asked
claims concerning the “what” and the “why” of
to meet someone in another room whom you’ve
Dove go down smoothly than I do about readers
never seen,” he said, “it wouldn’t be easy not to
taking seriously the means by which I made my
think what that person was like on the way into the
way to those claims. My hope, then, is that by plot-
other room. It would be surprising indeed if your
ting a course for rethinking Dove’s practice, in part
idea of the person in the other room and the person
by expanding the field of evidence and recasting
in the other room collided precisely—they never
the historical and conceptual categories available
could even if you had been in the other room all
for interpretive use, I might also encourage read-
4
the time.” Here, Dove proffers the very substance
ers to look with fresh eyes at other of the artists
of establishing a social relation—one human en-
counted as members of Stieglitz’s circle, including
countering, thinking about, and occupying the
the most pondered and written about of all them,
same space as another—as a demonstration of the
Georgia O’Keeffe, whose art in scholarly accounts
crossed purposes and disrupted currents native to
escapes the Stieglitz paradigm even less frequently
any gesture toward an intersubjective state. Dove’s
than Dove’s.6 Despite himself, Paul Rosenfeld in
shorthand, his playfully obfuscating poetry and
Port of New York offered a glimmer of a way out.
prose, his custom-made weather codes that, in the
He attributed to her work the linear exactness of
absence of a cipher, prove illegible to anyone but
a machine- cut form and a “Picasso- like power,”
him (or perhaps Torr), and his lovely, strange, and
suggesting in the space of a few short sentences
riveting abstract vocabulary: these things, too, in
a series of terms and concepts—Cubism, collage,
their resistance to being read, in their refusal to
Precisionism, technology, the nonhuman, and the
be dissected, marked out, and defined, insist on
cult of the machine, among others—that venture
the necessity of leaving matters somewhat in the
unconventional avenues of inquiry regarding her
dark. This was Dove’s embrace of the extrahuman or
work. Rosenfeld also invoked perception as a par-
preternatural aspect of intersubjectivity registered
adigm for understanding O’Keeffe’s paintings.
also in his talk of tunking ghosts, white light, sensi-
When looking at her work, he wrote, “it is as though
tive instruments, and telepathy. Dove’s project was
one had been given to see the mysterious parting
impossible, then, because he could only engineer,
movement of petals under the rays of sudden fierce
he only had language and its properties on his side,
heat; or the scarcely perceptible twist of a leaf in
leaving him hoping along the way for flashes of
a breath of air; or the tremulous throbbing of a
wonder and unanticipated, extraintentional effects
diminutive bird-breast,” and he employed the term
to emerge as by-products of his labor. “The thing
“flower-movements” to describe O’Keeffe’s render-
has never been done,” Dove said, “that I should like
ing of such undetectable effects of motion someEpilogue
253
how available to the eye in picture form.7 Textual
even impulsive approach to the work of someone
nuggets such as these do not the foundation of a
like O’Keeffe, or to any other artist from the period
wholesale reinterpretation make, but the existence
whose stories we believe we know by heart, mem-
of remarks like Rosenfeld’s grants license to enter
bers of the Stieglitz circle but also other figures
and explore less well-traveled interpretive terrain.
from the first half of the twentieth century, includ-
It might, for instance, draw one back through time
ing those that have recently recaptured popular and
to early natural history and, in particular, to the
scholarly interest, such as Charles Burchfield. Aaron
botanist William Bartram’s sense of the volition
Douglas, Charles Sheeler, Marius de Zayas, and Flo-
of plants or, a bit later, to the artist Martin John-
rine Stettheimer also come to mind. The point I
son Heade’s paintings of hummingbirds, some of
make here, that there is still a fair amount left to
these creatures suspended between the stillness of
say, is an optimistic one, and with it I mean to pay
a specimen and the vivacity of breathing, blood-
homage to the scholarly writing on early American
pumping life. Rosenfeld’s remark also propels one
modernism that precedes my own. Without such
forward again, returning one to the intellectual
a foundation on which to build, I would not have
preoccupations of O’Keeffe’s own day, to contem-
had the wherewithal to recognize the diaries as pe-
poraneous discourse on the sensorium, perhaps, or
culiarly significant or to comprehend fully Dove’s
maybe the physics of motion and force—in either
fixation on the weather, and I certainly would not
case, possibly relevant, possibly not, but certainly
have dedicated so much time and thought to the
worth a look.
assemblages, some of which, I must admit, initially
When I undertook the chore of reading page by
made me question Dove’s artistic and intellectual
page the diaries kept for decades by Dove and Torr,
bona fides. Above all else, I hope that my thoughts
I found dispiriting at first the ratio between what
on Dove will find a comfortable home alongside the
I thought was usable material—Dove commenting
preexisting literature, entering into a relationship
on his art, Torr describing his artistic process—and
with this previous scholarly work as sociable and
what I deemed mere fluff, including reports of what
supercharged as the network of relations and bonds
they ate for dinner or bought at the store, a note
Dove envisaged as establishing intersubjectivity as
about Torr washing her hair or mending Dove’s
the essential condition for the world and its myriad
socks, records of the day’s weather, descriptions of
inhabitants.
errands run in town and trips to the post office, and accounts of Dove’s constant maintenance work on the boat. But as my frustration gave way to curiosity about the value that Dove and Torr by all appearances placed on the mundane and the everyday it occurred to me that the fact of the diary’s existence might be as important as the information it contained and that the impulse to register one’s doings and the conditions of one’s surround in writing on a daily basis might just tell the scholar something about a person’s art. Realizing as much encouraged me to approach Dove with an open mind and a sense of possibility commensurate with his own and also forced me to let go of any assumptions regarding what I had thought I would wind up saying about his work. My sense is that the time has come for an analogously open, counterintuitive or 254
Epilogue
Notes
Introduction 1. The Dove exhibition was organized by Debra Bricker Balken in collaboration with William C. Agee and Elizabeth Hutton Turner; it originated at the Phillips Collection and traveled to multiple venues. Debra Bricker Balken, Arthur Dove: A Retrospective (Andover, MA: Addison Gallery of American Art; Washington, DC: The Phillips Collection; Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 1997). 2. My account of Dove’s biography relies on the following sources: Ann Lee Morgan, Arthur Dove: Life and Work with a Catalogue Raisonné (Newark: University of Delaware Press; London: Associated University Presses, 1984); Balken, Arthur Dove: A Retrospective; Erika D. Passantino, ed., The Eye of Duncan Phillips: A Collection in the Making (Washington, DC: The Phillips Collection, 1999); Sarah Greenough, ed., Modern Art and America: Alfred Stieglitz and His New York Galleries (Washington, DC: National Gallery of Art, 2000); Anne Cohen DePietro, Out of the Shadows: Helen Torr, A Retrospective (Huntington, NY: Heckscher Museum of Art, 2003); and Debra Bricker Balken, Dove/O’Keeffe: Circles of Influence (Williamstown, MA: Sterling and Francine Clark Art Institute, 2009). 3. The Lobster is in the collection of the Amon Carter Museum of American Art, Forth Worth, Texas. 4. Sue Davidson Lowe, Stieglitz: A Memoir/Biography (Boston: MFA Publications / Museum of Fine Arts, 2002), 136–37; Charles Grafly, “Art and Artists Pass in Review,” Philadelphia Inquirer, Oct. 17, 1915, 8. 5. Exceptions of course exist, including Morgan, Arthur Dove; Sherrye Cohn, Arthur Dove: Nature as Symbol (1982; Ann Arbor, MI: UMI Research Press, 1985); and Harry Cooper, “Arthur Dove Paints a Record,” Source Notes in the History of Art 24/2 (Winter 2005): 70–77. See also DeLue, “Against the Circle,” in Inventing Abstraction, 1910–1925: How a Radical Idea Changed Modern Art, ed. Leah Dickerman (New York: Museum of Modern Art, 2012), 188–90. 6. Clifford Geertz, “Thick Description: Toward an Interpretive Theory of Culture,” in The Interpretation of Cultures (New York: Basic Books, 1973), 3–30.
255
7. Nelson Goodman, Languages of Art: An Approach to a Theory of Symbols (Indianapolis, IN: Hackett Publishing, 1976), xi–xii. 8. Hans-Georg Gadamer, “The Nature of Things and the Language of Things,” in Philosophical Hermeneutics, trans. and ed. David E. Linge (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1976), 77. See also Roland Barthes, “The Rhetoric of the Image,” in Image/Music/Text, trans. Stephen Heath (New York: Hill and Wang, 1977), 32–51, in which Barthes analyzes different modes of signification in terms of their operational capacities in relation to his discussion of the manner in which an image produces meaning; Barthes’s attention to the “operational” warrants his mention in regard to language in Dove. 9. Walter Benjamin, “The Task of the Translator,” in Illuminations: Walter Benjamin, ed. Hannah Arendt, trans. Harry Zohn (New York: Schocken Books, 2007), 69–82. 10. For Benjamin, translation, and utopia, see Lawrence Venuti, “Translation, Community, Utopia,” in The Translation Studies Reader, ed. Venuti (London: Routledge, 2000), 482–502. For a basic introduction to translation studies, an interdisciplinary field that describes, interprets, and theorizes the nature, effects, and applications of translation, see Jeremy Munday, Introducing Translation Studies: Theories and Applications, 2nd ed. (London: Routledge, 2008); and Mona Baker and Gabriela Saldanha, eds., Routledge Encyclopedia of Translation Studies, 2nd ed. (London: Routledge, 2009). Also relevant are Kenneth R. Allan, “Metamorphosis in 391: A Cryptographic Collaboration by Francis Picabia, Man Ray, and Erik Satie,” Art History 34/1 (Feb. 2011): 102–25, which discusses a contemporaneous exploration of language and translation within the American avant-garde, one also relevant to Dove’s formulation of intersubjectivity and to what I characterize in this study as his preoccupation with notational systems and communication technologies such as the telegraph; and Kristin Schwain, Signs of Grace: Religion and American Art in the Gilded Age (Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 2008), ch. 1, which considers the role of language and translation in a religious painting by Thomas Eakins and sees both as central to Eakins’s understanding of how paintings should address and engage their viewers. 11. Bruno Latour, the scholar perhaps most closely associated with actor-network theory today, objects to the term “social” when used to describe a system or network comprising persons, things, and ideas because it concretizes what, to his mind, is in reality ever in process. I use the term here for the sake of convenience. Bruno Latour, Science in Action: How to Follow Scientists and Engineers through Society (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1987); Bruno Latour, Reassembling the Social: An Introduction to Actor-Network- Theory (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2005); Bruno Latour, “Why Has Critique Run Out of Steam? Matters of Fact, Matters of Concern,” in Things, ed. Bill Brown (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2004), 167–68. See also John Law and John Hassard, eds., Actor Network Theory and After (Oxford, MA: Blackwell / Sociological Review, 1999), which includes essays by Latour, Law, and Michel Callon, who together were the three originators of actor-network theory in the mid-1980s; David Turnbull, “Rendering Turbulence Orderly,” Social Studies of Science 25/1 (Feb. 1995): 9–33; and Fiona Cheetham, “An Actor-Network Perspective on
256
Notes to Pages 6–7
Collecting and Collectibles,” in Narrating Objects, Collecting Stories, ed. Sandra H. Dudley et al. (London: Routledge, 2012), 125–35. 12. Peter-Paul Verbeek offers a useful and detailed account of translation as a concept within actor-network theory in What Things Do: Philosophical Reflections on Technology, Agency, and Design, trans. Robert P. Crease (University Park: Pennsylvania State University Press, 2005), ch. 5. 13. Wittgenstein’s sense of language as a “form of life” or a kind of social relation or action is relevant here. Ludwig Wittgenstein, Philosophical Investigations, rev. 4th ed., trans. G. E. M. Anscombe, P. M. S. Hacker, and Joachim Schulte, ed. P. M. S. Hacker and Joachim Schulte (Chichester, UK: Wiley- Blackwell, 2009), 14. 14. For intersubjectivity and psychoanalysis, see J. Gentile, “Wrestling with Matter: Origins of Intersubjectivity,” Psychoanalytic Quarterly 76/2 (Apr. 2007): 547–82; J. Dunn, “Intersubjectivity in Psychoanalysis: A Critical Review,” International Journal of Psychoanalysis 76/4 (Aug. 1995): 723– 38; and D. M. Orange, R. D. Stolorow, and G. E. Atwood, “Hermeneutics, Intersubjectivity Theory, and Psychoanalysis,” Journal of the American Psychoanalytic Association 46/2 (1998): 568–71. For the foundational study of intersubjectivity within phenomenology, see Edmund Husserl, The Crisis of European Sciences and Transcendental Phenomenology: An Introduction to Phenomenological Philosophy, trans. David Carr (Evanston, IL: Northwestern University Press, 1970), 23–59, 86–123 (sec. 9 and 33–43); Edmund Husserl, “Fifth Meditation,” in Cartesian Meditations: An Introduction to Phenomenology, trans. Dorion Cairns (The Hague: Kluwer Academic, 1999), 89–151. It should be noted that Husserl’s concept of “transcendental intersubjectivity” (italics mine) posits intersubjectivity not as a product of interrelation but as the very condition that makes such interrelation possible. See also Paul Ricoeur, Husserl: An Analysis of His Phenomenology, trans. Edward G. Ballard and Lester E. Embree (Evanston, IL: Northwestern University Press, 2007); Michael Lewis and Tanja Staehler, Phenomenology: An Introduction (London: Continuum, 2010), 33–63; and David Carr, Interpreting Husserl: Critical and Comparative Studies (Dordrecht, Neth.: M. Nijhoff, 1987). For empathy, see Wilhelm Worringer, Abstraction and Empathy: A Contribution to the Psychology of Style, trans. Michael Bullock (London: Routledge and Kegan Paul, 1953); Matthew Rampley, “From Symbol to Allegory: Aby Warburg’s Theory of Art,” Art Bulletin 79/1 (Mar. 1997): 41–54; and Harry Francis Mallgrave and Eleftherios Ikonomou, eds. and trans., Empathy, Form, and Space: Problems in German Aesthetics, 1873–1893 (Santa Monica, CA: Getty Center for the History of Art and the Humanities, 1994). For empathy in relation to art, see, in addition to Worringer, Juliet Koss, “On the Limits of Empathy,” Art Bulletin 88/1 (Mar. 2006): 139–57; and Spyros Papapetros, On the Animation of the Inorganic: Art, Architecture, and the Extension of Life (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2012). Both offer a far more complete analysis of the history and bibliography of empathy within and outside art history than I can offer here. For a relevant characterization of the intersubjectivity that arises out of the experience of reading, see Georges Poulet, “Phenomenology of Reading,” New Literary History 1/1 (Oct. 1969): 53–68. For a useful parsing of the idea of intersubjectivity as “a shared sense of being-in-the-world” within the work
of a range of thinkers, including Maurice Merleau-Ponty, George Santayana, and Edmund Husserl, see Todd Cronan, “Merleau-Ponty, Santayana, and the Paradoxes of Animal Faith,” British Journal for the History of Philosophy 18/3 (2010): 487–506. Intersubjectivity has received attention within neuroscience as well. See, for example, S. Sauvagnat, M. Wiss, and S. Clément, “A Historical Perspective on the Collaboration between Psychoanalysis and Neuroscience,” Journal of Physiology (Paris) 104/6 (Dec. 2010): 288–95; John Onians, Neuroarthistory: From Aristotle and Pliny to Baxandall and Zeki (New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 2007); and Barbara M. Stafford, Echo Objects: The Cognitive Work of Images (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2007). See also Hans Belting, An Anthropology of Images: Picture, Medium, Body, trans. Thomas Dunlap (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 2011), in which Belting posits the body as a living medium productive of its own images, a reality that according to him must be taken into account within art-historical interpretation. Given its attention to human relations and social systems as organizing principles for art and its utopian outlook, the concept of “relational aesthetics” is also relevant here. See, for example, Nicolas Bourriaud, Relational Aesthetics, trans. Simon Pleasance and Fronza Woods (Dijon, Fr.: Les presses du réel, 2009); and Claire Bishop, “Antagonism and Relational Aesthetics,” October 110 (Fall 2004): 51–79. Of course the idea of intersubjectivity, if not the term itself, predates the aforementioned literature. Ovid, René Descartes, and Jonathan Swift, among others, theorized analogous conditions of empathy, sympathetic metamorphosis, or metempsychosis. Matthew L. Jones, “Descartes’s Geometry as Spiritual Exercise,” and Jonathan Lamb, “Modern Metamorphoses and Disgraceful Tales,” in Things, ed. Bill Brown (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2004), 40–71, 193–226. And as Janine Mileaf has noted, intersubjectivity was highly valued within Dada and Surrealist circles in the first half of the twentieth century. Janine Mileaf, Please Touch: Dada and Surrealist Objects after the Readymade (Hanover: University Press of New England, 2010), 3–4 and passim. See also Dario Gamboni, Potential Images: Ambiguity and Indeterminacy in Modern Art (London: Reaktion Books, 2002), for a related discussion of compelled interchange between a work of art and its beholder. 15. I thank Ann Lee Morgan for this information about Dove’s reading habits, which she gleaned from multiple conversations with Dove’s son, William Dove.
Chapter 1 1. Elizabeth Hutton Turner, “Going Home: Geneva, 1933– 1938,” in Debra Bricker Balken, Arthur Dove: A Retrospective (Andover, MA: Addison Gallery of American Art; Washington, DC: The Phillips Collection; Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 1997), 95; diary entries for Jan. 17, 19, 21, 30, 31, 1933, Arthur and Helen Torr Dove Papers, 1905–1974, Archives of American Art, Smithsonian Institution, 3:2:7 (hereafter cited as Dove Papers). Torr refers to the painting in these entries as “Sun Drawing Water,” making clear that the title was Dove’s own. According to Torr, Dove worked on the painting from January 17 to 31. 2. For a comprehensive survey of Dove’s precursors and contemporaries in abstraction, see Leah Dickerman, ed.,
Inventing Abstraction, 1910–1925: How a Radical Idea Changed Modern Art (New York: Museum of Modern Art, 2012). Dove would have come into contact with recent European art, including that of Paul Cézanne, Henri Matisse, Pablo Picasso, Constantin Brancusi, Paul Gauguin, and Wassily Kandinsky at Stieglitz’s galleries or at the 1913 Armory Show (from which Stieglitz purchased Kandinsky’s 1912 Improvisation No. 27), and also perhaps during his trip to France. Most scholars agree that Kandinsky served as a source of inspiration for Dove, but interpretations of the nature and mechanism of Kandinsky’s influence vary. An English translation of Kandinsky’s Concerning the Spiritual in Art (1912) was available by 1914; two years earlier, in 1912, Stieglitz had published translated excerpts of Kandinsky’s text in Camera Work, and in November 1913 he lent Dove a copy of Der Blaue Reiter (1912), which was edited by Kandinsky and Franz Marc. Wassily Kandinsky, “Extracts from ‘The Spiritual in Art,’ ” Camera Work 39 ( July 1912): 34; Kandinsky, The Art of Spiritual Harmony (London: Constable, 1914); Marilyn Satin Kushner and Kimberly Orcutt, eds., The Armory Show at 100: Modernism and Revolution (New York: New-York Historical Society, 2013); Gail Stavitsky, Laurette E. McCarthy, and Charles H. Duncan, The New Spirit: American Art in the Armory Show, 1913 (Montclair, NJ: Montclair Art Museum, 2013); Ann Lee Morgan, Arthur Dove: Life and Work with a Catalogue Raisonné (Newark: University of Delaware Press; London: Associated University Presses, 1984), 40–43, 68n14; Sarah Greenough, ed., Modern Art and America: Alfred Stieglitz and His New York Galleries (Washington, DC: National Gallery of Art, 2000); Gail Levin and Marianne Lorenz, Theme and Improvisation: Kandinsky and the American Avant-Garde, 1912–1950 (Boston: Little, Brown, 1992); Gail Stavitsky and Katherine Rothkopf, eds., Cézanne and American Modernism (Montclair, NJ: Montclair Art Museum, 2009); Joseph J. Rishel and Katherine Sachs, Cézanne and Beyond (Philadelphia, PA: Philadelphia Museum of Art, 2009); Debra Bricker Balken, Dove/O’Keeffe: Circles of Influence (Williamstown, MA: Sterling and Francine Clark Art Institute, 2009), 33–34. 3. H. Effa Webster, “Artist Paints Rhythms of Color: Works Are Most Strange and Confusing; Need No Titles,” Chicago Examiner, Mar. 15, 1912, 5. 4. Debra Bricker Balken, Arthur Dove: Watercolors (New York: Alexandre Gallery, 2006), 16, 17. 5. See John J. Videler, Avian Flight (New York: Oxford University Press, 2005), 66–90; Carrol L. Henderson, Birds in Flight: The Art and Science of How Birds Fly (Minneapolis, MN: Voyageur Press, 2008), ch. 2. For a consideration of the representation of the invisible phenomenon of wind in European and American art and visual culture, see Alessandro Nova, The Book of the Wind: The Representation of the Invisible, trans. Marguerite Shore (Montreal: McGill-Queen’s University Press, 2011). 6. Dove to Stieglitz, Jan. 29, 1933, in Dear Stieglitz, Dear Dove, ed. Ann Lee Morgan (Newark: University of Delaware Press; London: Associated University Presses, 1988), 264. Dove also described painting from a moving train in a June 28, 1933, letter to Duncan Phillips, housed in the collection of the Library and Archives of the Phillips Collection, Washington, DC. 7. Fields of Grain as Seen from Train is in the collection of the Albright-Knox Art Gallery in Buffalo, New York.
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8. During the period Dove was at work on the painting, his mother died; according to Torr, Dove received a telephone call on January 22, and they traveled that evening to Geneva, New York, where the next day they made arrangements for the funeral, held on January 24. Dove left Geneva for Halesite on January 29 and returned to work on the painting. Diary entries for Jan. 22, 23, 24, 29, 1933, Dove Papers, 3:2:7. Dove, in a letter to Alfred Stieglitz written while on the train heading home, indicated that he was present at the moment of his mother’s passing: “Quite beautiful a few minutes before the end and afterward. Absolutely conscious up to the last 3 or 4 breaths.” Dove to Stieglitz, Jan. 29, 1933, in Morgan, Dear Stieglitz, Dear Dove, 264. Torr’s diary entry of Jan. 22 originally noted, in pen, that the telephone call concerned “Arthur’s mother.” What looks to be a later addition, in pencil, transformed the sentence into “Arthur’s mother had died” (italics mine). This may not bear directly on the meaning of Sun Drawing Water, of course, but it is worth noting the relevant documentation here. 9. See, for example, Turner, “Going Home,” 95. For further discussion of supersight, a term I borrow from the photographer Berenice Abbott, a contemporary of Dove’s, see Terri Weissman, The Realisms of Berenice Abbott: Documentary Photography and Political Action (Berkeley: University of California Press, 2011). 10. Cohn notes the recurrence of ovoid, elliptical, and spiral forms in Dove’s body of work and discusses his use of such forms as part of a quest for a universal language for expressing the essence of nature; Barbara Haskell describes Dove’s circles as symbols of the “universal rhythm or life force that he felt existed in the world”; and Elizabeth Turner states that they gave Dove’s art an intensity “at once abstract and surreal.” Sherrye Cohn, Arthur Dove: Nature as Symbol (1982; Ann Arbor, MI: UMI Research Press, 1985), 31–33; Barbara Haskell, “Arthur G. Dove,” American Art Review 2/1 ( Jan.–Feb. 1975), 137; Turner, “Going Home,” 106. Select paintings by Georgia O’Keeffe and Oscar Bluemner feature concentric circle forms much like those in Dove’s pictures. See Barbara Haskell and Stephanie Lynn Schumann, “Oscar Bluemner: Suns and Moons,” Magazine Antiques, Nov. 2005, 122–27; and Balken, Dove/O’Keeffe. 11. Sunrise I is in the collection of Edward and Deborah Shein; Sunrise II is also privately held. 12. Janet Browne, “Photosynthesis,” in The Oxford Companion to the History of Modern Science, ed. J. L. Heilbron, (New York: Oxford University Press, 2003), 638–39; John Langone, Bruce Stutz, and Andrea Gianopoulos, Theories for Everything: An Illustrated History of Science from the Invention of Numbers to String Theory (Washington, DC: National Geographic Society, 2006), 288–91. 13. As Turner notes, Dove read Max Doerner’s technical manual, The Materials of the Artist, trans. Eugen Neuhaus (New York: Harcourt, Brace, 1934), in the fall of 1935, writing to Stieglitz on October 1, “Am reading every inch of Max Doerner’s book. Wish I had it years ago. Georgia says she reads it like the Bible.” In another letter to Stieglitz, written on October 24, 1935, Dove stated that “Doerner is the only one I have read who seems to give such complete scientific information, and what a mass of it. He makes even some of the Germans seem almost careless.” Turner, “Going Home,” 104; Morgan, Dear Stieglitz, Dear Dove, 341, 342.
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Doerner praised the quality of Naples yellow, writing, “We might well be happy if we had nothing but colors of the quality of pure Naples yellow!” Doerner, The Materials of the Artist, 61–62, in Turner, “Going Home,” 105. Torr mentions Dove’s study of “mediums, varnishes” in her diary entry for September 22, 1935. Dove Papers, 3:2:8. For Naples yellow, see John Gage, Color and Culture: Practice and Meaning from Antiquity to Abstraction (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1993), 223; and Simon Jennings, Artist’s Color Manual: The Complete Guide to Working with Color (New York: HarperCollins, 2003), 64. 14. Simon Jennings, Artist’s Color Manual, 75. 15. See, for example, William C. Agee, “New Directions: The Late Work, 1938–1946,” in Balken, Arthur Dove: A Retrospective, 133–53; Cohn, Arthur Dove: Nature as Symbol; Morgan, Arthur Dove, 38–82; and Turner, “Going Home.” Of course, Dove was not unique in his attempt to use pictures to reveal an unseen physical (as opposed to spiritual) world. Other artists of this period had similar ambitions; painters such as Georgia O’Keeffe and photographers such as Berenice Abbott and Paul Strand were especially attuned to the capacity of images to manifest visually the unseen. There is a substantial literature on images, the unseen, and invisibility, and several recent studies consider these issues in the context of scientific inquiry and experimentation. See, for example, Joel Snyder, “Visualization and Visibility,” in Picturing Science, Producing Art, ed. Caroline Jones and Peter Galison (New York: Routledge, 1998), 378–97; Lynn Gamwell, Exploring the Invisible: Art, Science, and the Spiritual (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 2002); Robert M. Brain, “Representation on the Line: Graphic Recording Instruments and Scientific Modernism,” in From Energy to Information: Representation in Science and Technology, Art, and Literature, ed. Bruce Clarke and Linda Dalrymple Henderson (Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 2002), 155–77; Peter Geimer, “Picturing the Black Box: On Blanks in Nineteenth- Century Paintings and Photographs,” Science in Context 17/4 (Dec. 2004): 467–501; James Elkins, Six Stories from the End of Representation: Images in Painting, Photography, Astronomy, Microscopy, Particle Physics, and Quantum Mechanics, 1980– 2000 (Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 2008); Josh Ellenbogen, Reasoned and Unreasoned Images: Bertillon, Galton, Marey (University Park: Pennsylvania State University Press, 2012); and Peter Galison, “Concrete Abstraction,” in Dickerman, Inventing Abstraction, 350–57. 16. Morgan, Arthur Dove, 12; diary entries for Oct. 31, Nov. 1, 8, 1924, Dove Papers, 3:1:51; Dove to Stieglitz, Dec. 9, 1934, in Morgan, Dear Stieglitz, Dear Dove, 319; Cohn, Arthur Dove: Nature as Symbol, 42. Cohn reports that Dove expressed this wish to his son, who then shared it with her in an interview conducted on October 14, 1980. 17. Dove to Stieglitz, Oct. 13, 1930, and Dec. 4, 1930, in Morgan, Dear Stieglitz, Dear Dove, 199, 201; Cohn, Arthur Dove: Nature as Symbol, 41–43; diary entry for Feb. 5, 1929, and undated typewritten essay, Dove Papers, 3:2:3, 3:3:2. Cohn notes that Einstein and relativity were regularly subjects of conversation for Stieglitz and that his library contained several of Einstein’s publications, in both English and German (42). 18. Bert Leston Taylor, “A Line O’ Type or Two,” Chicago Daily Tribune, Mar. 21, 1920, 8. 19. Cohn, Arthur Dove: Nature as Symbol, ch. 2; Linda Dal-
rymple Henderson, The Fourth Dimension and Non-Euclidean Geometry in Modern Art (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1983), ch. 4; Dalrymple Henderson, “The Image and Imagination of the Fourth Dimension in Twentieth-Century Art and Culture,” Configurations 17/1–2 (Winter 2009): 131–60. For a period discussion of the fourth dimension in relation to art with which Dove may have been familiar, see Max Weber, “The Fourth Dimension from a Plastic Point of View,” Camera Work 31 ( July 1910): 25. For discussion of relevant intersections between art and science in the prewar period, see, for example, Julia Kelly, Art, Ethnography and the Life of Objects, Paris, c. 1925–35 (Manchester, UK: Manchester University Press, 2007); Linda Dalrymple Henderson, ed., “Writing Modern Art and Science,” special issue, Science in Context 17/4 (Dec. 2007), esp. the essay by Gavin Parkinson, “Surrealism and Quantum Mechanics: Dispersal and Fragmentation in Art, Life, and Physics,” 557–77; Sara Lynn Henry, “Form-Creating Energies: Paul Klee and Physics,” Arts Magazine, Sept. 1977, 118–21; Gavin Parkinson, Surrealism, Art, and Modern Science: Relativity, Quantum Mechanics, Epistemology (New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 2008); and Oliver A. I. Botar and Isabel Wünsche, eds., Biocentrism and Modernism (Farnham, UK: Ashgate, 2011). 20. Dove to Samuel Kootz, in Kootz, Modern American Painters (New York: Brewer & Warren, 1930), 37–38; Dove to Arthur Jerome Eddy, in Cubists and Post-Impressionism (Chicago: McClurg, 1914), 48; Cohn, Arthur Dove: Nature as Symbol, 30–31; undated typewritten essay, Dove Papers, 3:3:3. 21. Cohn, Arthur Dove: Nature as Symbol, ch. 2; Morgan, Arthur Dove. 22. Leo G. Mazow has previously documented an analogous interest in notational systems, including cryptography, secret writing, and mathematics, on the part of the American artist John Covert, a contemporary of Dove’s. Mazow’s consideration of Covert’s particular preoccupation with notation bears on my approach to Dove. Mazow also presents an illuminating discussion of Covert’s daybooks as an attempt to register and comprehend the passage of time, a topic relevant to my discussion in the next chapter of Dove’s diary and log keeping. Mazow, “John Covert, Tetraphilia, and the Language of Time,” Winterthur Portfolio 41/1 (Spring 2007): 21–42; and Mazow, John Covert Rediscovered (State College, PA: Palmer Museum of Art, 2003). 23. Dove to Torr, Nov. 10, 1933, Dove Papers, 2:1:41. See Megan McShea, “A Painter Writes a Landscape: Arthur Dove’s Prose Poem,” Archives of American Art Journal 47, 1/2 (2008): 24–29, for the only sustained analysis in the literature to date of Dove’s writing habits. Henderson, “The Image and Imagination of the Fourth Dimension,” 154–57, describes a link between spiral forms and theorizations of the fourth dimension in the period under discussion, a possible source for Dove’s prolific spiral forms. 24. Dove to Torr, Nov. 22, 1934 (postmarked), Nov. 10, 1933 or 1934 (postmarked), Dove Papers, 2:1:31. 25. Dove was not alone among the members of the so-called Stieglitz circle in this regard. John Marin, for instance, experimented with writing as a medium in his notebooks, sketches, and paintings. Other artists of the period did as well, including Charles Burchfield. 26. See Leo Rosten [Leonard Q. Ross], The Education of
H * Y * M * A * N K * A * P * L * A * N (New York: Harcourt Brace, 1937). 27. Dove to Torr, Oct. 1936, Dove Papers, 2:1:38. 28. Typewritten essay, Dec. 13, 1928, Dove Papers, 3:3:1. 29. Undated handwritten essay, , Dove Papers, 3:2:19. 30. Dove to Samuel M. Kootz, n.d., Dove Papers, 2:1:22. 31. Roger Cooke, The History of Mathematics: A Brief Course (New York: Wiley, 1997), 103–4; Dove to Kootz, in Kootz, Modern American Painters, 37. 32. Dove to Edward Alden Jewell, n.d., Dove Papers, 2:1:23. 33. Dove to Henry McBride, n.d., Dove Papers, 2:1:23. 34. Arthur Dove, “An Idea,” in Arthur G. Dove: Paintings, 1927 (New York: The Intimate Gallery, Dec. 12, 1927–Jan. 11, 1928), n.p; Wassily Kandinsky, Point and Line to Plane, ed. Hilla Rebay, trans. Hilla Rebay and Howard Dearstyne (New York: Solomon R. Guggenheim Foundation, 1947; repr., New York: Dover Publications, 1979). Kandinsky’s text was part of a series of books edited by Walter Gropius and Lazlo Moholy-Nagy and published by the Bauhaus. 35. Arthur Dove, “A Way to Look at Things,” in Alfred Stieglitz Presents Seven Americans (New York: The Anderson Galleries, Mar. 9–28, 1925), 4, and Arthur G. Dove: Exhibition of Recent Paintings (1941–1942) (New York: An American Place, Apr. 14–May 27, 1942), n.p. 36. Eugene Jolas et al., “Proclamation,” transition 16/17 (1929): 13; Dougald McMillan, Transition: The History of a Literary Era, 1927–1938 (London: Calder and Boyers, 1975); Cary Nelson, Repression and Recovery: Modern American Poetry and the Politics of Cultural Memory, 1910–1945 (Madison: University of Wisconsin Press, 1989), 173–75. For recent writing on art and experimental literature during this period, see Carol Armstrong, Scenes in a Library: Reading the Photograph in the Book, 1843–1875 (Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 1998); Arna Sigridur Arnar, The Book as Instrument: Stephane Mallarmé, the Artist’s Book, and the Transformation of Print Culture (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2011); Peter Collier and Robert Lethbridge, eds., Artistic Relations: Literature and the Visual Arts in Nineteenth-Century France (New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 1994); Dario Gamboni, The Brush and the Pen: Odilon Redon and Literature (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2011); Linda Goddard, Aesthetic Rivalries: Word and Image in France, 1880–1926 (New York: Peter Lang, 2012); Dee Reynolds, Symbolist Aesthetics and Early Abstract Art: Sites of Imaginary Space (New York: Cambridge University Press, 1995); and Garrett Stewart, The Look of Reading: Book, Painting, Text (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2006) 37. Dove to Stieglitz, Oct. 22, 1928, in Morgan, Dear Stieglitz, Dear Dove, 160, 161. In the October 22 letter, Dove also reported that he had “just finished quite a remarkable MS of Toomer’s,” perhaps referring to Cane, which was published in 1923. It is clear from Dove’s letters to Stieglitz and from his and Torr’s diaries that he read transition regularly and avidly. See, for example, Dove to Stieglitz, Oct. 20, 1928, Nov. 6/8, 1928, in Morgan, Dear Stieglitz, Dear Dove, 160, 162; diary entries for Aug. 7, Nov. 9, 1928, Aug. 9, 1929, Feb. 28, 1936, Dove Papers, 3:2:2, 3:2:3, 3:2:9. 38. Dove to Stieglitz, Oct. 22, 1928, in Morgan, Dear Stieglitz, Dear Dove, 161; James Joyce, “Continuation of a Work in Progress,” transition 13 (Summer 1928): 5–32. 39. Dove to Stieglitz, Oct. 20, 1928, Apr. 24, 1930, Apr. 6,
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1931, in Morgan, Dear Stieglitz, Dear Dove, 160, 192, 218. According to Herbert J. Seligmann, Benton was kinder in his evaluation of Dove, stating on the occasion of a visit to Stieglitz’s Intimate Gallery that he liked Dove’s work while objecting more generally to the principles it represented. Herbert J. Seligmann, Alfred Stieglitz Talking: Notes on Some of His Conversations, 1925–1931 (New Haven, CT: Yale University Library, 1966), 42. In the diaries, Torr wrote that Dove bought her a copy of Harper’s containing an essay by Max Eastman titled “The Tendency toward Pure Poetry.” Diary entry for June 24, 1929, Dove Papers, 3:2:3; Max Eastman “The Tendency toward Pure Poetry,” Harper’s Monthly Magazine, July 1929, 222–30. In the essay, Eastman considered poetry as a system or “strategy” (228) of communication; he discussed literary modernism and opposed poetry that sought to produce a “mystic essence” or a profound meaning to modern verse, with its vigorous attention to the material and the experiential, the descriptive and the everyday: “In place of a criticism, these poets are offering us in each poem a moment of life, a rare, perfect or intense moment, and nothing more” (224). He also discussed trends in poetry toward the meaningless or unintelligible, where words are empty of meaning or emotional heft and leave the reader with nothing but the words themselves (226–27). 40. Arthur Dove, “What Does Photography Mean to Me?” MSS, Dec. 1922, 9. MSS had a short run, with six issues appearing in 1922 and 1923; its chief sponsors were Paul Rosenfeld and Alfred Stieglitz. The December 1922 issue, in which Dove’s text appeared, was edited by Stieglitz with assistance from Paul Strand. Ann Lee Morgan, “An Encounter and Its Consequences: Arthur Dove and Alfred Stieglitz, 1910–1925,” Biography 2/1 (Winter 1979): 48; Robert E. Haines, “Alfred Stieglitz and the New Order of Consciousness in American Literature,” Pacific Coast Philology 6 (Apr. 1971): 26; Greenough, Modern Art and America, 298, 392–93. 41. Gertrude Stein, “Composition as Explanation,” Dial, Oct. 1926, 327–36; Gertrude Stein, “A Long Gay Book,” Dial, Sept. 1927, 231–36; Bruce Kellner, “Ex Libris: The Published Writings of Gertrude Stein,” in A Gertrude Stein Companion: Content with the Example, ed. Kellner (Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 1988), 27, 46–47; Ulla E. Dydo, ed., A Stein Reader (Evanston, IL: Northwestern University Press, 1993), 151–52; Dove to Stieglitz, Dec. 1926 and Sept. 8, 1927, in Morgan, Dear Stieglitz, Dear Dove, 134, 143. “Composition as Explanation” originated as a lecture delivered by Stein at Oxford and Cambridge in 1926. Kellner, “Ex Libris,” 27; Dydo, A Stein Reader, 493–94. See also Ulla E. Dydo, with William Rice, Gertrude Stein: The Language That Rises, 1923–1934 (Evanston, IL: Northwestern University Press, 2003); and Ulla Hasel stein, “Tender Buttons: Stein et ses portraits des choses (1914),” in Carrefour Alfred Stieglitz, ed. Jay Bochner and Jean-Pierre Montier (Rennes, Fr.: Presses Universitaires de Rennes, 2012), 339–48. 42. Dove to Stieglitz, Aug. 9, 1932, and Sept. 30, 1933, in Morgan, Dear Stieglitz, Dear Dove, 246, 286; Morgan, Dear Stieglitz, Dear Dove, 501. 43. Dove to Elizabeth McCausland, June 10, 1934, Elizabeth McCausland Papers, 1838–1965, bulk 1920–1960, Archives of American Art, Smithsonian Institution, 2:5:11; Elizabeth McCausland, “Super-Sense Applied to Twentieth- Century Life,” Springfield Republican, Mar. 4, 1934, cited in
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Susan Platt, “Elizabeth McCausland: Art, Politics, and Sexuality,” in Women Artists and Modernism, ed. Katy Deepwell (Manchester, UK: Manchester University Press, 1998), 89; Gertrude Stein, The Making of Americans: The Hersland Family (New York: Harcourt, Brace, 1934); Lawrence Rainey, review of The Making of Americans, by Gertrude Stein, with an introduction by Steven Meyer and a foreword by William H. Gass. (Normal, IL: Dalkey Archive Press, 1995), Modernism/ Modernity 4/2 (Apr. 1997): 222–24. 44. Bert Leston Taylor, “A Line-O’-Type or Two: Post- Impressionism,” Chicago Daily Tribune, Nov. 5, 1912, 6. 45. Gertrude Stein, Tender Buttons: Objects, Food, Rooms (Mineola, NY: Dover Publications, 1997), 3. For other examples of verbal still life that compare interestingly with Dove’s kitchen table portrait, see Guy Davenport, Objects on a Table: Harmonious Disarray in Art and Literature (Washington, DC: Counterpoint, 1998), chs. 2, 4. 46. Arthur Dove, “291,” Camera Work 47 ( July 1914), 37. 47. Arthur Dove, “A Different One,” in America and Alfred Stieglitz: A Collective Portrait, ed. Waldo Frank et al. (New York: Doubleday, Doran, 1934), 243. 48. Gertrude Stein, “Stieglitz,” in America and Alfred Stieglitz, 280. 49. For a basic account of Dove and mental telepathy, including examples of Dove’s written references to it, see Cohn, Arthur Dove: Nature as Symbol, ch. 3. 50. Jeffrey Sconce, Haunted Media: Electronic Presence from Telegraphy to Television (Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 2000). 51. Paul Dove, “Notes relative to Arthur G. Dove” and “Facts pertaining to the life of Arthur G. Dove,” Dove Papers, 1:1:1. 52. Alexander Humez and Nicholas Humez, On the Dot: The Speck That Changed the World (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2008), ch. 1; Kenneth R. Allan, “Metamorphosis in 391: A Cryptographic Collaboration by Francis Picabia, Man Ray, and Erik Satie,” Art History 34/1 (Feb. 2011): 120. 53. Dove to Torr, Oct. 15, 1936, Dove Papers, 3:1:38. 54. In designing the 1934 exhibition Machine Art at the Museum of Modern Art, Philip Johnson lined some of the gallery walls with panels of aluminum, stainless steel, and copper. As Kristina Wilson points out, these panels shared their materials with many of the objects on display, an implied connection between figure and ground comparable to Dove’s use of metal in Telegraph Pole. Kristina Wilson, “Spiritual and Material Gods in the Machine Age,” in The Modern Eye: Stieglitz, MoMA, and the Art of the Exhibition, 1925–1934 (New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 2009), 157, 188. See also Jennifer Jane Marshall, Machine Art 1934 (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2012). For discussion of an illuminating precedent for the intersection of Dove’s art and the operations and sociotechnological implications of telegraphy, see Jennifer L. Roberts, “Post-Telegraphic Pictures: Asher B. Durand and the Nonconducting Image,” Grey Room 48 (Summer 2012): 12–35; and Jennifer L. Roberts, Transporting Visions: The Movement of Images in Early America (Berkeley: University of California Press, 2014), ch. 3, an expanded version of the Grey Room article. 55. Suzanne Mullett Smith and Gordon Smith, “Music of the Eye: The Development of an Idea,” unpublished lecture, American University, Washington, DC, 1950, reedited 1976,
Suzanne Mullett Smith Papers, Archives of American Art, Smithsonian Institution, microfilm roll no. 1043, frame 1274, quoted in Judith Zilczer, “Synaesthesia and Popular Culture: Arthur Dove, George Gershwin, and the ‘Rhapsody in Blue,’ ” Art Journal 44/4 (Winter 1984): 362. 56. Frederick S. Wight, Arthur G. Dove (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1958), 58; Suzanne M. Mullet, “Arthur G. Dove, 1880–1946” (MA thesis, American University, Washington, DC, 1944), 15. See also Harry Cooper, “Arthur Dove Paints a Record,” Source Notes in the History of Art 24/2 (Winter 2005): 70. 57. Dove to Torr, Oct. 2, 1936 (postmarked), Dove Papers, 2:1:37. 58. Eric Burns, Invasion of the Mind Snatchers: Television’s Conquest of America in the Fifties (Philadelphia: Temple University Press, 2010), 6 (Hoover quotation); Gary R. Edgerton, The Columbia History of American Television (New York: Columbia University Press, 2007), ch. 1. See also Albert Abramson, The History of Television, 1880–1941 ( Jefferson, NC: McFarland, 1987). 59. Anne Cohen DePietro interview with William Dove, in Arthur Dove and Helen Torr: The Huntington Years (Huntington, NY: Heckscher Museum of Art, 1989), 78; diary entry for Mar. 20, 1942, Dove Papers, 3:2:13. William Dove also noted that Dove greatly admired Billy Rose who, before he became a well-known lyricist and theatrical producer in the 1920s and 1930s, had studied with Gregg, was a shorthand champion, and had worked as a professional stenographer during the war. Jan Jones, Billy Rose Presents . . . Casa Mañana (Fort Worth: Texas Christian University Press, 1999), 17–19. In her diary entry for February 15, 1925, Torr wrote, “French & shorthand in eve.” Whether Dove partook in this instance is not certain, but Torr tended to note when an activity was specific to herself or to Dove, using pronouns or initials to make clear who did what; the absence of pronouns in her entries usually indicates that both she and Dove participated in the activity described, such as reading a book or listening to music. At least one other diary entry records Dove himself practicing shorthand. Diary entry for Feb. 15, 1925, Dove Papers, 3:1:53; DePietro interview with William Dove, 78. 60. John Robert Gregg, Gregg Shorthand: Light-Line Phonography for the Million, anniv. ed. (New York, NY: Gregg, 1929), 1, x–xi. 61. DePietro interview with William Dove, 78. 62. DePietro interview with William Dove, 78. For an example of “wkd,” see the diary entries for Oct. 17–23, 1924, Dove Papers, 3:1:51. 63. DePietro interview with William Dove, 78; Edward Alden Jewell, “Concerning Mr. Dove,” New York Times, Mar. 30, 1930, 12. Jewell corrected his mistake in “Telescoping Centuries,” New York Times, Apr. 6, 1930, 18. Dove wrote to Jewell to thank him for the first review and in his letter noted the confusion over his title, saying that the mix-up did not prevent Jewell from producing criticism that “remains the most thoughtful in my mind that I have ever had.” Dove to Jewell, n.d., Dove Papers, 1:1:23. 64. See, for example, diary entries for Aug. 24, Oct. 7, 9, 17, 19, Nov. 22, 28, 30, Dec. 1, 2, 3, 1924, Apr. 3, 1943, Dove Papers, 3:1:51, 3:2:13. One could feasibly map onto the terms I use here a more formalized vocabulary of semiotic forms
and operations, including those most commonly discussed in relation to visual art—namely, Charles Saunders Peirce’s “icon,” “index,” and “symbol.” But because such a vocabulary was alien to Dove, I have chosen not to pursue such an endeavor. For a thought-provoking discussion of how Peirce’s terms can illuminate the analysis of an artist’s work, see Michael Leja, “Eakins’s Reality Effects,” ch. 2 in Looking Askance: Skepticism and American Art from Eakins to Duchamp (Berkeley: University of California Press, 2004). 65. All are in the collection of the McNay Art Museum (1962.3, 1962.4.1–1962.4.10). 66. Charles C. Eldredge, Reflections on Nature: Small Paintings by Arthur Dove, 1942–1943 (New York: American Federation of Arts, 1997); Melanie Kirschner, Arthur Dove: Watercolors and Pastels (New York: George Braziller, 1998); Balken, Arthur Dove: Watercolors. The study bearing the first set of notes cited is in the collection of the Metropolitan Museum of Art, an untitled work in tempera and graphite on paper, three by four inches, dated 1943 (1984.536.29); the second set of notes cited annotates an untitled study in tempera and oil from 1942 in the collection of the National Gallery of Art in Washington, DC (1992.111.18). 67. DePietro, Arthur Dove and Helen Torr, 47, 51; Morgan, Arthur Dove, 54; Agee, “New Directions,”, 136; Kirschner, Arthur Dove: Watercolors and Pastels, 41. William Dove discussed his father’s small studies in an interview with DePietro and said that he used both a magic lantern and a pantograph to transfer them to canvas; he noted that the fit of the magic lantern dictated the 3″ x 4″ format of many of the drawings. DePietro interview with William Dove, 78. See also diary entries for Aug. 17, Sept. 16, 1930, May 25, Aug. 8, Sept. 8, 1942, Dove Papers, 3:2:4, 3:2:13. In a 1935 letter to Stieglitz, Dove reported that his son was visiting him and Torr in Geneva and that he was working on an “enlarging camera” for Dove that combined parts of an old sun lamp and Dove’s Kodak camera that may have been intended for use in transferring sketches to canvas. Dove to Stieglitz, May 6, 1935, in Morgan, Dear Stieglitz, Dear Dove, 337. 68. Turner, “Going Home,” 102; Dove to Stieglitz and O’Keeffe, Sept. 18/25, 1933, in Morgan, Dear Stieglitz, Dear Dove, 284. 69. The sketch, also dated 1942 and rendered in watercolor, gouache, and ink, maps the basic forms and colors of the finished painting, including Dove’s signature; it is in the collection of the Art Institute of Chicago, where the painting also resides. 70. According to Barbara Haskell, this painting earned its title when one of Dove’s friends on seeing it remarked, “That’s no feather pillow.” No source is cited in her account. Haskell, Arthur Dove (San Francisco, CA: San Francisco Museum of Art, 1974), 21. 71. For signatures in American art, see Michael Fried, Realism, Writing, Disfiguration: On Thomas Eakins and Stephen Crane (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1987); and John Wilmerding, Signs of the Artist: Signatures and Self-Expression in American Paintings (New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 2003). 72. Sun on the Lake is in the collection of the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston. 73. I owe this idea to a comment made by an unidentified member of the audience at the Present Day Club,
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Princeton, New Jersey, where I spoke about portions of my Dove research on January 6, 2009. 74. DePietro interview with William Dove, 75; Morgan, Dear Stieglitz, Dear Dove, 210. Dove owned or consulted the following manuals: The Book of the Art of Cennino Cennini, trans. Christiana J. Herringham (London: George Allen, 1899); E[mory] C[obb] Andrews, Color and Its Application to Printing (Chicago: Inland Printer, 1911); Jacques Blockx, Compendium of Painting (Antwerp: J. E. Buschman, 1926); Doerner, Materials of the Artist; Hilaire Hiler, Notes on the Technique of Painting (New York: Oxford University Press, 1935); Ralph Mayer, The Artists Handbook of Materials and Techniques (New York: Viking, 1940); Wilhelm Ostwald, Letters to a Painter on the Theory and Practice of Painting (Boston: Ginn, 1907); and Maximilian Toch, Materials for Permanent Painting (New York: D. Van Nostrand, 1911). 75. Balken, Arthur Dove: Watercolors, 73. 76. Andrews, Color and Its Application to Printing, 20, 21. 77. Balken, Dove/O’Keeffe, 68. 78. Paul Strand, “Photography,” Camera Work 49/50 ( June 1917): 3–4. 79. Diary entries for Aug. 27, Oct. 3, Nov. 1, 1926, Aug. 6, 11, 13, 1934, Mar. 18, 1935, Dove Papers, 3:1:54, 3:2:7, 3:2:8. 80. Morgan, Dear Stieglitz, Dear Dove, 88; and Greenough, Modern Art and America, 387–88, 423–26, 454–55. Stieglitz exhibited a similar series in March 1924, called “Songs of the Sky.” Greenough, Modern Art and America, 548. Greenough discusses the relationship between Dove’s production and Stieglitz’s photographs (423–28, 436). The years during which Stieglitz created his cloud photographs, including those specifically designated Equivalents, are variously given in the literature, but scholars agree that he began photographing the sky and clouds in 1922. 81. Dove to Stieglitz, July 7, 1942, and Stieglitz to Dove and Torr, July 8 and July 17, 1942, in Morgan, Dear Stieglitz, Dear Dove, 471–72. In 1924, the first year she and Dove began to keep their diary, Torr recorded a visit to “Stieglitz’s room” in New York during which Stieglitz and his associate and unofficial assistant, the artist Emil Zoler, “showed us cloud photographs.” “No one else could have done them,” she wrote. Diary entry for Dec. 5, 1924, Dove Papers, 3:1:52. I address the significance of the Equivalents for Dove more extensively in chapter 3; my argument there draws substantially on Rosalind Krauss, “Stieglitz/Equivalents,” October 11 (Winter 1979): 129–40. 82. Dove to Stieglitz, June 7, 1942, in Morgan, Dear Stieglitz, Dear Dove, 470. 83. Dove to Stieglitz, probably July 23, 1942, and Aug. 9, 1942, in Morgan, Dear Stieglitz, Dear Dove, 472–73. William C. Agee discusses Dove and the Equivalents in “Arthur Dove: A Place to Find Things,” in Greenough, Modern Art and America, 423–29. 84. Sunrise in Northport Harbor is in the collection of the Wichita Art Museum, Wichita, Kansas. 85. Gawain Weaver, A Guide to Fiber-Base Gelatin Silver Print Condition and Deterioration (Rochester, NY: George Eastman House / Image Permanence Institute, Rochester Institute of Technology, 2008), 5–7. Available online at Advanced Residency Program in Photograph Conservation, The George Eastman House, accessed Feb. 1, 2011, http:// gawainweaver.com/library/.
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86. Dove to Stieglitz, Oct. 3, 1942, in Morgan, Dear Stieglitz, Dear Dove, 477. 87. Alfred Stieglitz Presents Seven Americans, 8; Morgan, Arthur Dove, 141. 88. Dove to Stieglitz, Oct. 3, 1942, in Morgan, Dear Stieglitz, Dear Dove, 477. 89. Peter Michael Harman, Energy, Force, and Matter: The Conceptual Development of Nineteenth-Century Physics (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1982), esp. chs. 3 and 4; Gillian Beer, “Wave Theory and the Rise of Literary Modernism,” ch. 13 in Open Fields: Science in Cultural Encounter (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1996); Gamwell, Exploring the Invisible, 68, 152–55, 164–68, 195–205, 215–18. 90. Boys’ Life, Sept. 1924, 53; Popular Mechanics, Sept. 1924, 131; Popular Science Monthly, Nov. 1924, 126. The advertisement in Boys’ Life ran adjacent to a column entitled “The Radio Tower” by Zeh Bouck (52–53). The murals that decorate the lobby of the New York Telephone Company’s 1927 Art Deco tower offer an interesting period comparison to Lawrie’s reliefs at 30 Rockefeller Plaza. Painted by Hugo R. B. Newman, they depict the history of human communication, from smoke signals and carrier pigeons to the heliograph, gunfire, and the telephone. At one end of the central panel, concentric circles of orange, bronze, and gold billow forth from an angelic figure holding aloft a telephone, suggesting at once clouds and sound waves, and at the opposite end, a second winged figure stands against a backdrop of similar waveforms issuing like wires from insulators attached to the horizontal crossbars of telephone and telegraph poles. David W. Dunlap, “Damaged by Hurricane Sandy, Verizon’s Jazz-Age Frescoes Glow Again,” New York Times, Apr. 11, 2013, accessed June 5, 2014, http://cityroom .blogs.nytimes.com/2013/04/11/damaged-by-hurricane -sandy-verizons-jazz-age-frescoes-glow-again/?_php=true &_type=blogs&_r=0. 91. “WLS Radio Station,” Sears Archives, accessed Feb. 3, 2011, http://www.searsarchives.com/history/questions /wls.htm. The call letters “WLS” stood for “World’s Largest Store.” 92. Charles Schwartz, Cole Porter: A Biography (New York: Da Capo Press, 1977), 91; Cecil Smith and Glenn Litton, Musical Comedy in America (New York: Theatre Arts Books, 1981), 130–32. The Follies was a popular revue; initially based in Greenwich Village before relocating to Broadway, it ran from 1919 to 1928. The 1924 show took place at the Schubert Theater and included among its performers Cole Porter, one of many rising stars who appeared in the Follies early in their careers, among them Martha Graham. Porter composed the score for the 1924 show. 93. Sheldon Cheney, A Primer of Modern Art (New York: Boni and Liveright, 1924), 239. See also Edward Alden Jewell, “Arthur Dove’s New Work,” New York Times, Dec. 18, 1927, 12, in which Jewell quotes a similar description on Dove’s part. 94. Susan Douglas, Listening In: Radio and the American Imagination (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 2004), 36; Alexander Nemerov, “Ground Swell: Edward Hopper in 1939,” American Art 22/3 (Fall 2008): 50–71. 95. “Some Notes by Arthur G. Dove,” in Dove Exhibition: List of Paintings and Some Notes by Arthur Dove (New York: The Intimate Gallery, Apr. 9–28, 1929), n.p.
96. Undated typewritten composition, Dove Papers, 3:2:10. 97. McShea, “A Painter Writes a Landscape,” 27. 98. “List of Paintings,” in Dove Exhibition, n.p.; Morgan, Arthur Dove, 151–52; Marc Simpson, “Arthur Dove’s Sea Gull Motive,” Triptych (Nov./Dec. 1990): 18–20. Simpson identified the correct (vertical) orientation of Sea Gull Motive when the work entered the collection of the Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco in 1990. 99. Reaching Waves is in the collection of the Metropolitan Museum of Art. 100. My definition of “instrument” draws on Jocelyn Holland and Susanne Strätling, “Introduction: Aesthetics of the Tool—Technologies, Figures, and Instruments of Literature and Art,” in “Aesthetics of the Tool,” ed. Holland and Strätling, special issue, Configurations 18/3 (Fall 2010): 203–9. For a related and important account of self-acting works of art, see Harry Cooper, “Speak, Painting: Word and Device in Early Johns,” October 127 (Winter 2009): 49–76. 101. H. H. C. Dunwoody, Weather Proverbs, Signal Service Notes, no. 9 (Washington, DC: Government Printing Office, 1883), 77; Charles Franklin Brooks, Why the Weather? (New York: Harcourt, Brace, 1924), 88–89; Charles Fitzhugh Talman, The Realm of the Air: A Book about Weather (Indianapolis, IN: Bobbs-Merrill, 1931), 135. 102. A watercolor landscape by the nineteenth-century American artist William Trost Richards, for example, entitled Beach with Sun Drawing Water (1872, Museum of Fine Arts, Boston), illustrates the phenomenon in question, albeit with far more clarity and precision. I thank Ann Lee Morgan for bringing this work to my attention. 103. For Stieglitz’s account of the meaning of the Equivalents, see “How I Came to Photograph Clouds,” Amateur Photographer and Photography 56 (1923): 255. For meteorological photography and lightning, see Jennifer Tucker, Nature Exposed: Photography as Eyewitness in Victorian Science (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2005), ch. 3. For discussion of photography, science, and evidence, see Armstrong, “Looking Forward to the 1870s: The Natural Method of Photographic Illustration,” ch. 1 in Scenes in a Library; and Ellenbogen, Reasoned and Unreasoned Images. 104. Paul Haviland, “We Are Living in the Age of the Machine,” 291, Sept.–Oct. 1915, 1. Haviland founded and edited 291 along with Marius de Zayas and Agnes Meyer. 105. The work of two scholars in particular has informed my reading of Dove here. In Reading Voices: Literature and the Phonotext (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1990), Garrett Stewart considers the aural aspects of reading a text, including the displacement or silencing of voice that occurs in the act of reading. In “The Death of a Beautiful Woman,” Interval(le)s 2.2–3.1 (Fall 2008 / Winter 2009): 571– 83, Walter Benn Michaels reads Susan Howe’s poem Pierce- Arrow (1999) through a series of questions about the nature of signs and their availability to the senses in works of art (as in, can a word be touched?), the relationship between sounds and words, the possible materiality of language, and onomatopoeia as a form that transcends ordinary language. See also the discussion of onomatopoeia and Frank Norris’s M cTeague, A Story of San Francisco (1899) in Walter Benn Michaels, The Gold Standard and the Logic of Naturalism (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1987), ch. 5.
106. Wanda M. Corn, The Great American Thing: Modern Art and National Identity, 1915–1935 (Berkeley: University of California Press, 2000), 195; Jonathan Weinberg, Ambition and Love in Modern American Art (New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 2001), 75–78. Weinberg identifies the seated figure as Dove. Although he notes Stettheimer’s inclusion of the names of Hartley, Marin, and O’Keeffe in the portrait, he does not mention the panel that spells Dove’s name, suggesting he overlooked this allusion and mistakenly believed that Dove appeared in the scene as the seated man. 107. Elizabeth McCausland, “Dove Retrospective at An American Place,” Springfield Sunday Union and Republican, Apr. 2, 1939, 6E. The Demuth painting is in the collection of the Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library at Yale University. 108. Edward Alden Jewell to Dove, Jan. 25 [ca. 1928], Dove Papers, 2:1:19; undated composition, Dove Papers, 3:2:19. Because Jewell was the first owner of Orange Grove in California, his letter to Dove most likely dates to the period shortly after Jewell received the work from Stieglitz. Cooper, “Arthur Dove Paints a Record,” 76n13; Morgan, Arthur Dove, 155–56; Donna M. Cassidy, Painting the Musical City: Jazz and Cultural Identity in American Art, 1910–1940 (Washington, DC: Smithsonian Institution Press, 1997), 91. Jewell used a color reproduction of the painting for the frontispiece to his Modern Art: Americans (New York: Knopf, 1930). 109. Diary entries for Mar. 31, Apr. 1–3, May, and June 1942, Dove Papers, 3:2:13. 110. “Ideas,” final page of 1924 diary, Dove Papers, 3:1:52. 111. Marcia Brennan, Painting Gender, Constructing Theory: The Alfred Stieglitz Circle and American Formalist Aesthetics (Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 2001), 107–17.
Chapter 2 1. Arthur Dove, “An Idea,” in Arthur G. Dove: Paintings, 1927 (New York: The Intimate Gallery, Dec. 12, 1927–Jan. 11, 1928), n.p. 2. Dove to Stieglitz, Mar. 1931, in Dear Stieglitz, Dear Dove, ed. Ann Lee Morgan (Newark: University of Delaware Press; London: Associated University Presses, 1988), 213–15. Dove mentions this essay in an earlier letter to Stieglitz: “Have been working on an ‘article’ since 5 a.m. and stretching canvas. Now 6:30 p.m. The article is on the present situation.— The canvas is on the future.” Dove to Stieglitz, Mar. 24, 1931, in ibid., 211. 3. Dove to Stieglitz, Mar. 1931, in Morgan, Dear Stieglitz, Dear Dove, 213–15. 4. Dove, untitled statement, in Arthur G. Dove: Exhibition of New Oils and Water-Colors (New York: An American Place, 1940), n.p. 5. Arthur Dove to Elizabeth McCausland, May 13, 1933, Elizabeth McCausland Papers, 1838–1965, bulk 1920–1960, Archives of American Art, Smithsonian Institution, 2:5:11. See also Dove’s diary entry for Dec. 17, 1942, Arthur and Helen Torr Dove Papers, 1905–1974, Archives of American Art, Smithsonian Institution, 3:2:13 (hereafter cited as Dove Papers). 6. See, for example, diary entries for Feb. 6, 27, June 11, 1942, and May 5, 1943, Dove Papers, 3:2:13. The entry for February 27 includes notes about time and rhythm in relation
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to painting, but they are partially illegible; Dove’s handwriting is rough and a portion of the passage appears to have been erased or accidentally rubbed out. The entry for May 5 reads, “Temp. done in ‘½’ time.” 7. For discussion of Dove and the series, see William C. Agee, “New Directions: The Late Work, 1938–1946,” in Balken, Arthur Dove: A Retrospective, 144. For the Formation paintings, see Ann Lee Morgan, Arthur Dove: Life and Work with a Catalogue Raisonné (Newark: University of Delaware Press; London: Associated University Presses, 1984), 285– 86, 297. 8. Dove, “An Idea,” n.p. Dove appears to have felt that his version of Kandinsky’s words in some way exemplified or stood for his practice, for he excerpted it in a typed statement that he sent to the critic Samuel Kootz, who had asked him to provide commentary on his work for use in his forthcoming book, Modern American Painters, discussed above. Dove’s statement, unlike his other letters to Kootz, featured very few of his own words. Other than the Kandinsky passage, he included only a basic description of his facial features, drawn from his driver’s license; the rest of the text cited other critics’ evaluations of his work. Dove to Kootz, 1930, Dove Papers, 1:1:4. 9. Diary entry for Aug. 12, 1939, Dove Papers, 3:2:10. 10. John Loughery, Alias S. S. Van Dine (New York: Scribner, 1992). 11. Willard Huntington Wright [S. S. Van Dine, pseud.], The Bishop Murder Case (1929; Middlesex, UK: Echo Library, 2006), 145. Wright was a friend of Stieglitz’s; one scene in the book features Vance visiting the Intimate Gallery to see an O’Keeffe exhibition (138). 12. See, for example, ibid., 22. Dove’s triangulation of art, crime, and a system of knowing such as mathematics calls to mind Surrealism’s turn to noir in the 1930s as described by Jonathan P. Eburne in Surrealism and the Art of Crime (New York: Cornell University Press, 2008). 13. “Some Notes by Arthur G. Dove,” in Dove Exhibition: List of Paintings and Some Notes by Arthur Dove (New York: The Intimate Gallery, Apr. 9–28, 1929), n.p. Dove gave the title Beyond Abstraction to one of the last paintings he created before his death; in a letter to his brother and his brother’s wife, he noted that Stieglitz referred to it as “Just Painting,” which happens to be the title of one of Dove’s earlier works, created in 1927. Dove to Betty and Paul Dove, n.d., Dove Papers, 2:1:50; Morgan, Arthur Dove, 155. 14. Dove to Samuel Kootz, in Kootz, Modern American Painters (New York: Brewer & Warren, 1930), 37. 15. See, for example, Balken, “Continuities and Digressions in the Work of Arthur Dove from 1907–1933,” in Balken, Arthur Dove: A Retrospective, 21; Morgan, Arthur Dove, 78–79; 16. Quoted in Sherrye Cohn, “Dove’s Writings,” in Arthur Dove: Nature as Symbol (1982; Ann Arbor, MI: UMI Research Press, 1985), 61. 17. “Some Notes by Arthur G. Dove,” n.p. 18. Anne Cohen DePietro interview with William Dove, in Arthur Dove and Helen Torr: The Huntington Years (Huntington, NY: Heckscher Museum of Art, 1989), 75; Morgan, Dear Stieglitz, Dear Dove, 210. 19. E[mory] C[obb] Andrews, Color and Its Application to Printing (Chicago: Inland Printer, 1911).
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20. DePietro interview with William Dove, 75. 21. Dove to Stieglitz, July 11, 1930, in Morgan, Dear Dove, Dear Stieglitz, 194–95. 22. Cohn, Arthur Dove: Nature as Symbol, 57–63; Andrews, Color and Its Application to Printing, ch. 2. For an extended discussion of Dove and theosophy, see Cohn, Arthur Dove: Nature as Symbol, ch. 3. For a useful account of some of the basic tenets of theosophy, see Mark S. Morrison, Modern Alchemy: Occultism and the Emergence of Atomic Theory (New York: Oxford University Press, 2008), ch. 2. 23. H. P. Blavatsky, The Key to Theosophy (London: The Theosophical Publishing Company; New York: W. Q. Judge, 1889), 58; Annie Besant, The Ideals of Theosophy (Adyar, India: The Theosophist Office, 1912), 72–73; Claude Bragdon, The Eternal Poles (New York: A. A. Knopf, 1931), 19, 65; “Theosophy School,” Theosophy 14/12 (Oct. 1926): 562–63. 24. Undated handwritten note, Dove Papers, 3:3:11. 25. Cohn, Arthur Dove: Nature as Symbol, 61–62; Annie Besant and C. W. Leadbeater, Thought-Forms (London: The Theosophical Publishing Society; New York: John Lane, 1905), 17–19. 26. Dove to Stieglitz, Oct. 3, 1942, in Morgan, Dear Stieglitz, Dear Dove, 477; Barbara Haskell, Arthur Dove (San Francisco, CA: San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, 1974), 7. Haskell discusses Dove and the aura, and she quotes him as stating the following but includes no citation: “You can describe a person in a color,” and “the most important thing is the statement of color . . . so that an artist could know exactly in color how a person felt” (7). 27. Dove to Stieglitz, July 11, 1930, in Morgan, Dear Stieglitz, Dear Dove, 195. 28. Quoted in Cohn, “Dove’s Writings,” 61. 29. Undated typewritten essay, Dove Papers, 3:3:3. 30. William Innes Homer, “Identifying Arthur Dove’s ‘The Ten Commandments,’ ” American Art Journal 12/3 (Summer 1980): 21–32; Ann Lee Morgan, “ ‘A Modest Young Man with Theories’: Arthur Dove in Chicago, 1912,” in The Old Guard and the Avant-Garde: Modernism in Chicago, 1910–1940, ed. Sue Ann Prince (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1990), 23–37. 31. Dove to Kootz, in Kootz, Modern American Painters, 37 32. Paul Rosenfeld, “Arthur Dove,” in Port of New York: Essays on Fourteen American Moderns (1924; Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 1961), 171. 33. Duncan Phillips, one of Dove’s chief supporters, patrons, and interlocutors, surely colored the perceptions of critics and scholars to come with statements such as the following, penned in 1937: “Isolated on his farm [in Geneva, NY], far from the city’s art movements and art politics, he is intimate with the sun and the soil and with the rough hewn objects of his daily use. . . . All his inspiration as an artist is drawn from his simple life and his surprising thoughts as a man. It is his stubborn plan to achieve a unity, a synthesis of his own material and spiritual resources in complete independence from the mass-minded, collectivist world. Consequently he is a lonely person and both his serious vision and his humorous caprice seem strange to those accustomed to a more urban, cosmopolitan and worldly point of view. What he wants for himself is an intimate understanding of the rural environment which is his microcosmos and the laboratory for his research as a designer. . . . Dove is a
nature poet of old American stock.” Duncan Phillips quoted in Arthur G. Dove: Exhibition of New Oils and Water-Colors, 1–2. For further discussion of the rhetoric that shaped the reception of Dove during his lifetime and for years to come, with particular attention to the discourse of the Stieglitz circle, see Marcia Brennan, Painting Gender, Constructing Theory: The Alfred Stieglitz Circle and American Formalist Aesthetics (Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 2001), ch. 4. 34. Georg Simmel, “The Sociology of Sociability,” trans. Everett C. Hughes, American Journal of Sociology 55/3 (Nov. 1949), 254, 255; originally published as “Soziologie der Geselligkeit,” in Verhandlungen des Ersten Deutschen Soziologentages vom 19–12 Oktober, 1910, im Frankfurt A.M. (Tübingen: J. C. B. Mohr, 1911), 1–16. 35. Simmel, “The Sociology of Sociability,” 261. Dove would have liked Simmel’s description of a work of art as something that revealed the secret of life: “In the apparently self-governing play of its [art’s] forms we construct and experience the meaning and the forces of its [life’s] deepest reality but without the reality itself” (261). Lisa Siraganian, Modernism’s Other Work: The Art Object’s Political Life (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2012), considers how the work of the twentieth-century avant-garde in Europe and the United States negotiated the relationship between the individual and the collective or the state by asserting the absolute freedom of the reader or viewer through asserting the absolute autonomy of texts, reconciling Lockean liberalism with the idea of a public good. The question of art and sociability has been explored more extensively in other subfields of art history, if not exhaustively. Bridget Alsdorf’s Fellow Men: Fantin-Latour and the Problem of the Group in Nineteenth-Century French Painting (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 2013) offers an exemplary model to follow. 36. For the Stieglitz group and Whitman, see Celeste Connor, Democratic Visions: Art and Theory of the Stieglitz Circle, 1924–1934 (Berkeley: University of California Press, 2001), ch. 2. For Stieglitz and politics, see Allan Antliff, “Stieglitz parmi les anarchists,” in Carrefour Alfred Stieglitz, ed. Jay Bochner and Jean-Pierre Montier (Rennes, Fr.: Presses Universitaires Rennes, 2012), 39–57. See also Kristina Wilson, “The Intimate Gallery and the Cosmos,” ch. 2 in The Modern Eye: Stieglitz, MoMA, and the Art of the Exhibition, 1925– 1934 (New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 2009), which examines Stieglitz’s spirituality in terms of his broader mission to address a nonelite public; and Lauren Kroiz, Creative Composites: Modernism, Race, and the Stieglitz Circle (Berkeley: University of California Press, 2012), which considers Stieglitz and his cohort in terms of early twentieth-century discourses of immigration, identity, and race. 37. Alfred Stieglitz, “The Origin of the Photo-Secession and How It Became 291,” Twice-A-Year 8–9 (Spring/Summer, Fall/Winter, 1942): 114–27; Paul Rosenfeld [Peter Minuit, pseud.], “291 Fifth Avenue,” Seven Arts, Nov. 1916, 61–65; Harold Rugg, “The Artist and the Great Transition,” in America and Alfred Stieglitz: A Collective Portrait, ed. Waldo Frank et al. (New York: Doubleday, Doran, 1934), 179–98. For discussions of Stieglitz circle rhetoric, see J. M. Mancini, “ ‘The Safeness of Standing Alone’: Alfred Stieglitz, Camera Work, and the Organizational Roots of the American Avant-Garde,” Canadian Review of American Studies 28/2 (1998): 37–79; J. M.
Mancini, “Camera Work: Organizing the Avant-Garde,” ch. 5 in Pre-Modernism: Art World Change and American Culture from the Civil War to the Armory Show (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 2005); Wanda M. Corn, The Great American Thing: Modern Art and National Identity, 1915–1935 (Berkeley: University of California Press, 2000); Allan Antliff, Anarchist Modernism: Art, Politics, and the First American Avant-Garde (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2001), chs. 1–2; and Brennan, Painting Gender, Constructing Theory. Antliff’s book provides a thorough and important analysis of the relationship between anarchist politics and modern art in the early decades of the twentieth century in the United States. 38. Harold Clurman, “Alfred Stieglitz and the Group Idea,” in Frank et al., America and Alfred Stieglitz, 275, 276, 277–78. 39. Mark Whalan, “The Majesty of the Moment: Sociality and Privacy in the Street Photography of Paul Strand,” American Art 25/2 (Summer 2011), 35–55. Both Marcia Brennan and Celeste Connor consider the Stieglitz group in terms of the question of sociality. See Brennan, Painting Gender, Constructing Theory, esp. ch. 3; and Connor, Democratic Visions, esp. chs. 1–2. Dove’s 1922 essay “What Does Photography Mean to Me?” appeared in MSS alongside essays by Sherwood Anderson and Waldo Frank. 40. Antliff, Anarchist Modernism, ch. 1; A. Joan Saab, For the Millions: American Art and Culture between the Wars (Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 2004); Glenn Jordan, “Re-membering the African-American Past: Langston Hughes, Aaron Douglas, and Black Art of the Harlem Renaissance,” Cultural Studies 25/6 (Nov. 2011): 848–91; Dora Apel, Images of Lynching: Black Men, White Women, and the Mob (New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press, 2004), ch. 3; Kristina Wilson, “Social Identity and the Museum of Modern Art,” ch. 3 in The Modern Eye. 41. For discussion of such technological utopianism and the relationship between telegraphy and ideology, see Armand Mattelart, “Mapping Modernity: Utopia and Communication Networks,” in Mappings, ed. Denis Cosgrove (London: Reaktion Books, 1999), 169–92; Bruce J. Hunt, “Doing Science in a Global Empire: Cable Telegraphy and Electrical Physics in Victorian Britain,” in Victorian Science in Context, ed. Bernard Lightman (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1997), 312–33; Katherine Stubbs, “Telegraphy’s Corporeal Fictions,” in New Media, 1740–1915, ed. Lisa Gitelman and Geoffrey B. Pingree (Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 2003), 91–111; and Jennifer L. Roberts, “Post-Telegraphic Pictures: Asher B. Durand and the Nonconducting Image,” Grey Room 48 (Summer 2012): 12–35. For the telephotograph, an apparatus designed in the late nineteenth century for the purpose of transmitting images over long distances, see “New Method of Transmitting Pictures by Telegraph,” San Francisco Call, July 31, 1898, 25; Charles Emerson Cook, “Pictures by Telegraph,” Pearson’s Magazine, Apr. 1900, 345–48; Thomas Thorne Baker, The Telegraphic Transmission of Photographs (New York: D. Van Nostrand, 1910); and Russell W. Burns, “Images by Wire: Picture Telegraphy (1843–c. 1900),” ch. 8 in Communications: An International History of the Formative Years (London: Institution of Engineering and Technology, 2004). I thank Miri Kim for drawing my attention to telephotography and for the period references.
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42. Maurice Aisen, “The Latest Evolution in Art and Picabia,” Camera Work, June 1913, 17, 18, 19. 43. Hutchins Hapgood, “The Trend of the Time,” Globe and Commercial Advertiser, Mar. 12, 1912, 4. Allan Antliff discusses the Hapgood article in Anarchist Modernism, 36–38. 44. Martha Candler Cheney to Dove, Jan. 8, 1938, Dove Papers, 2:1:9. Cheney went on to publish Modern Art in America (New York: Whittlesey House; London: McGraw-Hill, 1939). 45. For Wind (No. 3), see Morgan, Arthur Dove, 230. 46. Diary entry for Sept. 7, 1939, Dove Papers, 3:2:10; DePietro, “Beyond Abstraction: The Late Work of Arthur Dove,” in Arthur Dove and Helen Torr, 43. 47. Debra Bricker Balken, “Storm Clouds, 1935,” in Abstract Expressionism and Other Modern Works: The Muriel Kallis Steinberg Newman Collection in the Metropolitan Museum of Art, ed. Gary Tinterow, Lisa Mintz Messinger, and Nan Rosenthal (New York: Metropolitan Museum of Art; New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 2007), 41; diary entries for Jan. 14, 17–20, 1936, Dove Papers, 3:2:9. As Balken notes, the link between the two works was first remarked by Jessica Murphy, a research associate at the Metropolitan Museum of Art. 48. Balken, “Storm Clouds, 1935,” 41. 49. H. H. C. Dunwoody, Weather Proverbs, Signal Service Notes, no. 9 (Washington, DC: Government Printing Office, 1883), 77; Charles Franklin Brooks, Why the Weather? (New York: Harcourt, Brace, 1924), 88–89; Charles Fitzhugh Talman, The Realm of the Air: A Book about Weather (Indianapolis, IN: Bobbs-Merrill, 1931), 135. See also DePietro, “Sense of Place in the Art of Arthur Dove,” in Balken, Arthur Dove: Watercolors, 19. 50. Arthur Dove, “A Way to Look at Things,” in Alfred Stieglitz Presents Seven Americans (New York: The Anderson Galleries, Mar. 9–28, 1925), n.p.; Dove, “An Idea,” n.p.; Arthur G. Dove: Exhibition of New Oils and Water-Colors, n.p. The “geese” statement is not attributed to Dove in the pamphlet, but Dove responded enthusiastically to its inclusion, and William Dove confirmed that Stieglitz took the phrase from a letter the elder Dove had written to the critic. Dove to Stieglitz, Apr. 4, 1940, in Morgan, Dear Stieglitz, Dear Dove, 437; DePietro interview with William Dove, 79. For period discussion of the meteorological significance of flying geese, see, for example, Brooks, Why the Weather?, 198–99. 51. Wolfgang Mieder, “Proverbs,” and David M. Ludlum, “Weather Lore,” both in Encyclopedia of Climate and Weather, ed. Stephen H. Schneider (New York: Oxford University Press, 1996), 2:617–21, 837–39; Katharine Anderson, Predicting the Weather: Victorians and the Science of Meteorology (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2005), chs. 1–2. For period texts, see, for example, Dunwoody, Weather Proverbs; Brooks, Why the Weather?; Talman, The Realm of the Air; Richard F. Warren, Reading the Weather (New York: Macmillan, 1920); and W. J. Humphreys, Weather Proverbs and Paradoxes (Baltimore: Williams & Wilkins, 1934). The “mackerel” proverb is from Warren, Reading the Weather, 69. 52. Newspaper clipping, Dove Papers, 3:2:13; Arthur G. Dove: Paintings, 1942–1943 (New York: An American Place, Feb. 11–Mar. 17, 1943), n.p. I have not been able to determine the exact source of the clipping, but it is likely that it appeared in a paper printed in 1941 or 1942. Underneath
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the list of weather signs runs a notice for US defense bonds. The bond program was initiated in the fall of 1940 and defense bonds that sold for $18.75, as described in the ad, and which matured to $25 within ten years, were issued by spring 1941. The name of the bonds was changed from “defense bond” to “war bond” in late 1941, but the notice in question, which employed the “defense bond” moniker, continued to appear in papers in early 1942. James J. Kimble, Mobilizing the Home Front: War Bonds and Domestic Propaganda (Dallas: Texas A&M University Press, 2006), ch. 1; “Local News,” New York Evening Post, Jan. 19, 1942, 3. 53. Warren, Reading the Weather, 25, 154–55; Dove to Stieglitz, Jan. 31, 1944, in Morgan, Dear Stieglitz, Dear Dove, 488. 54. For two useful if very different comparisons to Dove’s weather watching and painting, see Pierre Bonnard’s diary notations and sketches of the weather, discussed in Jean Clair, “ ‘The Adventures of the Optic Nerve,’ ” and Antoine Terrasse, “Bonnard’s Notes,” both in Bonnard: The Late Paintings (Washington, DC: The Phillips Collection; Dallas, TX: Dallas Museum of Art, 1984), 29–50, 51–70; and the series of preparatory studies by Charles Burchfield for his large-scale watercolor December Storm (1941–1960) in which he sketched weather events and then annotated the images with verbal description. Both Burchfield’s finished painting and the studies are in the collection of the Burchfield Penney Art Center at SUNY Buffalo State. 55. Dove to Torr, August 1936, Dove Papers, 2:1:32; Dove to Stieglitz, Sept. 3, 1936, in Morgan, Dear Stieglitz, Dear Dove, 359. 56. Dove to Stieglitz, Oct. 24, 1923, and Dove to Stieglitz and O’Keeffe, Aug. 15, 1924, both in in Morgan, Dear Stieglitz, Dear Dove, 97, 106. 57. Diary entries for Sept. 28 and 29, 1936, Dove Papers, 3:2:9. 58. Dove to Torr, Oct. 5, 1936 (postmarked), Dove Papers, 2:1:37. 59. Alan Gurney, Compass: A Story of Exploration and Innovation (New York: Norton, 2004), ch. 3; A. R. T. Jonkers, Earth’s Magnetism in the Age of Sail (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2003), ch. 6. I thank Jeremy Jernegan for suggesting the connection between Dove’s diagrams and the compass rose. 60. Dove, ship’s log, May 31–June 3, 1924, Dove Papers, 3:1:51. 61. Dove, ship’s log, May 30, 1924, Dove Papers, 3:1:51. 62. Dove, barometer diagram, ledger page, n.d., Dove Papers, 5:3:37. 63. Dove, list of abbreviations, Beaufort Wind Force Scale, ledger page, n.d., Dove Papers, 5:3:37; W. E. Knowles Middleton, The History of the Barometer (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1964), 398–425. 64. Talman, The Realm of the Air, 144; Peter K. Taylor, “Marine Weather Observations and Predictions,” in Schneider, Encyclopedia of Climate and Weather, 2:490; Bernard Mergen, Weather Matters: An American Cultural History since 1900 (Lawrence: University Press of Kansas, 2008), 149. 65. Diary entry for Jan. 18, 1942, Dove Papers, 3:2:13. 66. Hans-Georg Gadamer, “The Nature of Things and the Language of Things,” in Philosophical Hermeneutics, trans.
and ed. David E. Linge (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1976), 78. 67. Diary entries for Nov. 14 and 15, 1941, Dove Papers, 3:2:12. That “Ptly Cloudy” referred to the painting, and not to weather conditions, in the entry for the fourteenth is confirmed by Dove’s note, in his entry for the fifteenth, that he “Drew in Partly Cloudy” as well as by additional comments about the painting in subsequent entries. See, for example, diary entries for Nov. 17, 18, and 19, 1941, Dove Papers, 3:2:12. 68. Henry David Thoreau, for example, kept daily records of the condition of the sky, and artists in the nineteenth century in Europe and America, including Pierre Bonnard (see above), commonly included cloud studies in their paintings. For discussion of such precedents, see Mergen, Weather Matters, 141, 176; Barbara Novak, Nature and Culture: American Landscape Painting, 1825–1875 (New York: Oxford University Press, 2007), ch. 5; Hubert Damisch, A Theory of /Cloud/: Toward a History of Painting, trans. Janet Lloyd (Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 2002); and Vittoria Di Palma, “Blurs, Blots, and Clouds: Architecture and the Dissolution of the Surface,” AA Files 54 (Summer 2006): 34–45. See also Rudolf Dekker, “Watches, Diary Writing, and the Search for Self-Knowledge in the Seventeenth Century,” in Making Knowledge in Early Modern Europe: Practices, Objects, and Texts, 1400–1800, ed. Pamela H. Smith and Benjamin Schmidt (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2007), 127–42, for a conceptually relevant consideration of diary keeping as a way of knowing. 69. Elizabeth Hutton Turner, “Going Home: Geneva, 1933–1938,” in Debra Bricker Balken, Arthur Dove: A Retrospective (Andover, MA: Addison Gallery of American Art; Washington, DC: The Phillips Collection; Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 1997), 99; “Chronology,” in ibid., 176. 70. For a discussion of this broader context, see Stephen Kern, The Culture of Time and Space, 1880–1918 (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1983); and Peter Galison, Einstein’s Clocks, Poincaré’s Maps: Empires of Time (New York: Norton, 2003). 71. Anderson, Predicting the Weather, 1–2; Mark Monmonier, Air Apparent: How Meteorologists Learned to Map, Predict, and Dramatize Weather (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1999), ch. 3; James Rodger Fleming, Meteorology in America, 1800–1870 (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1990), ch. 7. 72. Warren, Reading the Weather, 17, 19, 148, 184; Edwin C. Martin, Our Own Weather: A Simple Account of Its Curious Forms, Its Wide Travels, and Its Notable Effects (New York: Harper & Brothers, 1913), 1; M. Luckiesh, The Book of the Sky: A Résumé of Personal Experience and Observation (New York: E. P. Dutton, 1922), vii, 198. See also A. Lawrence Rotch, Sounding the Ocean of Air (New York: E. and J. B. Young, 1900). 73. See, for example, Martin, Our Own Weather, 22, 97, 119; Brooks, Why the Weather?, 146; and W. J. Humphreys, Weather Rambles (Baltimore: Williams & Wilkins, 1937), 161–84. 74. Mergen, Weather Matters, 108. 75. Anderson, Predicting the Weather, chs. 3 (pp. 82, 84) and 2 (p. 287). 76. Weather Source, LLC, “Weather Warehouse,” accessed July 21, 2010, http://weather-warehouse.com
/WeatherHistory/PastWeatherData_GenevaExperimentSt _Geneva_NY_ January.html; Turner, “Going Home,” 102. 77. My summary account here relies on several sources: Anderson, Predicting the Weather, esp. chs. 3, 5, 6; Katharine Anderson, “Mapping Meteorology,” in Intimate Universality: Local and Global Themes in the History of Weather and Climate, ed. James Rodger Fleming, Vladimir Jankovic, and Deborah R. Coen (Sagamore Beach, MA: Science History Publications / USA, 2006), 69–91; Kristine C. Harper, Weather by the Numbers: The Genesis of Modern Meteorology (Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 2008), esp. chs. 1–2; Mergen, Weather Matters, esp. chs. 1–3; Monmonier, Air Apparent, esp. chs. 1–4, 9; and Fleming, Meteorology in America, esp. ch. 7. Monmonier discusses the first regularly appearing US weather map, which debuted in 1879 in the New York Daily Graphic. As Monmonier describes, a cipher was used to transmit the Weather Bureau map from Washington, DC, to New York. A grid of horizontal and vertical lines that corresponded to letters and numbers was placed over the weather map; the map’s prominent features, including its isolines, were then encoded as number-letter pairs and this data was communicated by telegraph to the offices of the Daily Graphic, where it was retranslated into map form. Monmonier, Air Apparent, 158–59. 78. Monmonier, Air Apparent, chs. 1–2; Harper, Weather by the Numbers, 15–16; Anderson, “Mapping Meteorology.” For the weather map used as illustration, see, for example, Willis L. Moore, Moore’s Meteorological Almanac and Weather Guide, 1901 (Chicago: Rand, McNally, 1900); Willis L. Moore, Descriptive Meteorology (New York: D. Appleton, 1910); Martin, Our Own Weather; and Richard Whatham, Meteorology for Aviator and Layman (New York: Frederick A. Stokes, 1930). 79. My explanation of the basic features of the weather map relies on Anderson, “Mapping Meteorology”; Anderson, Predicting the Weather; Monmonier, Air Apparent; and Warren Blier, “Charts, Maps, and Symbols,” in Schneider, Encyclopedia of Climate and Weather, 1:111–16. 80. See Fleming, Meteorology in America, 141–45; Anderson, Predicting the Weather, ch. 1. 81. Monmonier, Air Apparent, 54–56. For examples of hemispheric and world weather maps, see Moore, Descriptive Meteorology, 287–93, 303–4, 318–19, 322–23. 82. See, for example, Monmonier, Air Apparent, chs. 1–2; Mergen, Weather Matters, ch. 3; Anderson, Predicting the Weather, ch. 5. As Monmonier points out, meteorologists relied on the example of conventional cartography in fashioning the weather map, drawing on cartography’s already-established graphic vocabulary to create a synoptic image of weather (7). 83. Monmonier, Air Apparent, 64–65, 84–87, 219–28; Mergen, Weather Matters, 18–19, 22; Anderson, “Mapping Meteorology,” 75; Anderson, Predicting the Weather, 179–83, 195–98. 84. For a discussion of instrumental precision, see Anderson, Predicting the Weather, ch. 4–5. 85. Mergen, Weather Matters, 108–9. 86. For discussion of this trend, see Alan Sekula, “The Body and the Archive: The Use and Classification of Portrait Photography by the Police and Social Scientists in the Late 19th and Early 20th Centuries,” October no. 39 (Winter 1986): 3–64; Joel Snyder, “Visualization and Visibility,” in Picturing
Notes to Pages 116–120
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Science, Producing Art, ed. Caroline A. Jones and Peter Galison (New York: Routledge, 1998), 378–97; Thomas L. Hankins and Robert J. Silverman, Instruments and the Imagination (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1995); Merriley Borell, “Training the Senses, Training the Mind,” and Stanley J. Reiser, “Technology and the Use of the Senses in Twentieth-Century Medicine,” both in Medicine and the Five Senses, ed. W. F. Bynum and Roy Porter (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1993), 244–61, 262–73; Stanley J. Reiser, Medicine and the Reign of Technology (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1978); Rachael Z. DeLue, “Diagnosing Pictures: Sadakichi Hartmann and the Science of Seeing, circa 1900,” American Art 21 (Summer 2007): 42– 69; and Josh Ellenbogen, Reasoned and Unreasoned Images: Bertillon, Galton, Marey (University Park: Pennsylvania State University Press, 2012). 87. Mergen, Weather Matters, 13, 108–9. 88. Ibid., 321, 9–12, 27, 79. 89. This popularization included meteorology’s glorification as a factor in America’s success and superiority in the commercial, scientific, and military spheres. See, for example, Luckiesh, The Book of the Sky; and Martin, Our Own Weather. 90. Anderson, Predicting the Weather, esp. chs. 1 and 2. 91. Andrew Beers, Farmer’s Almanac for the Year of Our Lord 1820 (Philadelphia, PA: S. Potter, 1819). 92. Information about the basic almanac form comes from Anderson, Predicting the Weather, chs. 1 and 2; Katharine Anderson, “Almanacs and the Profits of Natural Knowledge,” in Culture and Science in the Nineteenth-Century Media, ed. Louise Henson et al. (Aldershot, UK: Ashgate, 2004), 97–111; and Molly McCarthy, “Redeeming the Almanac: Learning to Appreciate the iPhone of Early America,” Common-Place 11/1 (October 2010), accessed Nov. 15, 2010, www.common-place.org. 93. Robert Hunt Lyman, ed., The World Almanac and Book of Facts for 1924 (New York: New York World, 1924), 68–69. For an earlier example, see Moore, Moore’s Meteorological Almanac. 94. Diary entry for Nov. 14, 1941, Dove Papers, 3:2:12. Dove recorded a temperature of 44 degrees for Nov. 14, although it is not clear from the entry (or from the unremarkable temperature itself) that he meant to refer to that day as the warmest in history. 95. See also Martin, Our Own Weather, esp. ch. 15; Luckiesh, The Book of the Sky, esp. the discussion in ch. 3 about clouds and cloud wisdom and the discussion in ch. 20 about weather signs; Brooks, Why the Weather?; and Humphreys, Weather Rambles. 96. Warren, Reading the Weather, i, ii, iv. 97. Ibid., 167–68, 180. 98. Luckiesh, The Book of the Sky, 196. 99. Warren, Reading the Weather, 42–45; Martin, Our Own Weather, 25–26, 58, 111–12, 218. Katharine Anderson discusses the perceived shortcomings of both human sight and meteorology with regard to measuring and quantifying but also simply perceiving the weather in Predicting the Weather, chs. 4–5. For a related discussion of the visibility and representability of weather events, lightning in particular, see Jennifer Tucker, Nature Exposed: Photography as Eyewitness in
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Victorian Science (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2005), ch. 3. 100. Diary entries for Feb.–Mar. 1942, Dove Papers, 3:2:13. 101. “Ready Reference Diary” (1926), Dove Papers, 3:1:54. 102. Diary entry for May 25, 1924, Dove Papers, 3:1:51. 103. Dove to Stieglitz, Mar. 1931, in Morgan, Dear Stieglitz, Dear Dove, 214. 104. Dove to Arthur Jerome Eddy, in Cubists and Post- Impressionism (Chicago: McClurg, 1914), 48. 105. Warren, Reading the Weather, 147, 169. 106. Humphreys, Weather Rambles, 88. 107. Warren, Reading the Weather, 147. 108. Martin, Our Own Weather, 10. 109. Jennifer L. Roberts, “Copley’s Cargo: ‘Boy with a Squirrel’ and the Dilemma of Transit,” American Art 21/2 (Summer 2007), 20–41; Jennifer L. Roberts, Transporting Visions: The Movement of Images in Early America (Berkeley: University of California Press, 2014); Dava Sobel, Longitude: The True Story of a Lone Genius Who Solved the Greatest Scientific Problem of His Time (New York: Penguin, 1995). 110. Undated typewritten essay, Dove Papers, 3:3:2. 111. Dove to Stieglitz, Sept. 29, 1940, in Morgan, Dear Stieglitz, Dear Dove, 449. 112. Susan Douglas, Listening In: Radio and the American Imagination (Minneapolis, MN: University of Minnesota Press, 2004), 24, 37–38, 57–58; Jeffrey Sconce, Haunted Media: Electronic Presence from Telegraphy to Television (Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 2000), 65–66, 75; Dove to Torr, Oct. 14, 1936, Dove Papers, 2:1:38. 113. Susan Schulten, The Geographical Imagination in America, 1880–1950 (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2001), 92. As the scholar Denis Cosgrove has noted, the notion of the geographer as a reliable eyewitness who might accurately report and record the various regions of the globe has been replaced by alternate configurations and approaches to the work of geography. Denis Cosgrove, Geography and Vision: Seeing, Imagining and Representing the World (London: I. B. Tauris, 2008), 5–6. Schulten also traces this transformation as it manifested in secondary education in the United States (ch. 6). 114. David Livingstone, The Geographical Tradition: Episodes in the History of a Contested Enterprise (Oxford: Blackwell, 1992), chs. 4–7; Schulten, The Geographical Imagination in America, chs. 2–5; and Martin Brückner, The Geographic Revolution in Early America: Maps, Literacy, and National Identity (Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 2006), chs. 3–5. 115. Cosgrove, Geography and Vision, 1. 116. See, for example, Brennan, Painting Gender, Constructing Theory; Harry Cooper, “Arthur Dove Paints a Record,” Source Notes in the History of Art 24/2 (Winter 2005): 70–77; Helen A. Harrison, “Arthur G. Dove and the Origins of Abstract Expressionism,” American Art 12 (Spring 1998): 66–83; Robert Goldwater, “Arthur Dove: A Pioneer of Abstract Expressionism in American Art,” Perspectives USA 2 (Winter 1953): 78–88. 117. Alexander von Humboldt and Aimé Bonpland, Essay on the Geography of Plants, ed. Stephen T. Jackson, trans. Sylvie Romanowski (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2009), 1–26, 146–55; Michael Dettelbach, “Humboldtian Science,” in Cultures of Natural History, ed. N. Jardine, J. A.
Secord, and E. C. Spary (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1996), 287–304; Katherine Olesko, “Alexander von Humboldt,” in The Oxford Companion to the History of Science, ed. J. L. Heilbron (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2003), 283–84. 118. Albert E. Theberge, “Sounding Pole to Sea Beam,” Technical Papers 1989 ASPRS/ACSM Annual Convention, Surveying and Cartography 5 (1989): 334–46. 119. William C. Agee discusses Sand and Sea’s aerial perspective in “New Directions,” 147. 120. Moore, Moore’s Meteorological Almanac, 128; Luckiesh, The Book of the Sky, 196. The examples of period weather writing cited thus far make a point of emphasizing meteorology’s bird’s-eye or aircraft’s-eye point of view. 121. Agee, “New Directions,” 147; DePietro, “Beyond Abstraction,” 51. 122. Diary entries for Apr. 3 and 5, 1943, Dove Papers, 3:2:13. 123. Dove, in Arthur G. Dove: Paintings, 1942–1943, n.p. 124. “Some Notes by Arthur G. Dove,”, n.p. See also two of Dove’s undated typewritten essays, Dove Papers, 3:3:1, 3:3:4, in which Dove included the phrase “There is no such thing as an abstraction” and either drafted or reworked the extraction-not-abstraction formulation, titling his commentary “Just What You See.” 125. Diary entry for Mar. 27, 1940, Dove Papers, 3:2:11; DePietro, “Beyond Abstraction,” 46; DePietro, “Sense of Place in the Art of Arthur Dove,” 24–25; Waldo Frank, “Straight Streets,” in In the American Jungle (New York: Farrar and Rinehart, 1937), 122. DePietro reproduces one such aerial photograph in her “Sense of Place” essay (26). For the aerial perspective, see Jason Weems, “Aerial Views and Farm Security Administration Photography,” History of Photography 28/3 (Autumn 2004): 266–82; Jason Weems, Barnstorming the Prairies: Aerial Vision and Modernity in Rural America, 1920–1940 (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, forthcoming); Cosgrove, Geography and Vision, ch. 5; and Mark Dorrian and Frédéric Pousin, eds., Seeing from Above: The Aerial View in Visual Culture (London: I. B. Tauris, 2013). For further discussion of the elevated viewpoint in American art, as distinct from the aerial point of view, see Albert Boime, The Magisterial Gaze: Manifest Destiny and American Landscape Painting, circa 1830–1865 (Washington, DC: Smithsonian Institution, 1991). Dove had flown on a plane, as he reported to Stieglitz in a 1936 letter. Dove to Stieglitz, Sept. 3, 1936, in Morgan, Dear Stieglitz, Dear Dove, 359. 126. Anderson, Predicting the Weather, 13; Mergen, Weather Matters, chs. 3, 4; Roger Turner, “Teaching the Weather Cadet Generation: Aviation, Pedagogy and Aspirations to a Universal Meteorology in America, 1920–1950,” in Fleming, Jankovic, and Coen, Intimate Universality, 141–73. For period discussion of meteorology, flight, and warfare, see, for example, Alexander McAdie, Man and Weather (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1926) and Luckiesh, The Book of the Sky. 127. Martin, Our Own Weather, 25–26. 128. Luckiesh, The Book of the Sky, 18–19. See also Rotch, Sounding the Ocean of Air. Katharine Anderson, in Predicting the Weather, chs. 4–5, discusses the problem of clouds and cloud nomenclature, as does Tucker in Nature Exposed, ch. 3, and Mergen in Weather Matters, ch. 3. Vittoria Di Palma, in
“Blurs, Blots, and Clouds,” discusses the cloud, as a nonobject, as an emblem of lack of fixity and visibility in art of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries; included in her discussion are the blot drawings of Alexander Cozens as well as a fascinating series of diagrams by John Ruskin of “cloud perspective.” She also considers a more recent engagement, in contemporary architecture, with the heterogeneity and instability of cloud forms. 129. Anderson, Predicting the Weather, 222–32; Tucker, Nature Exposed, ch. 3; Whatham, Meteorology for Aviator and Layman; McAdie, Man and Weather; Luckiesh, The Book of the Sky; Martin, Our Own Weather. 130. Steven J. Zaloga, Unmanned Aerial Vehicles: Robotic Air Warfare, 1917–2007 (Oxford: Osprey Publishing, 2008). 131. Lisa Gitelman, “Souvenir Foils: On the Status of Print at the Origin of Recorded Sound,” in Gitelman and Pingree, New Media, 1740–1915, 157–73. 132. Katharine Anderson discusses the desideratum of automatic measurement in Predicting the Weather, ch. 5, and Katherine Stubbs explores a similar desideratum pertaining to telegraphy in “Telegraphy’s Corporeal Fictions,” 91–111. Fidelity, of course, was an ideal, not necessarily an actual outcome. Scholarly writing about the problematic performance of instruments and the troublesome instability of the data and knowledge they produce, along with scholarly writing about the situatedness of knowledge more generally, has informed my thinking about Dove and instruments throughout. See, for example, Thomas S. Kuhn, The Structure of Scientific Revolutions (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1962); Pierre Bourdieu, Outline of a Theory of Practice, trans. Richard Nice (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1977); Karen Knorr-Cetina, The Manufacture of Knowledge (Oxford: Pergamon Press, 1981); Clifford Geertz, Local Knowledge: Further Essays in Interpretive Anthropology (New York: Basic Books, 1983); Peter Galison, How Experiments End (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1987); Bruno Latour, Science in Action: How to Follow Scientists and Engineers through Society (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1987), esp. ch. 2, “Laboratories”; Ian Hacking, Representing and Intervening: Introductory Topics in the Philosophy of Natural Science (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1983); Joseph Rouse, Knowledge and Power: Toward a Political Philosophy of Science (Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 1983); Steven Shapin and Simon Schaffer, Leviathan and the Air-Pump: Hobbes, Boyle, and the Experimental Life (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1985); David Gooding, Trevor Pinch, and Simon Schaffer, eds., The Uses of Experiment: Studies in the Natural Sciences (New York: Cambridge University Press, 1988); Friedrich Kittler, Discourse Networks (Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 1992); Hans Ulrich Gumbrecht and K. Ludwig Pfeiffer, eds., Materialities of Communication (Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 1994); David Turnbull, “Rendering Turbulence Orderly,” Social Studies of Science 25/1 (Feb. 1995): 9–33; Hankins and Silverman, Instruments and the Imagination, esp. chs. 1, 6; Graeme J. N. Gooday, “Instrumentation and Interpretation: Managing and Representing the Working Environments of Victorian Experimental Science,” in Lightman, Victorian Science in Context, 409–37; Davis Baird, Thing Knowledge: A Philosophy of Scientific Instruments (Berkeley: University of California Press, 2004); Jocelyn Holland and Susanne Strätling, eds.,
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“Aesthetics of the Tool,” special issue, Configurations 18/3 (Fall 2010); and Matthew C. Hunter, Wicked Intelligence: Visual Art and the Science of Experiment in Restoration London (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2013). 133. Martin, Our Own Weather, 197. 134. In physics, gravity is conventionally referred to as one of four fundamental forces or interactions of nature; the other three are electromagnetism and the strong and weak nuclear forces. For further explanation, see Bruce A. Schumm, Deep Down Things: The Breathtaking Beauty of Particle Physics (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2004), ch. 2. 135. Dove to Elizabeth McCausland, May 13, 1933, Elizabeth McCausland Papers, 1838–1965, bulk 1920–1960, Archives of American Art, Smithsonian Institution, 2:5:11. 136. Dove, “Notes by Others,” n.d., quoted in Charles C. Eldredge, Reflections on Nature: Small Paintings by Arthur Dove, 1942–1943 (New York: American Federation of Arts, 1997), 10–11. 137. For a related discussion of Surrealism, automatism, and the action of instruments, see David Lomas, “ ‘Modest Recording Instruments’: Science, Surrealism, and Visuality,” Art History 27/4 (Sept. 2004): 627–50. See also the discussion of the idea of the automaton on the part of the American avant-garde in Barbara Zabel, Assembling Art: The Machine and the American Avant-Garde ( Jackson: University of Mississippi Press, 2004), chs. 1–2; Charles Palermo’s reading of automatism in the work of Joan Miró in Fixed Ecstasy: Joan Miró in the 1920s (University Park: Pennsylvania State University Press, 2008), esp. the introduction and ch. 3; and Richard Shiff’s consideration of automatism and artistic autonomy in his “Puppet and Test Pattern: Mechanicity and Materiality in Modern Pictorial Representation,” in From Energy to Information: Representation in Science and Technology, Art, and Literature, ed. Bruce Clarke and Linda Dalrymple Henderson (Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 2002), 327–50. 138. See, for example, diary entries for Oct.–Nov. 1942, Dove Papers, 3:2:13. Dove notes an event of war (“French blew up fleet”) and marks D-Day in capital letters in his entries for Nov. 27, 1942, and June 6, 1944, respectively. Dove Papers, 3:2:13. 139. Diary entry for Dec. 7, 1941, Dove Papers, 3:2:12; J. C. Bernstein to Dove, postcards and letters, 1943, Dove Papers, 2:1:14, 2:1:16; DePietro, “Beyond Abstraction,” 42, 49; Morgan, Dear Stieglitz, Dear Dove, 475–76; Morgan, Arthur Dove, 276; Sue Davidson Lowe, Stieglitz: A Memoir/Biography (Boston, MA: MFA Publications / Museum of Fine Arts, 2002), 414. Lattice and Awning (1941) is now in the collection of the Huntington Library, Art Collections, and Botanical Gardens. Dove makes frequent mention of Dr. Bernstein in letters sent to Stieglitz between 1939 and 1945, during which time he was under the doctor’s care. Morgan, Dear Stieglitz, Dear Dove, 413–14, 426–27, 430–31, 435, 443, 445–46, 449–50, 453, 455–57, 462–63, 465–66, 469, 475–78, 494. Among the Dove materials housed at the Archives of American Art is a letter Dove received from the Museum of Modern Art, dated November 10, 1942, urging Dove to “make an important contribution to the war effort” by contributing examples of his work to serve as potential models for therapeutic designs for use in treating injured US soldiers; the letter was signed by J. T. Soby, identified as the director of the Armed Services
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Program. According to a Museum of Modern Art press release, Soby was appointed by the museum as a liaison between the museum and the armed services and charged with the task of determining how the museum might “most helpfully put its facilities at the service of the men in our armed forces.” Dove Papers, 2:1:13; “The Museum of Modern Art Appoints James T. Soby Director of Its Armed Services Program,” Jan. 27, 1942, Press Release Archives, 1940–49, Research Resources, Museum of Modern Art, accessed Apr. 13, 2011, http://www.moma.org/learn/resources/press_archives /1940s/1942. 140. Diary entry for Nov. 17, 1942, Dove Papers, 3:2:13. 141. Both are in private collections. 142. Dove to Stieglitz, July 1940, in Morgan, Dear Stieglitz, Dear Dove, 446. Included in the checklist to the 1944 exhibition at An American Place was a work entitled 1944. Arthur G. Dove: Paintings, 1944 (New York: An American Place, Mar. 21–May 21, 1944), n.p. At the time of the publication of Morgan’s catalogue raisonné, the work had not been identified. Morgan, Arthur Dove, 311. 143. The January 1918 issue of National Geographic Magazine featured the constitutive connection between world war and aviation, devoting several articles to the subject, many illustrated with aerial photographs. Joseph Talasne, “America’s Part in the Allies’ Mastery of the Air”; Jacques De Sieyes, “Aces of the Air”; Pasquale Tozzi, “Italy’s Eagles of Combat and Defense”; Hiram Bingham, “Building America’s Air Army”; and Robert E. Peary, “The Future of the Airplane,” National Geographic, 33/1, Jan. 1918, 1–5, 5–9, 38–47, 48–86, 107–13. 144. Diary entry for Oct. 11, 1939, Dove Papers, 3:2:10. 145. McAdie, Man and Weather, 37, 40. 146. Michael J. Crowe, Theories of the World from Antiquity to the Copernican Revolution, 2nd rev. ed. (Mineola, NY: Dover Publications, 2001), chs. 2, 4; David Standish, Hollow Earth: The Long and Curious History of Imagining Strange Lands, Fantastical Creatures, Advanced Civilizations, and Marvelous Machines Below the Earth’s Surface (Cambridge, MA: Da Capo Books, 2007); James McBride, Symmes’ Theory of Concentric Spheres (Cincinnati, OH: Morgan, Lodge & Fisher, 1826); Edgar Allan Poe, The Narrative of Arthur Gordon Pym of Nantucket, and Related Tales, ed. J. Gerald Kennedy (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1994); Adam Seaborn [ John Cleves Symmes Jr.], Symzonia: A Voyage of Discovery (1820; Gainesville, FL: Scholars’ Facsimiles & Reprints, 1965); Jules Verne, Journey to the Centre of the Earth, trans. Frank Wynne, ed. Peter Cogman (1864; London and New York: Penguin Books, 2009). 147. Peter Lynch, “The Origins of Computer Weather Prediction and Climate Modeling,” Journal of Computational Physics 227 (2008): 3431–44; Diane Manuel, “Lewis Fry Richardson,” in Schneider, Encyclopedia of Climate and Weather, 2:643–44. 148. Lewis Fry Richardson, Weather Prediction by Numerical Process (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1922), 219. 149. Ibid., 220. 150. See, for example, Frederick Winslow Taylor, The Principles of Scientific Management (1911; New York and London: Harper & Brothers, 1913). For related discussion of streamlining in industry, science (and pseudoscience),
art, and culture, see Sharon Corwin, “Picturing Efficiency: Precisionism, Scientific Management, and the Effacement of Labor,” Representations 84 (Autumn 2003): 139–65; Christina Cogdell, Eugenic Design: Streamlining America in the 1930s (Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 2004); Jennifer Jane Marshall, Machine Art 1934 (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2012); and Andrew Hemingway, The Mysticism of Money: Precisionist Painting and Machine Age America (Pittsburgh, PA: Periscope, 2013). Richardson’s description of his Forecast-Factory calls to mind Charles Babbage’s difference engine, one of the earliest proposed machines for use in computation, first described by Babbage in 1822 as a remedy for error-prone manual calculation, and pursued by him, in plan and prototype, for several decades. Simon Schaffer, “Babbage’s Intelligence: Calculating Engines and the Factory System,” Critical Inquiry 21/1 (Autumn 1994): 203–27; Francis Spufford, “The Difference Engine and The Difference Engine,” in Cultural Babbage: Technology, Time, and Invention, ed. Francis Spufford and Jenny Uglow (London: Faber and Faber, 1996), 266–90; David Tomas, “On the Imagination’s Horizon Line: Uchronic Histories, Protocybernetic Contact, and Charles Babbage’s Calculating Engines,” in Clarke and Henderson, From Energy to Information, 217–34. The Forecast-Factory as thinking machine also shared its ideal of superintegration with the eastern European philosopher and guru George Ivanovich Gurdjieff, who lectured in New York in the winter of 1923/24 to audiences that included the author Hart Crane, the founder and editor of the Little Review Margaret Anderson, and the publisher Jane Heap, also a Little Review editor. Gurdjieff described the universe as a vast machine, its parts interlinked and working together to produce thought. Kristina Wilson, “Spiritual and Material Gods in the Machine Age,” in The Modern Eye, 160–61.
Chapter 3 1. Diary entries for May 23, 1926, July 21, 1926, Jan. 13, 1927, Aug. 2, 1926, Feb. 8, 1927, Jan. 8, 1927, Dec. 29, 1926, Dec. 24, 1927, Jan. 13, 1928, Dec. 1, 1926, Jan. 9, 1927, Jan. 11, 1927, Jan. 14, 1927, Jan. 8, 1927, Jan. 20, 1927, Jan. 29, 1927, Feb. 5, 1927, Feb. 19, 1927, Feb. 25, 1927, Mar. 2, 1927, Apr. 6, 1927, Apr. 9, 1927, Apr. 10, 1927, Apr. 11, 1927, Apr. 22, 1927, Nov. 30, 1927, Arthur and Helen Torr Dove Papers, 1905–1974, Archives of American Art, Smithsonian Institution, 3:1:54, 3:2:1–2 (hereafter cited as Dove Papers). See also Dove’s diary entry for June 27 and 28, 1943, in which he describes making pictures from Duke Ellington, Dove Papers, 3:2:13. Some material from this chapter first appeared in Rachael Z. DeLue, “Arthur Dove, Painting, and Phonography,” History and Technology 27/1 (Mar. 2011): 113–21. 2. Diary entries for Dec. 8, 1926, Jan. 4, 5, 15, 17, 27, 1927, and Feb. 1, 4, 16, 1927, Dove Papers, 3:1:54, 3:2:1. 3. Harry Cooper, “Arthur Dove Paints a Record,” Source Notes in the History of Art 24/2 (Winter 2005): 70–77. 4. Diary entries for Mar. 27, July 25, 1926, and Jan. 12, 1928, Dove Papers, 3:1:54, 3:2:1, 3:2:2. 5. Ann Lee Morgan, Arthur Dove: Life and Work with a Catalogue Raisonné (Newark: University of Delaware Press; London: Associated University Presses, 1984), 27.2, 27.3, 27.6, 27.7, 27.10, and 27.14. 6. Cooper, “Arthur Dove Paints a Record,” 70; Donna M.
Cassidy, “Arthur Dove’s Music Paintings of the Jazz Age,” American Art Journal 20/1 (1988): 13–16. In December 1925, Dove attended a performance of the Whiteman Orchestra in New York, what may have inspired him to purchase the Victor records. Diary entry for Dec. 15, 1925, Dove Papers, 3:1:53. The recordings are as follows: “I’ll Build a Stairway to Paradise” / Victor 18949; “An Orange Grove in California” / Victor 19169-A; “Rhapsody in Blue” / Victor 55225; and “The Rhythm Rag” / Victor 19773-B. 7. For discussion of Robison’s recording of the tune, see Richard Crawford, “George Gershwin’s ‘I Got Rhythm’ (1930),” in The George Gershwin Reader, ed. Robert Wyatt and John Andrew Johnson (New York: Oxford University Press, 2004), 157, 160n7; for Robison’s orchestra, see Wayne D. Shirley, “Religion in Rhythm: William Grant Still’s Orchestrations for Willard Robison’s Deep River Hour,” Black Music Research Journal 19/1 (Spring 1999): 1–41. As Cooper notes, all five recordings discussed here can be sampled at www .redhotjazz.com/pwo.html. Cooper, “Arthur Dove Paints a Record,” 77n1. 8. Improvision is called Improvisation in the Dove catalogue raisonné. Morgan, Arthur Dove, 27.7. For further discussion of Improvision and Rhythm Rag, including the issue of Improvision’s title, see Cassidy, “Arthur Dove’s Music Paintings of the Jazz Age,” 23n55. 9. Program Notes, Kennedy Center, Washington, DC, National Symphony Orchestra, Feb. 19–21, 2009, accessed Nov. 2, 2009, www.kennedy-center.org/calendar/?fuse action=composition&composition_id=2677. 10. In “Arthur Dove’s Music Paintings of the Jazz Age,” Cassidy offers a good summary of these practices. See also Donna M. Cassidy, Painting the Musical City: Jazz and Cultural Identity in American Art, 1910–1940 (Washington, DC: Smithsonian Institution Press, 1997), which includes a chapter on Dove; Barbara Zabel, Assembling Art: The Machine and the American Avant-Garde ( Jackson: University of Mississippi Press, 2004), ch. 7 (on jazz and the American avant-garde); and Jody Patterson, “ ‘It Don’t Mean a Thing . . .’: Jazz, Modernism, and Murals in New Deal New York,” in Music and Modernism, c. 1849–1950, ed. Charlotte de Mille (Newcastle upon Tyne, UK: Cambridge Scholars Publishing, 2011), 228–54. As is well known, Dove’s close friend, Georgia O’Keeffe experimented with painting from music while at Teachers College in New York during the 1914/15 term, when she dropped in on a class taught by Alon Bement and participated in an exercise that involved responding to music through charcoal drawing. Barbara Haskell, “Georgia O’Keeffe: Making the Unknown—Known,” in Georgia O’Keeffe: Abstraction, ed. Barbara Haskell (New York: Whitney Museum of American Art, 2009), 3–4. O’Keeffe created several musical-themed, abstract paintings in the following decades, including two early works in oil, Music-Pink and Blue No. 1 and Music-Pink and Blue No. 2, both 1918. One among various other local precedents with which Dove may have been familiar was the work of Pamela Colman Smith, whose exhibition of “visions evoked by music, sketched during the concert or opera” went on view at Stieglitz’s 291 in March 1909. “Exhibitions Presented by Stieglitz, 1905–1946,” in Modern Art and America: Alfred Stieglitz and His New York Galleries, ed. Sarah Greenough (Washington, DC: National Gallery of Art, 2000), 544; Melinda Boyd Parsons, “Pamela
Notes to Pages 148–149
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Colman Smith and Alfred Stieglitz: Modernism at 291,” History of Photography 20/4 (Winter 1996): 285–92. I thank Emily Burns for directing my attention to the Parsons article. 11. For studies on art and sound, see, for example, Ernst Gombrich, “Epilogue: Some Musical Analogies,” in The Sense of Order: A Study in the Psychology of Decorative Art, 2nd ed. (1979; London: Phaidon Press, 1984), 285–305; Cassidy, Painting the Musical City; Emily Thompson, The Soundscape of Modernity: Architectural Acoustics and the Culture of Listening in America, 1900–1933 (Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 2002), ch. 4; Esther da Costa Meyer and Fred Wasserman, eds., Schoenberg, Kandinsky, and the Blue Rider (New York: Jewish Museum; London: Scala, 2003); Kerry Brougher et al., Visual Music: Synaethesia in Art and Music since 1900 (London: Thames and Hudson, 2005); Peter Vergo, The Music of Painting: Music, Modernism, and the Visual Arts from the Romantics to John Cage (London: Phaidon Press, 2010); and Peter Dayan, Art as Music, Music as Poetry, Poetry as Art, from Whistler to Stravinsky and Beyond (Burlington, VT: Ashgate Publishing, 2011). My consideration of Dove and sound is part of a larger engagement on the part of historians of American art with questions of the sensory. In addition to the scholarship cited throughout this chapter, see, for example, the short essays by Leo G. Mazow, Mark M. Smith, Asma Naeem, Guy Jordan, and Wendy Bellion in a special section on American art and the sensorium in American Art 24/3 (Fall 2010): 2–25; Asma Naeem, “Splitting Sight and Sound: Thomas Dewing’s A Reading, Gilded Age Women, and the Phonograph,” American Quarterly 63/3 (Sept. 2011): 461–85; and Leo Mazow, Thomas Hart Benton and the American Sound (University Park: Pennsylvania State University Press, 2012). The following provide a useful overview of the history and historiography of sound studies across the humanistic disciplines: Rick Altman, ed., “The State of Sound Studies,” special issue, Iris 27 (Spring 1999); Michele Hilmes, “Is There a Field Called Sound Culture Studies? And Does it Matter?” American Quarterly 57/1 (Mar. 2005), 249–59; and Kara Keeling and Josh Kun, eds., “Sound Clash: Listening to American Studies,” special issue, American Quarterly 63/3 (Sept. 2011). 12. Paul Dove, “Facts pertaining to the life of Arthur G. Dove,” Dove Papers, 1:1:1. 13. Michael Chanan, Repeated Takes: A Short History of Recording and Its Effects on Music (London: Verso, 1995), 48; Mark Katz, Capturing Sound: How Technology Has Changed Music (Berkeley: University of California Press, 2004), 74; David L. Morton Jr., Sound Recording: The Life Story of a Technology (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2004), 36–37. 14. David A. Jasen, Tin Pan Alley: An Encyclopedia of the Golden Age of American Song (New York: Routledge, 2003), 421; Cassidy, “Arthur Dove’s Music Paintings of the Jazz Age,” 13; Katz, Capturing Sound, 3, 37, 75; Cooper, “Arthur Dove Paints a Record,” 70; Morton, Sound Recording, 62–63. Electrical phonograph recordings did not appear until after 1924; they were launched commercially in 1925. Chanan, Repeated Takes, 57. 15. Morton, Sound Recording, 42, 65; Paul C. Edie, “The Victor-Victrola Page: Timeline of the Victor Phonograph Company,” accessed November 3, 2009, http://www.victor -victrola.com/Timeline.htm. 16. Diary entry for Nov. 29, 1926, Dove Papers, 3:1:54. 17. Theodore E. Stebbins Jr., “The Memory and the Pres-
272
Notes to Pages 154–156
ent: Romantic American Painting in the Lane Collection,” in The Lane Collection: 20th-Century Paintings in the American Tradition, ed. Stebbins and Carol Troyen (Boston, MA: Museum of Fine Arts, 1983), 24. Stebbins cites a 1982 conversation with William Dove. 18. The number of springs used in the motor, from one to four, determined how often one had to turn the crank. Paul C. Edie, “The Victor-Victrola Page: Basics of the Acoustic Phonograph,” accessed Nov. 3, 2009, http://www .victor-victrola.com/Basics%20of%20the%20Acoustic%20 Phonograph.htm. My discussion of the phenomenology of record listening was in part inspired by Cooper’s discussion of the same. Cooper, “Arthur Dove Paints a Record,” 73–74. 19. Thompson, The Soundscape of Modernity, 1–12 (quote on p. 1), 115–52, 233–83. For a more historically proximate but equally penetrating analysis of the transformed circumstances of listening in the first half of the twentieth century, see Theodor W. Adorno, “The Radio Symphony: An Experiment in Theory (1941),” “The Curves of the Needle (1927),” and “The Form of the Phonograph Record (1934),” in Essays on Music, ed. Richard Leppert, trans. Susan Gillespie (Berkeley: University of California Press, 2002), 251–70, 271– 76, 277–82. 20. Douglas Kahn, “Ether Ore: Mining Vibrations in American Modernist Music,” in Hearing Cultures: Essays on Sound, Listening, and Modernity, ed. Veit Erlmann (Oxford: Berg, 2004), 114; Veit Erlmann, “But What of the Ethnographic Ear? Anthropology, Sound, and the Senses,” in Erlmann, Hearing Cultures, 9; Steven Connor, “Edison’s Teeth: Touching Hearing,” in Erlmann, Hearing Cultures, 153–72; Chanan, Repeated Takes, 6–7, 9, 20; and Katz, Capturing Sound, 5, 9–10, 17. Jonathan Sterne offers a thorough and compelling history of recorded sound, its cultural contexts, and its cultural and social impact in The Audible Past: Cultural Origins of Sound Reproduction (Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 2003). For further discussion of the subject of listening as treated by art, albeit in an earlier period, see Anne Leonard, “Picturing Listening in the Late Nineteenth Century,” Art Bulletin 89/2 ( June 2007): 266–86. 21. Arthur Dove, “An Idea,” in Arthur G. Dove: Paintings, 1927 (New York: The Intimate Gallery, Dec. 12, 1927–Jan. 11, 1928), n.p. 22. For nineteenth-century phonography (of the shorthand variety), see, for example, Sir Isaac Pitman, A Manual of Phonography, or, Writing by Sound (London: S. Bagster and Sons, 1845); S. P. Andrews and A. F. Boyle, Compendium of Phonography (New York: Andrews & Boyle, 1848); and Andrew J. Graham, Handbook of Standard or American Phonography, rev. ed. (1858; New York: Andrew J. Graham, 1894). 23. Anne Cohen DePietro interview with William Dove, in Arthur Dove and Helen Torr: The Huntington Years (Huntington, NY: Heckscher Museum of Art, 1989), 78. 24. Oliver Read and Walter L. Welch, From Tin Foil to Stereo: Evolution of the Phonograph, 2nd ed. (Indianapolis, IN: Howard W. Sams, 1976), 3–6, 10; Chanan, Repeated Takes, 1–3, 23, 25, 40–41; Morton, Sound Recording, 2–5. The phonautograph, invented in the mid-1850s, created a visual record of sound waves for purposes of analysis by way of a stylus, which, in response to air vibrations pressing on a diaphragm, traced a line in a rotating cylinder coated with
lampblack, or soot. Morton, Sound Recording, 2; Read and Welch, From Tin Foil to Stereo, 5–6. 25. Edie, “The Victor-Victrola Page: Basics of the Acoustic Phonograph.” 26. Dove, “An Idea,” n.p. 27. Chanan, Repeated Takes, 137–38; Katz, Capturing Sound, 2, 18–19. The distinction, as Chanan points out, between “documentary” and “mimesis” is important; enhancements in recording and playback technologies in the late 1930s and into the 1940s allowed for the production of the illusion of real sound, such that recordings did not have to depend solely on a single, discrete live performance as their source. 28. Katz, Capturing Sound, 3. See also Thompson’s discussion of the technological mediation of sound in “Introduction: Sound, Modernity, and History,” The Soundscape of Modernity, 1–12. 29. Katz, Capturing Sound, 25–26, 30. 30. Ibid., 26, 31–35, 81; Morton, Sound Recording, 40; Chanan, Repeated Takes, 10. 31. Cassidy, Painting the Musical City, 80, 70. See also Lauren Kroiz, Creative Composites: Modernism, Race, and the Stieglitz Circle (Berkeley: University of California Press, 2012). The music paintings, Cassidy writes, were “self-consciously nationalist,” and his “use of this music . . . must be understood in the context of his goal—and the Stieglitz circle’s concern—to identify his art as American.” Cassidy, Painting the Musical City, 81. See also Cassidy, “Arthur Dove’s Music Paintings of the Jazz Age”; and Judith Zilczer, “Synaesthesia and Popular Culture: Arthur Dove, George Gershwin, and the ‘Rhapsody in Blue,’ ” Art Journal 44/4 (Winter 1984): 361–66. 32. Cooper, “Arthur Dove Paints a Record,” 71–72, 73– 74, 75. 33. Cassidy, Painting the Musical City, 86; Zilczer, “Synaesthesia and Popular Culture,” 361. See also Morgan, Arthur Dove, 69–70n36. 34. For period responses to the phonograph, including worry over the harm done to music and to the listening ear by the mechanical reproduction of sound, see Timothy D. Taylor, Mark Katz, and Tony Grajeda, ed., Music, Sound, and Technology in America: A Documentary History of Early Phonograph, Cinema, and Radio (Durham: Duke University Press, 2012), 113–33. 35. Dove, “An Idea,” n.p.; Helen Torr letter, Dec. 8, 1929, Dove Papers, 2:1:19. 36. Dove, “An Idea,” n.p. 37. Cassidy, Painting the Musical City, 89–90, discusses Kandinsky’s text in this regard. 38. “Some Notes by Arthur Dove,” Dove Exhibition: List of Paintings and Some Notes by Arthur Dove (New York: The Intimate Gallery, Apr. 9–28, 1929), n.p. (emphasis added). 39. Dove to Stieglitz, August 1925, in Ann Lee Morgan, ed., Dear Stieglitz, Dear Dove (Newark: University of Delaware Press; London: Associated University Presses, 1988), 117. 40. Adorno, “The Form of the Phonograph Record,” 277, 278. 41. Sherrye Cohn, Arthur Dove: Nature as Symbol (1982; Ann Arbor, MI: UMI Research Press, 1985), 63–66; Lynn Gamwell, Exploring the Invisible: Art, Science, and the Spiritual (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 2002), 68, 152–55,
164–68, 195–205, 215–18. See also Sherrye Cohn, “Arthur Dove and Theosophy: Visions of a Transcendental Reality,” Arts Magazine, Sept. 1983, 86–91. 42. Mark F. Davis, “Records and Phonograph Cartridges,” in Springer Handbook of Acoustics, ed. Thomas D. Rossing (New York: Springer Science and Business Media, 2007), 761–63. 43. Dove, “An Idea,” n.p. 44. Arthur Dove, undated typewritten essay, Dove Papers, 3:3:2. 45. See Judith Zilczer, “Music for the Eyes: Abstract Painting and Light Art,” in Brougher et al., Visual Music, 24–87. Although it is not clear how attuned Dove was to the work in sound and music of his contemporaries, he easily fits within a larger, transatlantic context of musical experimentation in the period, one that would include Futurist poetry, music, and performance, George Antheil’s Ballet Mécanique, and the work of Pierre Schaeffer, who theorized musique concrète in the late 1940s. Thompson, The Soundscape of Modernity, 133–44; Pierre Schaeffer, “Acousmatics,” in Audio Culture: Readings in Modern Music, ed. Christoph Cox and Daniel Warner (New York: Continuum, 2004), 76–81. 46. Huntington Harbor I is in the Phillips Collection, Washington, DC, and Huntington Harbor II is in the Carnegie Museum of Art, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. 47. Edmund Wilson, “Opéra Comique,” New Republic, Jan. 20, 1926, 241; Edward Alden Jewell, “In the Realm of Art: Variety in the Local Panorama; On the Abstract Trail,” New York Times, Feb. 17, 1935, 9; Kenneth Peacock, “Instruments to Perform Color-Music: Two Centuries of Technological Experimentation,” Leonardo 21/4 (1988): 405–6. 48. Chanan, Repeated Takes, 16–20; Katz, Capturing Sound, 14–21. 49. Connor, “Edison’s Teeth,” 159. 50. Diary entry for Dec. 1, 1926, Dove Papers, 3:1:54. 51. Morgan, Dear Stieglitz, Dear Dove, 128–29. 52. Cooper, “Arthur Dove Paints a Record,” 71. See also Cassidy, Painting the Musical City, 86, where she likens Dove’s sense of illustration to Stieglitz’s idea of the equivalent. Cassidy describes Dove’s music paintings accordingly, as expressive of Dove’s emotional response to the musical pieces. 53. Morgan, Dear Stieglitz, Dear Dove, 326, 298. 54. Dove to Samuel Kootz (draft), Dove Papers, 2:1:22. 55. See Barbara D. Gallati, “Arthur G. Dove as Illustrator,” Archives of American Art Journal 21/2 (1981): 13–22; and diary entries for Aug. 26, 27, Oct. 11, and Dec. 3, 1926, Dove Papers, 3:1:54. 56. Quoted in Prosper Buranelli, “Bricks vs. Art—A Family Drama,” New York World Magazine, May 30, 1926, 12. 57. My sense of Dove looking up to see sound-as-thing I owe to Leo G. Mazow. 58. Music is in a private collection. 59. Given its title, it is possible that Dove’s Another Arrangement (1944) also in some way evokes music or musical composition. Ann Lee Morgan does not include Primitive Jazz in her catalogue raisonné, but Donna Cassidy cites Torr’s mention of it in the diaries. Cassidy, “Arthur Dove’s Music Paintings of the Jazz Age,” 21n13. 60. William Innes Homer, “Identifying Arthur Dove’s ‘The Ten Commandments,’ ” American Art Journal 12/3 (Summer 1980): 21–32; Ann Lee Morgan, “ ‘A Modest Young Man
Notes to Pages 157–168
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with Theories’: Arthur Dove in Chicago, 1912,” in The Old Guard and the Avant-Garde: Modernism in Chicago, 1910–1940, ed. Sue Ann Prince (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1990), 23–37. Nature Symbolized No. 1 (Roofs) is in a private collection. 61. As Cassidy has noted, Dove painted a picture called Factory Noise that was exhibited in 1925 at the Anderson Galleries but is now unlocated; she also discusses the period’s predilection for industrial America, the machine aesthetic, and machine noise. Cassidy, “Arthur Dove’s Music Paintings of the Jazz Age,” 11. 62. Zilczer, “Music for the Eyes,” 62; Cassidy “Arthur Dove’s Music Paintings of the Jazz Age,” 11, 22n27. Zilczer cites a letter written by Dove to Stieglitz, dated October 24, 1923, in which he mentions said dinner: “Had Chinese dinner with the Strands,” he wrote, with no further elaboration. For the letter, see Morgan, Dear Stieglitz, Dear Dove, 98. Cassidy refers to a poem published in Broom in 1921 as an example of early twentieth-century interest in Eastern art and culture, and it is worth citing two stanzas of the poem, for they offer a startling verbal analog to Dove’s painting: “Sound the flat gold of Chinese scales / let sound the red gold / of old gongs / and the light gold of oboes. Spread metal-blue upon the stair / pale rose and darker rose / and stream cruel lights / upon them.” Henry Bellamann, “Decorations for an Imaginary Ballet,” Broom, Dec. 1921, 117. In his 1914 book, Cubists and Post-Impressionism, Arthur Jerome Eddy compared Kandinsky to Chinese music and drew parallels between the experience of the two. Eddy, Cubists and Post-Impressionism (Chicago: McClurg, 1914), 128–30. 63. Morgan, Dear Stieglitz, Dear Dove, 88; Greenough, Modern Art and America, 387–88, 423–26, 454–55; Kristina Wilson, “The Intimate Gallery and the Equivalents: Spirituality in the 1920s Work of Stieglitz,” Art Bulletin 85/4 (Dec. 2003): 746–68. Stieglitz exhibited a similar series in March 1924, called “Songs of the Sky.” Greenough, Modern Art and America, 548. Greenough discusses the relationship between Dove’s production and Stieglitz’s photographs (ibid., 423– 28, 436). Stieglitz began photographing the sky and clouds in 1922. 64. Dove to Stieglitz, July 7, 1942, Stieglitz to Dove and Torr, July 8, 1942, and July 17, 1942, in Morgan, Dear Stieglitz, Dear Dove, 471–72; Dove to Stieglitz, June 7, 1942, in ibid., 470; and Dove to Stieglitz, probably July 23, 1942, and August 9, 1942, in ibid., 472–73. In 1924, Torr reported seeing the “cloud photographs” at Stieglitz’s gallery. “No one else could have done them,” she wrote. Diary entry for Dec. 5, 1924, Dove Papers, 3:1:52. 65. Rosalind Krauss, “Stieglitz/Equivalents,” October 11 (Winter 1979): 129–40. See Rosalind Krauss, “The Photographic Conditions of Surrealism,” in The Originality of the Avant-Garde and Other Modernist Myths (Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 1985), 87–118, for further discussion of the device of cropping in photography. 66. Dove to Torr, Aug. 23, 1936 (postmarked), Dove Papers, 2:1:32. 67. My thinking about letter writing as a circulation of material entities has been shaped by the work of Jennifer L. Roberts, as exemplified by Transporting Visions: The Movement of Images in Early America (Berkeley: University of California Press, 2014).
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Notes to Pages 170–175
68. The recordings are as follows: Pollack / Variety 504 Vocalion 3769; Blue Rhythm Band / Columbia 3157-D; Crosby / Decca 912. Both Ann Lee Morgan and Donna Cassidy have noted the link between Dove’s work and popular radio tunes. Morgan, Arthur Dove, 233; Cassidy, Painting the Musical City, 92. Jennifer Stettler Parsons has discussed Dove’s radio pictures at length in an essay published online, which I read after the manuscript for this book was complete, including chapter 3, which was drafted in full in 2008 and 2009. Although Parsons’s argument differs significantly from mine, her essay contributes to a more complete understanding of the paintings Dove made from the radio. Jennifer Stettler Parsons, “Absence and Presence: Arthur Dove’s Paintings ‘From the Radio,’ ” Archives of American Art, retrieved Aug. 1, 2013, http://www.aaa.si.edu/essay/ jennifer-parsons. 69. Diary entries for Dec. 2, 1936, Feb. 14, 15, 16, 17, 1937, Dove Papers, 3:2:9. It is difficult to pinpoint exactly when Dove began Me and the Moon and which one of the two radio pictures was referred to as “From the Radio,” but it is clear that both paintings were based on the two radio songs cited. 70. Arthur G. Dove: New Oils and Water Colors (New York: An American Place, Mar. 23–Apr. 16, 1937). See also Cassidy’s discussion of the genesis and sources of these paintings in Painting the Musical City (92), including her note that on the reverse of The Moon Was Laughing at Me is written the title of the work as well as the word “radio.” 71. The letters that make mention of the radio and radio listening are as follows: Dove to Torr, Aug. 30, 31 (postmarked), Sept. 26, 28, 29, Oct. 4, 14, 15, 17, 19, 20, and 24, 1936, Dove Papers, 3:1:33–40. The diaries contain mention of Dove and Torr listening to the radio together at home. See, for example, the diary entry for July 25, 1926, Dove Papers, 3:1:54. 72. For Dove’s time in Geneva, including information about the Dove Block, see Elizabeth Hutton Turner, “Going Home: Geneva, 1933–1938,” in Debra Bricker Balken, Arthur Dove: A Retrospective (Andover, MA: Addison Gallery of American Art; Washington, DC: The Phillips Collection; Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 1997), 95–113. 73. Dove to Torr, Aug. 30 and 31 (postmarked), 1936, Dove Papers, 2:1:33, 2:1:34. In a 1941 diary entry, Dove underlined the phrase “New Radio,” indicating his excitement about the purchase. Diary entry for Sept. 10, 1941, Dove Papers, 3:2:12. 74. Susan Douglas, Listening In: Radio and the American Imagination (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 2004), 7, 23–24, 84; Morton, Sound Recording, 82. 75. Leon Alfred Duthernoy, “Singing to Tens of Thousands; Impressions of an Artist during His First Radio Concert,” (radio broadcast, Nov. 1922), in Taylor, Katz, and Grajeda, Music, Sound, and Technology in America, 268. 76. Rudolf Arnheim, Radio: An Art of Sound, trans. Margaret Ludwig and Herbert Read (Salem, NH: Ayer Co., 1986), 15. For further discussion of Arnheim’s essay and other contemporaneous theorizations of radio, see Susan Key, “John Cage’s Imaginary Landscape No. 1: Through the Looking Glass,” in John Cage: Music, Philosophy, and Intention, 1933–1950, ed. David W. Patterson (London: Routledge, 2002), 105–33; Serge Cardinal, “Radiophonic Performance and Abstract Machines: Recasting Arnheim’s Art of Sound,” Liminalities
3/3 (Nov. 2007): 1–23; Shawn Vancour, “Arnheim on Sound: Materialtheorie and Beyond,” in Arnheim for Film and Media Studies, ed. Scott Higgins (New York: Routledge, 2010), 177– 94; and Margaret Fisher, Ezra Pound’s Radio Operas: The BBC Experiments, 1931–1933 (Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 2002), ch. 2. 77. Jeffrey Sconce, Haunted Media: Electronic Presence from Telegraphy to Television (Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 2000), 7–8. 78. Ibid., 10–11, chs. 2, 3. 79. Dove to Torr, Oct. 4, 1936, Dove Papers, 2:1:37. 80. Dove to Torr, Sept. 19, Oct. 1, 1936, Dove Papers, 2:1: 36–37. 81. Dove to Torr, Aug. 31, 1936 (postmarked), Dove Papers, 2:1:34. 82. Dove to Torr, Sept. 1936 (no exact date) and Sept. 26, 1936, Dove Papers, 2:1:34, 2:1:36. 83. Douglas, Listening In, 41. 84. See Cohn, Arthur Dove: Nature as Symbol, ch. 3; and Cohn, “Arthur Dove and Theosophy,” 86–91; Cohn interview with William Dove, Oct. 14, 1980, in Arthur Dove: Nature as Symbol, 45; Dove to Torr, Oct. 23, 1936, Dove Papers, 2:1:39. 85. Cohn, Arthur Dove: Nature as Symbol, 45. 86. Paul Strand, “Alfred Stieglitz and a Machine” (New York, printed privately, Feb. 1921), 1, Beinecke Digital Collections, Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library, Yale University Library. Strand enclosed the essay in an undated letter to Dove, Dove Papers, 2:1:3. The essay was subsequently printed in MSS, Mar. 1922, 6–7. 87. Quoted in Cohn, Arthur Dove: Nature as Symbol, 56; Dove to Stieglitz, Sept. 18/25, 1933, in Morgan, Dear Stieglitz, Dear Dove, 284. 88. Dove to Elizabeth McCausland (dated in pencil on the first of three typed pages “May 13, 1933”), Elizabeth McCausland Papers, 1838–1965, bulk 1920–1960, Archives of American Art, Smithsonian Institution, 2:5:11. 89. Quoted in Cohn, Arthur Dove: Nature as Symbol, 56. 90. Diary entry for Sept. 27, 1936, Dove Papers, 3:2:9. 91. Quoted in Cassidy, Painting the Musical City, 92. 92. Cassidy, Painting the Musical City, 92. 93. Justine S. Wimsatt, “Wax Emulsion, Tempera or Oil? Arthur Dove’s Materials, Techniques, and Surface Effects,” in AIC Preprints: Papers Presented at the Tenth Annual Meeting of the American Institute for Conservation of Historic and Artistic Works, Milwaukee, Wisconsin, 26–30 May 1982 (Washington, DC: AIC, 1982), 185; Richard Newman and Irene Konefal, “Arthur Dove’s Paint Media: An Analytical Study,” in AIC Painting Specialty Group Postprints, vol. 5 (Washington, DC: American Institute for Conversation of Historic and Artistic Works, 1993), 81–85; Turner, “Going Home,” 105; Max Doerner, The Materials of the Artist and Their Use in Painting, with Notes on the Techniques of the Old Masters, trans. Eugen Neuhaus (New York: Harcourt, Brace, 1934); Gail Stavitsky, “Waxing Poetic: Encaustic Art in America during the Twentieth Century,” Waxing Poetic: Encaustic Art in America (Montclair, NJ: Montclair Art Museum, 1999), 17–21 (on Dove, 18–19). 94. Turner, “Going Home,” 105; Wimsatt, “Wax Emulsion, Tempera or Oil?”; diary entries for Aug. 26, 1935, Jan. 2, 1936, Feb. 17, 18, 19, 20, Mar. 7, 8, 9, 17, 18, 26, 28, May 22, 23, July 31, Sept. 4, 5, 1942, Dove Papers, 3:2:8, 3:2:9, 3:2:13. 95. Sconce, Haunted Media, 63, 76; Bruce J. Hunt, “Lines
of Force, Swirls of Ether,” Ian F. Bell, “The Real and the Ethereal: Modernist Energies in Eliot and Pound,” and Linda Dalrymple Henderson, “Vibratory Modernism: Boccioni, Kupka, and the Ether of Space,” all three in From Energy to Information: Representation in Science and Technology, Art, and Literature, ed. Bruce Clarke and Linda Dalrymple Henderson (Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 2002), 99–113, 114– 25, 126–49. 96. Me and the Moon (sheet music) (New York: Santly Bros.-Joy, 1936); Mills Blue Rhythm Band: 1933–1936 (Amersfoort, Neth.: Retrieval / Challenge Records International, 2007), track 21. 97. Douglas, Listening In, 24, 37–38, 57–58; Sconce, Haunted Media, 65–66, 75. 98. Dove to Torr, Oct. 14, 1936, Dove Papers, 2:1:38. 99. Keith Harwood, The Float (Shropshire, UK: Medlar Press, 2003), 232. 100. Sconce, in Haunted Media, discusses the role of nautical metaphors in the discourse of wireless technology (63–65), as does Douglas in Listening In (36). See also Alexander Nemerov, “Ground Swell: Edward Hopper in 1939,” American Art 22/3 (Fall 2008): 50–71, for a discussion of radio and the sea (in light of Edward Hopper), including what Nemerov calls “oceanic metaphors of radio” (62). In the Hopper article, Nemerov builds on his argument concerning the relationship between sound technology and artistic practice in “The Boy in Bed: The Scene of Reading in N. C. Wyeth’s Wreck of the ‘Covenant’,” Art Bulletin 88 (Mar. 2006): 7–27. 101. Dove to Stieglitz, Aug. 15, 1924, in Morgan, Dear Stieglitz, Dear Dove, 106. 102. New York Times, Mar. 2, 1922, 20, quoted in Douglas, Listening In, 52. 103. Sconce, Haunted Media, 68–69. 104. Douglas, Listening In, 12, ch. 5. 105. Cassidy, “Arthur Dove’s Music Paintings of the Jazz Age,” 21n15; Cassidy, Painting the Musical City, 92–95. See also “Artists & Models (1937)”, IMDb, accessed Jan. 8, 2010, http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0028587/. Torr wrote in the diary: “In afternoon both to see movie—Artists & Models— with Louis Armstrong the drawing power.” Diary entry for Oct. 24, 1937, Dove Papers, 3:2:9. 106. Diary entries for Mar. 7–13, 1938, Dove Papers, 3:2:10; Arthur G. Dove: Exhibition of Recent Paintings, 1938 (New York: An American Place, Mar. 29–May 10, 1938). One can likely presume that the painting mentioned in the diary and Swing Music (Louis Armstrong) are one and the same. The work went on view again at An American Place in 1939, along with a selection of Dove’s previous output, including Portrait of Ralph Dusenberry, an assemblage from 1924. Arthur G. Dove: Exhibition of Oils and Temperas (New York: An American Place, Apr. 10–May 17, 1939). 107. Douglas, Listening In, 85, 93–94, 96–97. 108. Cassidy, Painting the Musical City, 94; Brent Hayes Edwards, “Louis Armstrong and the Syntax of Scat,” Critical Inquiry 28/3 (Spring 2002): 618–49. 109. Cassidy, Painting the Musical City, 94; “Which Animals Resemble One Another Most? Rabbit and Duck,” Harper’s Weekly, Nov. 19, 1892, 1114; W. E. Hill, “My Wife and My Mother-in-Law: They Are Both in This Picture—Find Them,” Puck, Nov. 6, 1915, 11. 110. For further discussion of this particular form of
Notes to Pages 175–184
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optical illusion in relation to artistic representation and the apprehension of pictures, see Ernst Gombrich, Art and Illusion: A Study in the Psychology of Pictorial Representation (1960; Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 2000), 4–9. 111. For synesthesia and American art, see Judith Zilczer, “‘Color Music’: Synaesthesia and Nineteenth-Century Sources for Abstract Art,” Artibus et Historiae 8/16 (1987): 101– 26; and Sharyn Rohlfsen Udall, Sensory Crossovers: Synesthesia in American Art (Albuquerque, NM: Albuquerque Museum, 2010). For a more general discussion of synaesthesia and the arts, see Crétien van Campen, The Hidden Sense: Synesthesia in Art and Science (Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 2008). 112. Diary entry for Feb. 21, 1929, Dove Papers, 3:2:3. Because he lived in Halesite, Dove would have regularly heard the fog bell housed in the Huntington Lighthouse on Huntington Harbor, which was built in 1912 and manned by members of the United States Lighthouse Service until 1939. However, I am not overly interested in making a case for the identity of the painting’s real-life source. I doubt that there exists an exact, identifiable referent, and I do not believe it particularly matters. For information about the Huntington Lighthouse, see www.huntingtonlighthouse. org; and Robert G. Muller, Long Island’s Lighthouses: Past and Present (Cutchogue, NY: Long Island Chapter, US Lighthouse Society, 2003), ch. 5. 113. “Chronology,” in Balken, Arthur Dove: A Retrospective, 179. 114. Dove to Stieglitz, mid-June 1940 and late Mar. 1941, in Morgan, Dear Stieglitz, Dear Dove, 445, 452; Exhibition of New Arthur G. Dove Paintings (New York: An American Place, Mar. 27–May 17, 1941), n.p. 115. Charles Van Wyck Brooks, Sensory Awareness: The Rediscovery of Experiencing (New York: Viking Press, 1974), 221–22. 116. Morgan, Arthur Dove, 272, 274, 263, 264; Dove to Stieglitz, Mar. 5, 1941, in Morgan, Dear Stieglitz, Dear Dove, 452. 117. Morgan, Arthur Dove, 263. See also Dove’s War (1939), a work on paper in the collection of the Museum of Modern Art, New York. 118. Dove to Torr, Nov. 10, 1934, Dove Papers, 2:1:31. Dove’s diary entries regarding this work suggest that he sketched the outlines of the painting in 1936 and then, in 1941, finished painting it. Dove Papers, 3:2:12. 119. “Made drawing of it and two photographs with the little camera. Made 3 small paintings after lunch of same to get motif clear. . . . Went out and made other drawing again.” Dove to Torr, Nov. 10, 1934, Dove Papers, 2:1:31.
Chapter 4 1. For illuminating discussion of the practices constituting this genealogy, see Rosalind Krauss, Passages in Modern Sculpture (Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 1981); Yve-Alain Bois, “Kahnweiler’s Lesson,” in Painting as Model (Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 1990), 65–97; Alex Potts, The Sculptural Imagination: Figurative, Modernist, Minimalist (New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 2000), chs. 2 (esp. the section on Rodin and Rilke), 3, 4; and the collection of essays by Lane Relyea, Julia Kelly, Anna Dezeuze, Jonathan D. Katz, Jaimey Hamilton, Jo Applin, and Patricio del Real on assemblage and bricolage (a term whose current use in describing and
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theorizing artistic assemblage practices originated with the anthropologist Claude Lévi-Strauss in reference to non-Western constructed objects) in Art Journal 67/1 (Spring 2008). Jacqueline Lichtenstein’s Blind Spot: An Essay on the Relations between Painting and Sculpture in the Modern Age, trans. Chris Miller (Los Angeles: Getty Research Institute, 2008), surveys thinking from the seventeenth to the nineteenth centuries about the differing natures of painting and sculpture, thus serving as a useful prehistory for the blurring of boundaries between the two formats during the period under discussion. William C. Seitz’s The Art of Assemblage (New York: Museum of Modern Art, 1961) stands as the foundational articulation of assemblage as an art form and as an exhibition presented an alternative to histories of modernism culminating in abstract painting. Seitz defined assemblage operationally, in terms of the action— assembling—generative of such works (6). Although his exhibition predated the publication of Lévi-Strauss’s The Savage Mind in 1962, Seitz discusses assemblage in relation to non-Western culture and in terms of the special or magical associations of transfigured objects (83–84, 86). Julia Kelly cites a letter that Seitz sent to Lévi-Strauss in advance of his exhibition, which apparently went unanswered. Julia Kelly, “The Anthropology of Assemblage,” Art Journal 67/1 (Spring 2008): 28. 2. Undated typewritten essay, Arthur and Helen Torr Dove Papers, 1905–1974, Archives of American Art, Smith sonian Institution, 3:3:2 (hereafter cited as Dove Papers). 3. The only published study of the assemblages as a group is Dorothy Rylander Johnson’s Arthur Dove: The Years of Collage (College Park, MD: University of Maryland Art Gallery, 1967), which for the most part duplicates the material of Johnson’s master’s thesis (“Arthur Dove: The Years of Collage,” MA thesis, University of Maryland, 1967). Barbara Zabel discusses Dove’s assemblages in relation to the larger context of the American avant-garde and collage in chapter 1 of Assembling Art: The Machine and the American Avant-Garde ( Jackson: University of Mississippi Press, 2004). 4. The following assemblages appeared in the 1925 exhibition: Miss Woolworth, Alfred Stieglitz, Ralph Dusenberry, Long Island, Huntington Harbor, Ten Cent Store, Mary Goes to Italy, and Rain. The 1927 exhibition included Clouds, Huntington Harbor I and Huntington Harbor II, Hand Sewing Machine, and Rhapsody in Blue, Part I. Alfred Stieglitz Presents Seven Americans (New York: The Anderson Galleries, Mar. 9–Mar. 28, 1925), 8; Arthur G. Dove: Paintings, 1927 (New York: The Intimate Gallery, Dec. 12, 1927–Jan. 11, 1928), 3. The subtitle to the Seven Americans catalog was 159 Paintings, Photographs & Things. 5. Diary entry for Dec. 4, 1924, Dove Papers, 3:1:51. 6. Forbes Watson and Royal Cortissoz have been proposed as subjects of The Critic. Johnson, Arthur Dove, 14–15; Beth Venn, “Arthur Dove, The Critic,” in Frames of Reference: Looking at American Art, 1900–1950. Works from the Whitney Museum of American Art, ed. Beth Venn and Adam D. Weinberg (New York: Whitney Museum of American Art; Berkeley: University of California Press, 1999), 72. Grandmother is in the collection of the Museum of Modern Art, New York. 7. Johnson, Arthur Dove, 14–15, 19–20; M. Therese Southgate, “The Cover: Arthur Dove, Grandmother, 1925,” Journal of the American Medical Association 290/14 (Oct. 8, 2003): 1821.
8. Georgia O’Keeffe to Dorothy Rylander Johnson, Oct. 25, 1965, in Johnson, Arthur Dove, 13. 9. Quoted in Ann Lee Morgan, Arthur Dove: Life and Work with a Catalogue Raisonné (Newark: University of Delaware Press; London: Associated University Presses, 1984), 143. Torr continued: “Brancusi said it was one of the most beautiful things he’d seen in America.” The work to which Torr referred, dated ca. 1925, is titled Plaster and Cork in Morgan, Arthur Dove (141), Untitled in Johnson, Arthur Dove (49), and Untitled by the work’s current repository, the Amon Carter Museum of American Art in Fort Worth, Texas (1966.17), which received it as a gift from O’Keeffe. The piece consists of a flat, abstract arrangement of plaster, cork, wire mesh, blue cloth or ribbon, graphite, and crayon. The pieces of cork occupy a recess in the plaster ground, the edges of which hold the cork in place, and the surface of the cork and plaster are flush; push pins or nails secure the wire mesh to the cork. In three separate places, a series of horizontal lines adorns the plaster. These lines look like they were made from pressing the cloth or ribbon into the plaster when wet but probably result from Dove’s exact copying of the horizontal pattern of the fabric’s grain onto the plaster surface. The work was exhibited at the Intimate Gallery in 1926, which is where Brancusi encountered it; when exhibited at An American Place in 1940, it was listed under the title Composition on Plaster. Morgan, Arthur Dove, 141, 143. 10. Here I refer only to the most basic subject of Goin’ Fishin’. Nancy J. Scott, “Submerged: Arthur Dove’s Goin’ Fishin’ and Its Hidden History,” Word and Image 23/2 (Apr.– June 2007): 147–48, argues that there is far more to Goin’ Fishin’ than meets the eye. 11. Frederick S. Wight, Arthur Dove (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1958), 51. 12. Johnson, Arthur Dove, 14–15; Suzanne M. Smith, “Arthur G. Dove” (MA thesis, American University, 1944), quoted in Wight, Arthur Dove, 52. For portraiture in the period and within the ranks of the early twentieth-century American avant-garde, see Sadakichi Hartmann, “Portrait Painting and Portrait Photography,” Camera Notes 3 ( July 1899): 1–20; Marius de Zayas, “Caricature: Absolute and Relative,” Camera Work 46 (Apr. 1914): 19–21; Craig R. Bailey, “The Art of Marius de Zayas,” Arts Magazine, Sept. 1978, 136–44; Linda Dalrymple Henderson, “Francis Picabia, Radiometers, and X-Rays in 1913,” Art Bulletin 71/1 (Mar. 1989): 114–23; William Rozaitis, “The Joke at the Heart of Things: Francis Picabia’s Machine Drawings and the Little Magazine 291,” American Art 8, 3/4 (Summer–Autumn 1994): 42–59; Wanda M. Corn, The Great American Thing: Modern Art and National Identity, 1915–1935 (Berkeley: University of California Press, 2000), introduction and ch. 4; Robin Jaffee Frank, Charles Demuth Poster Portraits, 1923–1929 (New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 1994); Susan Fillin-Yeh, “Dandies, Marginality, and Modernism: Georgia O’Keeffe, Marcel Duchamp, and Other Cross-Dressers,” Oxford Art Journal 18/2 (1995): 33–44; Marcia Brennan, Painting Gender, Constructing Theory: The Alfred Stieglitz Circle and American Formalist Aesthetics (Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 2001), ch. 3; Diane Dillon and Christopher Reed, “Looking and Difference in the Abstract Portraits of Charles Demuth and Duncan Grant,” Yale Journal of Criticism 11/1 (1998): 39–51; Barbara Zabel, Assembling Art, chs. 5, 6; Susan Chan Egan, “Paint-
ing Signs: Demuth’s Portrait of Charles Duncan,” American Art 22/3 (Fall 2008): 90–101; and Jonathan Frederick Walz, “Performing the New Face of Modernism: Anti-mimetic Portraiture and the American Avant-Garde, 1912–1927” (PhD diss., University of Maryland, 2010). 13. Diary entries for Aug. 9, 24, Oct. 26, 1924, Dove Papers, 3:1:51; Debra Bricker Balken, Dove/O’Keeffe: Circles of Influence (Williamstown, MA: Sterling and Francine Clark Art Institute, 2009), 68; Hunter Drohojowska-Philp, Full Bloom: The Art and Life of Georgia O’Keeffe (New York: Norton, 2004), 254, 279. 14. Dove to Stieglitz, June 1925, in Dear Stieglitz, Dear Dove, ed. Ann Lee Morgan (Newark: University of Delaware Press; London: Associated University Presses, 1988), 114. 15. Diary entries for Oct. 7, 20, Nov. 8, 22, Dec. 7, 1924, Oct. 7, 1926, June 24, 1929, Aug. 18, 1930, Mar. 27, 1931, Feb. 5, 1932, Jan. 26, 1935, Dove Papers, 3:1:51, 3:1:54, 3:2:3, 3:2:5, 3:2:6, 3:2:8. 16. Dove Exhibition: List of Paintings and Some Notes by Arthur G. Dove (New York: The Intimate Gallery, Apr. 9–28, 1929), n.p. Diary entries for May 28, 30, and 31, 1928, Dove Papers, 3:2:2, suggest that Dove found the wood on the beach, sawed it on site, and took it to the Mona. 17. Diary entries for Aug. 24, Oct. 2, 7, 9, 17, 19, Nov. 22, 28, 30, Dec. 1, 2, 3, 19, 22, 26, 27, 1924, Dove Papers, 3:1:51. In April 1943, Dove noted making a “small stuff thing,” but it remains unclear to what this description referred. Diary entry for Apr. 3, 1943, Dove Papers, 3:2:13. 18. Dove to Stieglitz, June 1925, in Morgan, Dear Stieglitz, Dear Dove, 114. 19. Diary entry for Oct. 1, 1924, Dove Papers, 3:1:51. 20. Dove to Stieglitz and O’Keeffe, Mar. 31/Apr. 3, 1929, in Morgan, Dear Stieglitz, Dear Dove, 169. 21. Charles Brock, “Charles Demuth: A Sympathetic Order,” in Modern Art and America: Alfred Stieglitz and His New York Galleries, ed. Sarah Greenough (Washington, DC: National Gallery of Art, 2000), 363–73; Ulla Haselstein, “Gertrude Stein’s Portraits of Picasso and Matisse,” New Literary History 34/4 (Autumn 2003): 723–43. Haselstein offers a compelling account of the intermedial character of Stein’s literary portraits, which suggests that Stein perhaps more than other artists and writers would have provided Dove with a model for his multimedia work. For a recent analysis of the object in Rauschenberg’s practice, see Joshua Shannon, The Disappearance of Objects: New York Art and the Rise of the Postmodern City (New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 2009). Numerous scholars have drawn a connection between Dove’s assemblages and New York Dada, singling out Picabia’s series of mechanomorphic or “machine” portraits, a selection of which were published in the little magazine 291 in 1915 and exhibited at Stieglitz’s 291, as a major influence. See, for example, Johnson, Arthur Dove; William Agee, “New York Dada, 1910–30,” in Avant-Garde Art, ed. Thomas B. Hess and John Ashbery (London: Collier Books, 1967), 125–53; Jan Thompson, “Picabia and His Influence on American Art, 1913–17,” Art Journal 39/1 (Autumn 1979): 14– 21; and Morgan, Arthur Dove, 18. In characterizing Picabia’s aims in a review of the 1913 Armory Show, a New York Times critic used the term “motive,” important within Dove’s practice, and attributed a quality of animation or mechanical capacity to Picabia’s art similar to the one Dove sought out,
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writing that Picabia “tries . . . to express the motive power that results in movement without asking us to recognize the moving object.” “Art at Home and Abroad,” New York Times, Feb. 23, 1913, 59. Nancy J. Scott has suggested Sherwood Anderson’s Winesburg, Ohio, with its chapter-length individual portraits of small-town denizens, as a stimulus to Dove’s portrait making. As Dove’s diaries and correspondence reflect, Anderson and Dove were friends and admired one another’s work. Scott, “Submerged,” 147–48. 22. Clement Greenberg, “The Pasted-Paper Revolution,” Clement Greenberg: The Collected Essays and Criticism, ed. John O’Brian, vol. 4, Modernism with a Vengeance, 1957–1969 (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1993), 62–63. Lisa Florman offers a thorough analysis of Greenberg’s essay and its much-revised and expanded version, “Collage” (1959), in “The Flattening of ‘Collage,’ ” October 102 (Fall 2002): 59–86. 23. Again, for this genealogy, see Seitz, The Art of Assemblage; Krauss, Passages in Modern Sculpture; Bois, “Kahn weiler’s Lesson”; Potts, The Sculptural Imagination, chs. 2–4 (esp. in ch. 2 the section on Rodin and Rilke); Lichtenstein, Blind Spot; and the collection of essays on assemblage and bricolage in Art Journal 67/1 (Spring 2008). Bois’s configuration of language in relation to construction in Picasso is especially salient with regard to my discussion of Dove’s assemblage practice and, in combination with Georges Didi-Huberman’s Confronting Images: Questioning the Ends of a Certain History of Art, trans. John Goodman (University Park: Pennsylvania State University Press, 2005), has aided my conceptualization of Dove’s investment in the operational rather than in signification (or semiosis) as such. 24. Alfred H. Barr, ed., Fantastic Art, Dada, Surrealism, 3rd ed. (New York: Museum of Modern Art, 1947), 211, 250. 25. Diary entries for Dec. 15, 1924, Dec. 1, 8, 1926, Jan. 9, 14, Feb. 4, 1927, Dove Papers, 3:1:51, 3:1:54; Morgan, Arthur Dove, 154. 26. Another of Dove’s assemblages, Huntington Harbor (1924, Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden), pays possible tribute to Picasso. Dove used rope to frame this collage of paint, fabric, metal screening, a seashell, wood, newspaper clippings, and tacks, calling to mind Picasso’s famous Still Life with Chair Caning (Spring 1912, Musée National Picasso, Paris), which Picasso edged with rope. 27. This chapter makes careful use of the extensive literature that, following Martin Heidegger, considers the definition and status of material artifacts (understood as anything that exists as itself in the world) and that explores the possible ontological and terminological distinctions that might be drawn between something referred to as an “object” and something called a “thing.” For practical purposes, however, I will use the following terms interchangeably to indicate a thing that exists literally in the world, as opposed to a representation of that thing and to designate the media Dove used to fashion his assemblages: “thing,” “object,” “artifact,” “material,” and “entity.” The materials of representation and art making—paint, photography, pastel, and so forth—are themselves things in the world, another point that I will consider in regard to Dove’s assemblage practice. 28. Murdock Pemberton, “The Art Galleries,” New Yorker, Dec. 24, 1927, 57. 29. Leo Steinberg, “Other Criteria” (1972), in Other
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Criteria: Confrontations with Twentieth-Century Art (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2007), 82–84. See also Rosalind Krauss’s discussion of horizontality in Krauss, “Horizontality,” in Yve-Alain Bois and Rosalind E. Krauss, Formless: A User’s Guide (New York: Zone Books, 1997), 93–103. As Krauss notes, Walter Benjamin had much earlier described such a distinction between “cuts through the world’s substance,” one longitudinal, like painting, the other transversal, like graphic production. Walter Benjamin, “Peinture et graphisme,” La Part de l’oeil, no. 6 (1990): 13, quoted in Krauss, “Horizontality,” 94. In her discussion of Joseph Cornell’s sandboxes, Janine Mileaf also presents a compelling means of understanding the shift from vertical to horizontal and considers the implications of such a shift for the temporality, spatiality, and viewing of Cornell’s work. Janine Mileaf, Please Touch: Dada and Surrealist Objects after the Readymade (Hanover, NH: University Press of New England, 2010), ch. 5. 30. Paul Dove, “Notes Relative to Arthur G. Dove” and “Facts Pertaining to the Life of Arthur G. Dove,” Dove Papers, 1:1:1. 31. See, for example, diary entries for May 5, 1926, Jan. 5, June 4, Nov. 6, 1927, Feb. 24, Sept. 23, 1928, Jan. 28, 1929, Sept. 21, 1930, Feb. 17, 18, 19, 20, Mar. 17, 18, 26, 28, July 31, Dec. 5, 1942, Dove Papers, 2:1:54, 3:2:1, 3:2:2, 3:2:3, 3:2:4, 3:2:13; Dove to Torr, Sept. 1936 (3 letters), Oct. 1936 (5 letters), Dove Papers, 2:1:35, 2:1:36, 2:1:38, 2:1:40. 32. Dove to Elizabeth McCausland, June 22, 1933, Elizabeth McCausland Papers, 1838–1965, bulk 1920–1960, Archives of American Art, Smithsonian Institution, 2:5:11 (hereafter cited as Elizabeth McCausland Papers); Elizabeth McCausland, “Dove: Man and Painter,” Parnassus 9/7 (Dec. 1937): 3–6; Dove to Stieglitz, Mar. 10, 1942, in Morgan, Dear Stieglitz, Dear Dove, 465; Florence Cane to Arthur Dove, n.d., Dove Papers, 2:1:3; Établissements Lefranc to Arthur Dove, May 4, 1935, Dove Papers, 2:1:3, 2:1:5; Dove to Stieglitz, Oct. 24, 1935, in Morgan, Dear Stieglitz, Dear Dove, 342; R. A. Brennecke to Arthur Dove, June 27, 1924, Dove Papers, 2:1:3; Samuel Kootz to Arthur Dove, Aug. 10, Sept. 10 and 30, 1937, Dove Papers, 2:1:8; Oswald H. Boltz, MD, to Arthur Dove, Nov. 20, Dec. 16, 1940, Jan. 20, Apr. 21, May 1, 10, June 4, 12, 24, July 2, 1941, Apr. 21, 1942, Dove Papers, 2:1:11, 2:1:12, 2:1:13. Dove’s correspondence suggests that Baekeland was an acquaintance of Stieglitz’s; Dove met him in New York in 1922, where Baekeland had a boat moored near Dove’s. Dove to Stieglitz, Sept. 1922, in Morgan, Dear Stieglitz, Dear Dove, 86, 87. 33. My understanding of Dove’s analogizing has been importantly shaped by Barbara Stafford’s analysis of analogy as a connecting practice that forges bonds “between two or more incongruities or spanned incommensurables” through strategies of comparison, correlation, and concordance. Barbara Stafford, Visual Analogy: Consciousness as the Art of Connecting (Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 1999), 9, ch. 1. Likewise, my understanding of Dove’s investment in materiality as equally attentive to the object world or the idea of the object and to the specific properties and capacities of materials themselves has been informed by Michael Podro, Depiction (New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 1998); Tim Ingold, “Materials against Materiality,” Archaeological Dialogues 14/1 ( June 2007): 1–16, as well as the series of responses to that essay, in the same issue of the journal,
by Christopher Tilley (16–20), Carl Knappett (20–23), Daniel Miller (23–27), and Björn Nilsson (27–30); Tim Ingold, Making: Anthropology, Archaeology, Art, and Architecture (London: Routledge, 2013); and Pamela Smith, The Body of the Artisan: Art and Experience in the Scientific Revolution (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2004). 34. Waldo Frank, “The Art of Arthur Dove,” New Republic, Jan. 27, 1926, 269. 35. Diary entries for Jan. 20, 25, 29, Feb. 1, 5, 1927, Dove Papers, 3:1:54. 36. Dove to Stieglitz, May 15, 1934, in Morgan, Dear Stieglitz, Dear Dove, 308. 37. Dove to Stieglitz, Oct. 1929, in Morgan, Dear Stieglitz, Dear Dove, 180. 38. Arthur G. Dove: Paintings, 1942–1943 (New York: An American Place, Feb. 11–Mar. 17, 1943), 2. 39. Arthur Dove, undated typewritten note, Dove Papers, 3:3:11. 40. Steinberg discusses Johns in terms that inspired my own here. Leo Steinberg, “Jasper Johns: The First Seven Years of His Art,” in Other Criteria, 17–54. See also Alex Potts, Experiments in Modern Realism: World Making, Politics and the Everyday in Postwar European and American Art (New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 2013), for a conceptually relevant discussion of the complex realism of certain strains of postwar American and European art. 41. “Some Notes by Arthur G. Dove,” in Dove Exhibition, n.p. 42. As described by Johnson, the assemblages perform a material metamorphosis, making objects into what they are not and demonstrating “the power of objects to seem different from what we know them to be.” Such transformation, she writes, approaches the magical, as lifeless things “assume an anomalous ability to seem alive.” Although my conclusions regarding the assemblages and animation differ from Johnson’s, I agree that “metamorphosis” and “life” are chief among the terms that best describe the aims and operations of these works. Johnson also notes Dove’s “kinship with objects,” a closeness or connection to the stuff of the material world that I also consider integral to his assemblage work. Johnson, “Arthur Dove,” 22, 23, 29. 43. Diary entry for Dec. 7, 1924, Dove Papers, 3:1:51. As Anne Cohen DePietro has pointed out, every year Dove recorded in his diary the first appearance of leaves on a willow tree outside his window in Centerport. DePietro, “Beyond Abstraction: The Late Work of Arthur Dove,” in Arthur Dove and Helen Torr, 42. Dove created the painting Willow Tree in 1937 (Norton Museum of Art, West Palm Beach, FL) and a closely related watercolor of the same title in 1938. Debra Bricker Balken, Arthur Dove: Watercolors (New York: Alexandre Gallery, 2006), color plate 25. In 1940, he made two watercolor sketches called Willows (Currier Museum of Art, Manchester, New Hampshire; The Phillips Collection, Washington, DC). Other willow subjects include the paintings Willow Sisters (1936; Morgan, Arthur Dove, 239) and Willows (1940; ibid., 270). Sherrye Cohn considers Willow Tree (1938) in light of theosophist beliefs in the latent geometry of nature, particularly the spiral and ovoid forms, in “Arthur Dove and Theosophy: Visions of a Transcendental Reality,” Arts Magazine, Sept. 1983, 90–91, and Arthur Dove: Nature as Symbol (1982; Ann Arbor, MI: UMI Research Press, 1985), 76.
44. For taxidermy in relation to lifelessness in art and display, see Donna Haraway, “Teddy Bear Patriarchy: Taxidermy in the Garden of Eden, New York City, 1908–1936,” Social Text 11 (Winter 1984–1985): 20–64; Susan Stewart, “Death and Life, in That Order, in the Works of Charles Willson Peale,” in Visual Display: Culture beyond Appearances, ed. Lynne Cooke and Peter Wollen (New York: New Press, 1998), 31–53; Alex Nemerov, “Haunted Supermasculinity: Strength and Death in Carl Rungius’s ‘Wary Game,’ ” American Art 13/3 (Autumn 1999): 3–31; Chris Philo and Chris Wilbert, “Animal Spaces, Beastly Places: An Introduction,” in Animal Spaces, Beastly Places: New Geographies of Human-Animal Relations, ed. Philo and Wilbert (London: Routledge, 2000), 1–34; Rachel Poliquin, The Breathless Zoo: Taxidermy and The Cultures of Longing (University Park: Pennsylvania State University Press, 2012); Erica Fudge, “Renaissance Animal Things,” in Gorgeous Beasts: Animal Bodies in Historical Perspective, ed. Joan B. Landes, Paula Young Lee, and Paul Younquist (University Park: Pennsylvania State University Press, 2012), 41– 45; and Nigel Rothfels, “Trophies and Taxidermy,” in Landes, Lee, and Younquist, Gorgeous Beasts, 117–36. 45. Dove to Stieglitz and O’Keeffe, Aug. 1921, in Morgan, Dear Stieglitz, Dear Dove, 75. Charles Van Wyck Brooks recalled the camping trip in Sensory Awareness: The Rediscovery of Experiencing (New York: Viking Press, 1974), 214. 46. Diary entry for Dec. 13, 1924, Dove Papers, 3:1:52. 47. Rosalind Krauss, “Stieglitz/Equivalents,” October 11 (Winter 1979): 140. 48. Hanneke Grootenboer, “Treasuring the Gaze: Eye Miniature Portraits and the Intimacy of Vision,” Art Bulletin 88/3 (Sept. 2006): 497. 49. See, for example, the following contributions to this literature, many of which have decisively shaped my understanding of Dove’s assemblages: Arjun Appadurai, ed., The Social Life of Things: Commodities in Cultural Perspective (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1986); Gaston Bachelard, Water and Dreams: An Essay on the Imagination of Matter, trans. Edith R. Farrell (Dallas, TX: Dallas Institute of Humanities and Culture / The Pegasus Foundation, 1999); Bill Brown, A Sense of Things: The Object Matter of American Literature (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2003); Bill Brown, ed., Things (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2004); Lorraine Daston, ed., Things That Talk: Object Lessons from Art and Science (New York: Zone Books, 2004); James Elkins, The Object Stares Back: On the Nature of Seeing (New York: Harcourt Brace, 1996); Josh Ellenbogen and Aaron Tugendhaft, eds., Idol Anxiety (Palo Alto, CA: Stanford University Press, 2011); Alfred Gell, Art and Agency: An Anthropological Theory (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1998); Martin Heidegger, What Is a Thing?, trans. W. B. Barton Jr. and Vera Deutsch (Chicago: Henry Regnery, 1967); Martin Heidegger, “The Origin of the Work of Art,” in Off the Beaten Track, ed. and trans. Julian Young and Kenneth Haynes (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2002), 1–56; Martin Heideg ger “The Thing,” Poetry, Language, Thought, trans. Albert Hofstadter (New York: HarperCollins, 1971), 161–84; Bruno Latour, Science in Action: How to Follow Scientists and Engineers through Society (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1987); Bruno Latour, We Have Never Been Modern, trans. Catherine Porter (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1993); Bruno Latour, Pandora’s Hope: Essays on the Reality of
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Science Studies (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1999); Bruno Latour, Reassembling the Social: An Introduction to Actor-Network-Theory (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2005); Bruno Latour and Peter Weibel, eds., Iconoclash: Beyond the Image Wars in Science, Religion, and Art (Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 2002); Stephen Melville, ed. The Lure of the Object (Williamstown, MA: Sterling and Francine Clark Art Institute, 2005); Daniel Miller, ed., Materiality (Durham: Duke University Press, 2005); W. J. T. Mitchell, What Do Pictures Want? The Lives and Loves of Images (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2005); Stafford, Visual Analogy; Barbara M. Stafford, Echo Objects: The Cognitive Work of Images (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2007); Peter-Paul Verbeek, What Things Do: Philosophical Reflections on Technology, Agency, and Design (University Park: Pennsylvania State University Press, 2005; Amsterdam: Boom Publishers, 2000); Mariët Westermann, ed., Anthropologies of Art (Williamstown, MA: Sterling and Francine Clark Art Institute, 2005); Ian Bogost, Alien Phenomenology, or What It’s Like to Be a Thing (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 2012); Karen Lang, ed., “Notes from the Field: Materiality,” Art Bulletin 95/1 (Mar. 2013): 10–37; and Matthew C. Hunter and Francesco Lucchini, eds., “The Clever Object,” special issue, Art History 36/3 ( June 2013). 50. Comte de Lautréamont, Lautrémont’s Maldoror, trans. Alexis Lykiard (New York: Thomas Y. Crowell, 1972), 177; Aturo Schwarz, Man Ray: The Rigour of Imagination (London: Thames and Hudson, 1977), 233. Johanna Malt discusses stitching as a motif in Surrealism, and Bréton’s work in particular, in Obscure Objects of Desire: Surrealism, Fetishism, and Politics (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2004), ch. 5. See also Julia Kelly, Art, Ethnography and the Life of Objects, Paris, c. 1925–35 (Manchester, UK: Manchester University Press, 2007), ch. 5; Renée Riese Hubert, Surrealism and the Book (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1988), ch. 6 (Salvador Dalí and sewing); W. Bowdoin Davis, Duchamp: Domestic Patterns, Covers, and Threads (New York: Midmarch Arts Press, 2002) (Duchamp and sewing); and Herbert Molderings, Duchamp and the Aesthetics of Chance: Art as Experience (New York: Columbia University Press, 2010), chs. 1–3 (on 3 Standard Stoppages and Network of Stoppages). 51. Dove to Torr, Nov. 10, 1934, Dove Papers, 2:1:31. It may have been this fire that inspired Dove to later paint Fire in the Sauerkraut Factory (fig. 116). 52. Dove, undated handwritten essay, Dove Papers, 3:2:18. 53. Brooks, Sensory Awareness, 214. A photograph of Hollyhock appears on p. 215 of Brooks’s book. 54. Quoted in Hutchins Hapgood, “The Live Line,” Globe and Commercial Advertiser, Mar. 8, 1913, 1. 55. In Lines: A Brief History (London: Routledge, 2007), Tim Ingold offers what he calls “a comparative anthropology of the line.” The practice of creating lines, he writes, is ubiquitous in human history and activity and thus forms a connective tissue among diverse and disparate cultures, disciplines, actions, and media. This sense of suturing across entities, as well as Ingold’s characterization of a species of line as constituting a threading mechanism, presents a compelling parallel to my description of Dove’s practice. 56. For lists as collections, see Umberto Eco, The Infinity of Lists, trans. Alastair McEwen (New York: Rizzoli,
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2009), 165–215. For further discussion of the nature and operations of lists, see Liza Kirwin, Lists: To-Dos, Illustrated Inventories, Collected Thoughts, and Other Artists’ Enumerations from the Smithsonian’s Archives of American Art (New York: Princeton Architectural Press; Washington, DC: Smithsonian Institution, 2010); Susanne Beyer and Lothar Gorris, “Part I: We Like Lists Because We Don’t Want to Die” and “Part II: People Have Their Preferences” (interview with Umberto Eco), Spiegel Online, Nov. 11, 2009 , accessed Aug. 3, 2011, http://www.spiegel.de/international/zeitgeist /0,1518,659577–2,00.html. I thank Vittoria di Palma and Erika Naginski for aiding my thinking about Dove and lists. 57. Eco, The Infinity of Lists, 131. Other period instances of listing within artistic practice that bear a resemblance to Dove’s include Joseph Cornell’s dossiers, repositories of visual material organized by theme; Tristan Tzara’s 1934 “When Things Dream,” which includes a list of phrases— “things to touch, to eat, to crunch, to apply to the eye, to the skin,” and so forth—in its discussion of Man Ray’s photograms; Arthur Wesley Dow’s teaching diagram, in which he surveys the possible outcomes of applying his “Principle of Fine Art”; Oscar Bluemner’s meticulously illustrated and annotated lists of completed paintings; and John Covert’s daybooks. Mileaf, Please Touch, 14, 169–80; Kirwin, Lists, 54– 55, 88–89; Leo G. Mazow, “John Covert, Tetraphilia, and the Language of Time,” Winterthur Portfolio 41/1 (Spring 2007): 21–42; and Leo G. Mazow, John Covert Rediscovered (State College, PA: Palmer Museum of Art, 2003). 58. James Joyce, Ulysses (New York: Penguin, 2008), ch. 17. For listing and cataloguing in Ulysses, see Karen R. Lawrence, “Style and Narrative in the ‘Ithaca’ Chapter of Joyce’s Ulysses,” ELH 47/3 (Autumn 1980): 559–74; and Andrew Gibson, “Introduction” and Fritz Senn, “ ‘Ithaca’: Portrait of the Chapter as a Long List,” both in Joyce’s “Ithaca,” ed. Gibson (Amsterdam: Rodopi, 1996), 3–27, 31–76. For Stein and materiality, see Wendy Steiner, Exact Resemblance to Exact Resemblance: The Literary Portraiture of Gertrude Stein (New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 1978), esp. ch. 4; and Peter Schwenger, “Words and the Murder of the Thing,” in Brown, Things, 135–49. I would also suggest the poetry of William Carlos Williams, which was influenced by colloquial speech and sound, attended to local conditions and everyday life, and strove to recapitulate rather than simply evoke or allude to material reality, as a possible analog to or context for Dove’s listing as I characterize it. As an example, take the following lines from the poem “Tree” (1927), where description proceeds as a series of object-like extractions from the material world, the effect underscored by Williams’s unconventional line breaks: “The tree is stiff, the branch / is arching, arching, arching / to the ground. Already its tip / reaches the hats of the passersby / children leap at it, hang on it—/ bite on it. It is rotten, it / will be thick with blossoms in / the spring.” “The Great Figure” (1921), on which Charles Demuth based his 1928 portrait of Williams, I Saw the Figure 5 in Gold, is also exemplary: “Among the rain / and lights / I saw the figure 5 / in gold / on a red / firetruck / moving / tense / unheeded / to gong clangs / siren howls / and wheels rumbling / through the dark city.” Williams of course famously declared in “Paterson” (1926) that there are “no ideas but in things.” The Collected Poems of William Carlos Williams, vol. 1, 1909–1939, ed. A. Walton Litz and Christo-
pher MacGowan (New York: New Directions, 1986), 263, 174. For Williams and objecthood, see Brown, A Sense of Things, 1–19, 124–26. 59. Mazow, “John Covert, Tetraphilia, and the Game of Time.” 60. For a discussion of Stein, repetition, materiality, and the objecthood of words that inspired my thinking here, see Ulla Haselstein, “Gertrude Stein and Seriality,” in Blackwell Companions to Literature and Culture: A Companion to Modern United States Fiction, ed. David Seed (Oxford: Blackwell, 2010), 229–39, and Haselstein, “Tender Buttons: Stein et ses portraits des choses (1914),” in Carrefour Alfred Stieglitz, ed. Jay Bochner and Jean-Pierre Montier (Rennes, Fr.: Presses Universitaires de Rennes, 2012), 339–48. 61. See, for example, Ann Blair, “Humanist Methods in Natural Philosophy: The Commonplace Book,” Journal of the History of Ideas 53/4 (Oct.–Dec. 1992): 541–51; William Clark, “On the Ministerial Archive of Academic Acts,” Science in Context 9 (1996): 421–86; Carol Armstrong, Scenes in a Library: Reading the Photograph in the Book, 1843–1875 (Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 1998); Earle Havens, Commonplace Books: A History of Manuscripts and Printed Books from Antiquity to the Twentieth Century (New Haven, CT: Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library, Yale University, 2001); Anthony Grafton, The Footnote: A Curious History (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1997); Anke te Heesen, “News, Paper, Scissors: Clippings in the Sciences and Arts around 1920,” in Daston, Things That Talk, 297–327; Rachael Z. DeLue, review of The Art of Evolution: Darwin, Darwinisms, and Visual Culture, ed. Barbara Larson and Fae Brauer (Hanover, NH: Dartmouth College Press / University Press of New England, 2009), Darwins Korallen: die frühen Evolutionsdiagramme und die Tradition der Naturgeschichte, by Horst Bredekamp (Berlin: Wagenbach, 2005), Endless Forms: Charles Darwin, Natural Science, and the Visual Arts, ed. Diana Donald and Jane Munro (Cambridge, UK: Fitzwilliam Museum; New Haven, CT: Yale Center for British Art; New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 2009), and Darwin’s Pictures: Views of Evolutionary Theory, 1837–1874, by Julia Voss (New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 2010), Art Bulletin 92/4 (Dec. 2010): 390; Anna Sigrídur Arnar, The Book as Instrument: Stéphane Mallarmé, the Artist’s Book, and the Transformation of Print Culture (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2011); Pamela H. Smith and Benjamin Schmidt, eds. Making Knowledge in Early Modern Europe: Practices, Objects, and Texts, 1400–1800 (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2007); and Ellen Gruber Garvey, Writing with Scissors: American Scrapbooks from the Civil War to the Harlem Renaissance (New York: Oxford University Press, 2013). 62. Seitz, The Art of Assemblage, 25. 63. Leo Stein, The A-B-C of Aesthetics (New York: Boni & Liveright, 1927), quoted in Bill Brown, “Thing Theory,” in Brown, Things, 4. 64. Heidegger, “The Thing,” 170, 171, 178. See also Hans- Georg Gadamer, “The Nature of Things and the Language of Things” (1960), in Philosophical Hermeneutics, trans. David E. Linge (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1976), 69–81. 65. George Kubler, The Shape of Time: Remarks on the History of Things (New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 1962); Pierre Bourdieu, Outline of a Theory of Practice, trans. Richard Nice (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1977); Appadurai, The Social Life of Things. See also Daniel Miller,
Material Culture and Mass Consumption (Oxford: Blackwell, 1987); Gell, Art and Agency; Fred R. Meyers, The Empire of Things: Regimes of Value and Material Culture (Santa Fe, NM: School of American Research Press, 2001); Nicholas Thomas, Entangled Objects: Exchange, Material Culture, and Colonialism in the Pacific (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1991); and Annette B. Weiner, Inalienable Possessions: The Paradox of Keeping While Giving (Berkeley, CA: University of California Press, 1992). 66. Bruno Latour, “Why Has Critique Run Out of Steam? Matters of Fact, Matters of Concern,” in Brown, Things, 151– 73; Bruno Latour, “On Technical Mediation—Philosophy, Sociology, Genealogy,” Common Knowledge 3/2 (Fall 1994): 29–64; Bruno Latour, “Technology Is Society Made Durable,” trans. Gabrielle Hecht, in A Sociology of Monsters: Essays on Power, Technology, and Domination, ed. John Law (New York: Routledge, 1991), 117; Nigel Thrift, “Beyond Mediation: Three New Material Registers and Their Consequences,” in Miller, Materiality, 235, 236; John Frow, “A Pebble, a Camera, a Man Who Turns into a Telegraph Pole,” in Brown, Things, 353–54, 357. For further discussion of things and the subject/object or animate/inanimate binary, see Jessica Riskin, “The Defecating Duck, or, the Ambiguous Origins of Artificial Life,” and Jonathan Lamb, “Modern Metamorphoses and Disgraceful Tales,” both in Brown, Things, 99–133, 193–226; Brown, introduction to A Sense of Things, 1–19; and Daniel Miller, “Materiality: An Introduction,” and Suzanne Küchler, “Materiality and Cognition: The Changing Face of Things,” both in Miller, Materiality, 1–50, 206–30. For relevant discussion of art objects and the fetish, see Brown, A Sense of Things, 185–88; Laura Mulvey, “Some Thoughts on Theories of Fetishism in the Context of Contemporary Culture,” October 65 (Summer 1993): 3–20; William Pietz, “Fetishism,” in Critical Terms for Art History, 2nd ed., ed. Robert S. Nelson and Richard Shiff (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2003), 306–17; Emily Apter and William Pietz, eds., Fetishism as Cultural Discourse (Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 1993); Hal Foster, Prosthetic Gods (Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 2004), chs. 4, 6, 8; and Jonathan Lamb, The Things Things Say (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 2011). Also influential to my thinking about works of art as autonomous- seeming objects has been Victor Stoichita, The Self-Aware Image: An Insight into Early Modern Meta-Painting, trans. Anne-Marie Glasheen (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1997). 67. Latour, “Why Has Critique Run Out of Steam?,” 167–68; Miller, “Materiality: An Introduction,” 38; Brown, “Thing Theory,” 7; Yve-Alain Bois, Denis Hollier, Rosalind Krauss, and Hubert Damisch, “A Conversation with Hubert Damisch,” October 85 (Summer 1998): 8; Hubert Damisch, The Judgment of Paris, trans. John Goodman (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1996); Ernst Van Alphen, Art in Mind: How Contemporary Images Shape Thought (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2005), ch. 1; Daston, “Introduction: Speechless,” in Daston, Things That Talk, 12, 15, and passim; Joel Snyder, “Res Ipsa Loquitur,” and Peter Galison, “Image of Self,” both in Things That Talk, 195–221, 257–94; Matthew C. Hunter and Francesco Lucchini, “The Clever Object: Three Pavilions, Three Loggias, and a Planetarium,” Art History 36/3 ( June 2013): 475. Latour developed his actor- network theory in Science in Action, Pandora’s Hope, and We
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Have Never Been Modern and revisited it in Reassembling the Social, a critique of the methodologies of social science as well as a set of recommendations for proceeding with the study of society. In “Thing Theory,” his introduction to the essay collection of the same name, Brown provides a useful survey of various strands of thinking about things from the nineteenth century onward, Latour’s work included. Jennifer Jane Marshall’s Machine Art 1934 presents a model approach to the analysis of material and visual culture through the ideas of thing theory, and Jennifer Roberts’s Transporting Visions has been essential to my thinking about Dove and things, as well. 68. Kelly, “The Anthropology of Assemblage,” 30; Foster, Prosthetic Gods; Mileaf, Please Touch; Rosalind Krauss, “The Photographic Conditions of Surrealism,” in The Originality of the Avant-Garde and Other Modernist Myths (Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 1985), 87–118; Amelia Jones, Irrational Modernism: A Neurasthenic History of New York Dada (Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 2004); Martha Buskirk and Mignon Nixon, eds., The Duchamp Effect (Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 1996); Thierry De Duve, Pictorial Nominalism: On Marcel Duchamp’s Passage from Painting to the Readymade, trans. Dana Polan (Minneapolis, MN: University of Minnesota Press, 1991); David Joselit, Infinite Regress: Marcel Duchamp, 1910–1941 (Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 1998); Jennifer Mundy, ed., Surrealism: Desire Unbound (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 2001); Amy Lyford, Surrealist Masculinities: Gender Anxiety and the Aesthetics of Post–World War I Reconstruction in France (Berkeley: University of California Press, 2007); Leah Dickerman, Dada: Zurich, Berlin, Hannover, Cologne, New York, Paris (Washington, DC: National Gallery of Art, 2005). 69. Gilles Deleuze and Félix Guattari, A Thousand Plateaus, trans. Brian Massumi (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1987), 4, 7–8, 23, 37, 71, 88–91; Henri Bergson, An Introduction to Metaphysics, trans. T. E. Hulme, ed. John Mullarkey and Michael Kolkman (New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2007). 70. Dove to Stieglitz, prob. July 25, 1922, in Morgan, Dear Stieglitz, Dear Dove, 80. 71. Christopher Pinney, “Things Happen: or, From Which Moment Does That Object Come?” in Miller, Materiality, 258 and passim; Ian Bogost, Alien Phenomenology, 1–34. Peter-Paul Verbeek also directs attention away from human use by focusing on the “operativity” of objects, technology in particular, and their role as mediators within human existence; in suggesting what he terms a postphenomenological point of view, Verbeek replaces consideration of human perception and experience with an analysis of material relations that assumes humans and objects to be equally constitutive of “reality.” Verbeek, What Things Do, 8–11, ch. 3. 72. Janine Mileaf’s discussion of gravity in relation to the work of Joseph Cornell has been particularly useful to my understanding of Dove’s “gravitation.” Mileaf, Please Touch, 164. 73. Diary entry for Apr. 24, 1929, Dove Papers, 3:2:3. 74. Dove, “Pencil Notes on a Boat,” in Morgan, Dear Stieglitz, Dear Dove, 194–95. Stieglitz believed that the conditions of the boat decisively shaped Dove’s work, as reported by Edward Alden Jewell in “Dove Again,” New York Times, Mar. 15, 1931, 12. 75. Diary entry for Apr. 25, 1929, Dove Papers, 3:2:3.
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76. Dove would have agreed with Robert Rauschenberg who in 1961 insisted, “Paint is itself an object, and canvas also. In my opinion, the void which must be filled does not exist.” Rauschenberg, Arts, May 10, 1961, 18, quoted in Seitz, The Art of Assemblage, 25. 77. Douglas Kahn, “Concerning the Line: Music, Noise, and Phonography,” in From Energy to Information: Representation in Science and Technology, Art, and Literature, ed. Bruce Clarke and Linda Dalrymple Henderson (Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 2002), 178–94. 78. Arthur Dove, undated typewritten essay [1928 or 1929], Dove Papers, 3:3:2. 79. Ezra Pound, ABC of Reading (New York: New Directions, 1934); Ezra Pound, “The Serious Artist” (New Freewoman, 1913), in Literary Essays of Ezra Pound, ed. T. S. Eliot (London: Faber and Faber, 1954), 41–57; Ezra Pound, “Cavalcanti: Medievalism” (Dial, 1928), in Literary Essays, 149–220. 80. Pound, ABC of Reading, 36, 37; Pound, “The Serious Artist,” 47–48, 49, 50, 56. For an extended discussion of Pound and energy in writing, see Ian F. Bell, “The Real and the Ethereal: Modernist Energies in Eliot and Pound,” in Clarke and Henderson, From Energy to Information, 114–25. For Pound and the New Freewoman, see Bruce Clarke, “Dora Marsden and Ezra Pound: ‘The New Freewoman’ and ‘The Serious Artist,’ ” Contemporary Literature 33/1 (Spring 1992): 91–112. 81. Pound, “Cavalcanti: Medievalism,” 154. The phrase “mezzo oscuro rade” appears in Cavalcanti and translates as “in the midst of darkness [light] shines infrequently.” Peter Makin, Provence and Pound (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1978), 181. 82. Jeremy Munday, Introducing Translation Studies: Theories and Applications, 2nd ed. (London: Routledge, 2008), 167–68; Lawrence Venuti, “American Tradition,” in Routledge Encyclopedia of Translation Studies, 2nd ed., ed. Mona Baker and Babriela Saldanha (London and New York: Routledge, 2009), 324–25. For Pound on translation, see Ezra Pound, “Guido’s Relations” (1929), in The Translation Studies Reader, 2nd ed., ed. Lawrence Venuti (London: Routledge, 2004), 86–93. 83. Pound, “Guido’s Relations,” 92; Lawrence Venuti, The Translator’s Invisibility: A History of Translation (London: Routledge, 1995), 34. Pound’s translation of The Seafarer dates to 1912. 84. Edward Alden Jewell, “Concerning Mr. Dove,” New York Times, Mar. 30, 1930, 12. 85. Robert Gober et al., Heat Waves in a Swamp: The Paintings of Charles Burchfield (Los Angeles: Hammer Museum; Munich: Prestel Verlag, 2009), 140–41. Karl Kusserow discusses another example of a work of art that takes as its subject telegraphy in “Technology and Ideology in Daniel Huntington’s Atlantic Cable Projectors,” American Art 24/1 (Spring 2010): 94–113, and “Memory, Metaphor, and Meaning in Daniel Huntington’s Atlantic Cable Projectors,” Picturing Power: Portraiture and Its Uses in the New York Chamber of Commerce (New York: Columbia University Press, 2013), 319–75. 86. Paul Dove, “Facts pertaining to the life of Arthur G. Dove,” Dove Papers, 1:1:1. For coronas and St. Elmo’s Fire, see, for example, Alexander McAdie, Man and Weather (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1926); and Charles Fitzhugh Talman, The Realm of the Air: A Book about
Weather (Indianapolis, IN: Bobbs-Merrill, 1931), 200–209. For telegraphy and sound, see W. J. Humphreys, Weather Rambles (Baltimore: Williams & Wilkins, 1937), 39–40, 47–48; and Talman, The Realm of the Air, 206–8. 87. Kandinsky, Point and Line to Plane, ed. Hilla Rebay, trans. Hilla Rebay and Howard Dearstyne (New York: Solomon R. Guggenheim Foundation, 1947; repr., New York: Dover Publications, 1979), 101–3. 88. Quoted in Hapgood, “The Live Line,” 7. 89. I discuss these associations in chapter 1. See also Susan Douglas, Listening In: Radio and the American Imagination (Minneapolis, MN: University of Minnesota Press, 2004), 36; and Alexander Nemerov, “Ground Swell: Edward Hopper in 1939,” American Art 22/3 (Fall 2008): 50–71. 90. Diary entries for Nov. 1, 8, 1924, Dove Papers, 3:1:51. 91. For star charts, see also Ellison Hawks, The Boys’ Book of Astronomy (New York: Frederick A. Stokes, 1914). For photographic illustrations, see also George F. Chambers, Astronomy (New York: D. Van Nostrand, 1913); Edmund W. Price, The Essence of Astronomy: Things Everyone Should Know about the Sun, Moon, and Stars (New York: G. P. Putnam’s Sons, 1914); Harold Jacoby, Astronomy: A Popular Handbook (New York: Macmillan, 1915); and David Peck Todd, Astronomy: The Science of the Heavenly Bodies (New York: Harper & Brothers, 1922). For photography and astronomy, see Jennifer Tucker, Nature Exposed: Photography as Eyewitness in Victorian Science (Baltimore: The Johns Hopkins University Press, 2005), ch. 5. 92. Kandinsky, Point and Line to Plane, 38–39, figs. 5 and 6. 93. Starry Heavens was itself not exhibited publicly until 1955. Morgan, Arthur Dove, 135. 94. “News and Notes of the Art World,” New York Times, Mar. 3, 1912, 15. 95. For an extensive bibliography of period writing on Dove, including exhibition reviews, see Morgan, Arthur Dove, 320–25, 360–63. Some critics poked fun at Dove, especially early on. In 1912, in response to the Chicago exhibition of “The Ten Commandments,” the Chicago Daily Tribune columnist Bert Leston Taylor penned a series of teasing poems that included the lines “I cannot tell you how I love / the canvases of Mr. Dove / Which Saturday I went to see / In Mr. Thurber’s gallery”; “This thing, which you would almost bet / Portrays a Spanish omelette / Depicts instead, with wondrous skill / A horse and cart upon a hill”; “But Mr. Dove is much too keen / To let a single bird be seen / To show the pigeons would not do / And so he simply paints the coo”; and “Dove is the cleverest of chaps / And, gazing at his rhythmic maps / I wondered (and I’m wondering yet) / Whether he did them on a bet.” And three years later: “Arthur Dove is raising chickens / He has put his paints away / Tell me, Chronos, where the dickens / Are the Cubes of Yesterday?” B.L.T. [Bert Leston Taylor], “A Line-O’-Type or Two: Lines Written after Viewing Mr. Arthur Dove’s Exposition of the ‘Simultaneousness of the Ambient,’” Chicago Daily Tribune, Mar. 25, 1912, 10; B.L.T., “A Line-O’-Type or Two: The Brooding Dove,” Chicago Daily Tribune, Mar. 24, 1915, 6. Other writers had nothing but praise for his work including, of course Stieglitz, Phillips, and Rosenfeld, especially beginning in the twenties. More typical of criticism throughout Dove’s career was the combination of excitement and perplexity expressed by a critic who wrote in response to “The
Ten Commandments” that Dove “is another of the young American artists who have seen a new and strange light, and have come out with something absolutely original and quite incomprehensible. But whether Mr. Dove is comprehensible or not, there is an extraordinary fascination about some of these decorative squares which he calls paintings.” Similarly: “We are not liberated enough for more than a smile for the watch springs, saws, files and other media that Arthur Dove utilizes for his compositions, but we can stand all day in awe before his storm clouds and abstractions.” Joseph Edgar Chamberlin, “Pattern-Paintings by A. G. Dove,” Evening Mail, Mar. 2, 1912, 8; “Art,” New Yorker, Mar. 28, 1925, 17. 96. Dove to Stieglitz and O’Keeffe, May 3, 1941, Aug. 23, 1928, in Morgan, Dear Stieglitz, Dear Dove, 457, 152–53; Dove to Duncan Phillips, after Dec. 19, 1927, in Elizabeth Hutton Turner and Leigh Bullard Weisblat, eds., “Selected Correspondence,” in In the American Grain: Dove, Hartley, Marin, O’Keeffe and Stieglitz, ed. Elizabeth Hutton Turner (Washington, DC: The Phillips Collection, 1995), 148. For similar remarks on Dove’s part, see Dove to Stieglitz, 1929, July 5, 1931, Mar. 10, 1942, in Morgan, Dear Stieglitz, Dear Dove, 163, 227, 464; and Dove to Duncan Phillips, after Dec. 12, 1927, in Turner and Weisblat, “Selected Correspondence,” 147. 97. Dove to Stieglitz and O’Keeffe, Mar. 31 / Apr. 3, 1929, in Morgan, Dear Stieglitz, Dear Dove, 168–69. The bracketed titles were inserted by Morgan. For a valuable analysis of Stieglitz’s gallery space, see Kristina Wilson, “The Intimate Gallery and the Cosmos,” ch. 2 in The Modern Eye: Stieglitz, MoMA, and the Art of the Exhibition, 1925–1934 (New Haven, CT : Yale University Press, 2009). One gleans from Dove’s correspondence and diaries that O’Keeffe often had a hand in installing Dove’s shows, and she was fully responsible for the selection and layout of his 1945 exhibition. Maude Riley, “Latest Doves Make Strong Impression,” Art Digest, June 1, 1945, 14. 98. Dove to Stieglitz, Dec. 3, 1937, Feb. 22/26, 1938, in Morgan, Dear Stieglitz, Dear Dove, 392, 396. In 1937 Dove wrote to Elmira Bier, assistant to Duncan Phillips, with whom he and Torr had become friendly, saying that he hoped “the feeling of space” provided by his quarters in the Dove Block “will creep into the coming paintings.” Dove to Elmira Bier, 1937, Dove Letters, Library and Archives, The Phillips Collection, Washington, DC. 99. Dove to Duncan Phillips, Apr. 14, 1943, and Dove to Elmira Bier, n.d., Dove Letters, Library and Archives of the Phillips Collection, Washington, DC. 100. Diary entries for Aug. 5, 20, 1942, Dove Papers, 3:2:13. 101. Dove to Stieglitz, Dec. 3, 1937, Aug. 9, 1931, early 1929, in Morgan, Dear Stieglitz, Dear Dove, 392, 227–28, 163. See also Dove to Stieglitz, Mar. 25, 1938, in ibid., 399. 102. Mark Guthrie, “Time Frame” (interview with Suzanne Smeaton), Picture Framing Magazine, Jan. 2003, 135; Suzanne Smeaton, “Modernist Frames: A Unique and Divergent Chapter in American Frame Design,” Picture Framing Magazine, May 1994, 11. An unpublished conservation report prepared by the Art Institute of Chicago describes the copper strip frame as original, but not the wood frame that surrounds it. The current frames of Clouds and I’ll Build a Stairway to Paradise, at the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, are reproductions of Dove’s originals. I am grateful to both
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institutions for facilitating access to this information. K. Lister, incoming examination report, object file, Art Institute of Chicago; Conservation report, object file, Museum of Fine Arts, Boston. Mentions of Dove “silvering” or coating his frames appear throughout the diaries; see, for example, Feb. 23, 24, 28, Mar. 3–5, 8–12, 1935, Dove Papers, 3:2:8. Dove described making panels for painting out of grocery crates in a 1922 letter to Stieglitz, and William Dove reported that Dove dedicated a good deal of time in the 1920s and 1930s to learning to silver frames correctly, and he also reported that his father described himself as a frame maker in the marriage registry when he and Torr were wed. Dove to Stieglitz, prob. July 25, 1922, in Morgan, Dear Stieglitz, Dear Dove, 80; Anne Cohen DePietro interview with William Dove, in Arthur Dove and Helen Torr, 65, 67. Alfie’s Delight is in the collection of the Herbert F. Johnson Museum of Art at Cornell University. 103. Arthur Dove, “Addenda,” in “Arthur G. Dove: New Paintings (1931–1932)” (New York: An American Place, Mar. 14–Apr. 9, 1932), 2. 104. Jonathan Lamb’s discussion of the manner in which things sidestep language, in particular his consideration of Hobbes and representation as a strategic diversion from things, helped shape my ideas in this section. Lamb, prologue to The Things Things Say, xi–xxix. 105. “Arthur Dove: Intimate Gallery,” Art News, Jan. 16, 1926, 7; “Exhibitions Presented by Stieglitz, 1905–1946,” in Greenough, Modern Art and America, 548. 106. John Bender and Michael Marrinan, The Culture of Diagram (Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 2010), 7. 107. Paul Rosenfeld, “Arthur G. Dove,” in Port of New York: Essays on Fourteen American Moderns (1924; Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 1961), 170, 171. 108. Dogs Chasing Each Other is in the collection of the Art Institute of Chicago; Goat is in the collection of the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York; and Blackbird is in the collection of the Thyssen-Bornemisza Collection, Madrid. 109. Morgan has described the creatures as monsters, noting a possible link to Surrealism, especially to the work of Joan Miró or Jean (Hans) Arp. Morgan, Arthur Dove: Life and Work, 72n68. 110. Ann H. Sayre, “New Exhibitions of the Week: Arthur G. Dove Seeks Cosmic Rhythms,” Art News, May 9, 1936, 8. Green, Black, and White is in a private collection. 111. Innis Howe Shoemaker, Adventures in Modern Art: The Charles K. Williams II Collection (Philadelphia, PA: Philadelphia Museum of Art, 2009), 137. 112. Something in Brown, Carmine, and Blue is in the collection of the Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art, Bentonville, Arkansas. 113. Rosenfeld, “Arthur G. Dove,” 168, 169, 171, 172. 114. From Cows is in the collection of the National Gallery of Art, Washington, DC. 115. See, for example, Deleuze and Guattari, A Thousand Plateaus, ch. 10; Donna Haraway, Simians, Cyborgs, and Women: The Reinvention of Nature (New York: Routledge, 1991); Alex Potts, “Natural Order and the Call of the Wild: The Politics of Animal Picturing,” Oxford Art Journal 13/1 (1990): 12–33; Nato Thompson, ed., Becoming Animal: Contemporary Art in the Animal Kingdom (North Adams, MA:
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MASS MoCA, 2005); Louise Lippincott and Andreas Blühm, Fierce Friends: Artists and Animals, 1750–1900 (London: Merrell; Amsterdam: Van Gogh Museum; Pittsburgh: Carnegie Museum of Art, 2005); Lorraine Daston and Gregg Mitman, ed., Thinking with Animals: New Perspectives on Anthropomorphism (New York: Columbia University Press, 2005); Richard Nash and Ron Broglio, eds., “Thinking with Animals,” special issue, Configurations 14/1–2 (Winter–Spring 2006); Martin Kemp, The Human Animal in Western Art and Science (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2007); Jacques Derrida, “The Animal That Therefore I Am (More to Follow),” Critical Inquiry 28/2 (Winter 2002), 369–418; Donald and Munro, Endless Forms; Cary Wolfe, What Is Posthumanism? (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 2010); Eric L. Santner, On Creaturely Life: Rilke, Benjamin, Sebald (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2006); Matthew Calarco, Zoographies: The Question of the Animal from Heidegger to Derrida (New York: Columbia University Press, 2008); and essays by J. M. Bern stein, Carolyn Dean, and Dario Gamboni in “Notes from the Field: Anthropomorphism,” ed. Karen Lang, Art Bulletin 94 (Mar. 2012): 13–15, 15–16, 20–22. The Bernstein, Dean, and Gamboni essays are useful for underscoring the distinction between anthropomorphism and Dove’s practice, which, rather than involving a projection of human qualities onto the nonhuman (animal, thing, or nature), entails a transfer or exchange of properties among entities and, importantly, a de-centering of the human. The Derrida text, one portion of a much longer address presented at Cerisy-la-Salle in 1997, is a foundational one within animal studies; it pivots on a hypothetical encounter between a (nude) human and an animal—“an animal looks at me” (374)—and addresses the question of the distinction between the human and the animal and the complexity of maintaining any such distinction given the slippery multiplicity of the animal as a being and a category. Derrida’s Cerisy remarks appear in their entirety in Derrida, The Animal That Therefore I Am, ed. Marie-Louise Mallet, trans. David Wills (New York: Fordham University Press, 2008). Although its focus is neither the American context nor the question of the animal, Devin Fore’s Realism after Modernism: The Rehumanization of Art and Literature (Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 2012), deserves mention here for its relevant consideration of techniques of anthropomorphism and the recalibrating of models of human subjectivity in literature and the arts in Germany in the interwar period. 116. Dove to Stieglitz, Jan. 18, 1937, Mar. 7, 1938, in Morgan, Dear Stieglitz, Dear Dove, 365, 397; Catalogue of Hobart College, Geneva, New York, 1922–1923, Hobart College Bulletins 21/2 (Geneva, NY: Hobart College, Jan. 1923), 12. Dove configures another such merger in Snowstorm (1935), in this case between an animal and a machine. He noted in a 1935 letter to Elizabeth McCausland that the chief motif in the painting represents his and Torr’s dog, John, running ahead of their car, a 1930 Ford Sport Coupe, on a road near their home. In a previous letter, Dove had described the dog’s speed as he raced ahead, estimating that he moved at around twenty-five miles per hour. In Snowstorm, the motif to which Dove referred suggests both the unruly hair and warm flesh of an animal and the crisply metallic parts of an automobile, with all components—animal and machine—in exuberant motion. Dove to Elizabeth McCausland, Dec. 12,
1934, Dec. 28, 1934, Apr. 17, 1935, Elizabeth McCausland Papers, 2:5:12. 117. Dove to Stieglitz, mid-June 1940 and late Mar. 1941, in Morgan, Dear Stieglitz, Dear Dove, 445, 452. 118. Constance Areson Clark, God—or Gorilla: Images of Evolution in the Jazz Age (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2008), 1–4, ch. 8. Dorothy Rylander Johnson mentions in passing a possible connection between Monkey Fur and the Scopes trial in Arthur Dove: The Years of Collage (43). One might want to compare Monkey Fur to Francis Picabia’s Still Lifes: Portrait of Rembrandt, Portrait of Cézanne, Portrait of Renoir (1920), which features a monkey pinned to a paperboard support surrounded by handwritten text, but the spirit of the two works is decidedly different, and no discernible historical connection exists between the two. Sara Ganz Blythe and Edward D. Powers, Looking at Dada (New York: Museum of Modern Art, 2006), 23. For Darwin and the arts, see Linda Nochlin and Martha Lucy, eds., “The Darwin Effect: Evolution and Nineteenth-Century Visual Culture,” special issue, Nineteenth-Century Art Worldwide, 2/2 (Spring 2003), www.19thc-artworldwide.org; Horst Bredekamp, Darwins Korallen: Frühe Evolutionsmodelle und die Tradition der Naturgeschichte (Berlin: Verlag Klaus Wagenbach, 2005); Donald and Munro, ed., Endless Forms; Barbara Larson and Fae Brauer, eds., The Art of Evolution: Darwin, Darwinisms, and Visual Culture (Hanover, NH: University Press of New England, 2009); Julia Voss, Darwin’s Pictures: Views of Evolutionary Theory, 1837–1874, trans. Lori Lantz (New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 2010); Phillip Prodger, An Annotated Catalogue of the Illustrations of Human and Animal Expression from the Collection of Charles Darwin: An Early Case of the Use of Photography in Scientific Research (Lewiston, NY: Edwin Mellen, 1998); Phillip Prodger, Darwin’s Camera: Art and Photography in the Theory of Evolution (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2009); and DeLue, review essay of Larson and Brauer, Bredekamp, Donald and Munro, and Voss (see above), Art Bulletin 92/4 (December 2010): 386–91. 119. Brown, A Sense of Things, ch. 3. 120. Stephen Christopher Quinn, Windows on Nature: The Great Habitat Dioramas of the American Museum of Natural History (New York: Abrams / American Museum of Natural History, 2006), 8–23; Douglas J. Preston, Dinosaurs in the Attic: An Excursion into the American Museum of Natural History (New York: St. Martin’s Press, 1986); Hugh Davies, Toby Kamps, and Ralph Rugoff, Small World: Dioramas in Contemporary Art (San Diego, CA: Museum of Contemporary Art, 2000); Rachael Z. DeLue, “Art and Science in America,” American Art 23/2 (Summer 2009): 2–9; and Melissa Milgrom, Still Life: Adventures in Taxidermy (Boston: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 2010), 68–89. 121. Stewart, “Death and Life.” In this way, Dove’s attempted reformulation of relationality as mapped out in his paintings, sketches, and assemblages—especially his privileging of the inanimate as a model for the animate and sentient world—might be described as quite unlike other contemporaneous attempts to animate paintings, including attempts to make works of art embody the capacities of a human being, including the efforts of Arthur B. Davies to make his paintings breathe as described recently by Robin Veder. Robin Veder, “Arthur B. Davies’ Inhalation Theory of Art,” American Art 23/1 (Spring 2009): 56–77.
122. Arthur Dove to Duncan Phillips, prob. May 16–18, 1933, in Turner and Weisblat, “Selected Correspondence,” 151. Spyros Papapetros maps this broader context of thinking about animation, animism, and empathy in On the Animation of the Inorganic: Art, Architecture, and the Extension of Life (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2012), characterizing the late nineteenth century as deeply and fondly concerned with a blurring subject-object divide and the early twentieth as increasingly worried about object animation as a potential form of nefarious agency. See also Harry Francis Mallgrave and Eleftherios Ikonomou, introduction to Empathy, Form, and Space: Problems in German Aesthetics, 1873–1893, ed. and trans. Mallgrave and Ikonomou (Santa Monica, CA: Getty Center for the History of Art and the Humanities, 1994), 1–85. 123. Mark A. Meadow, “Quiccheberg and the Copious Object: Wenzel Jamnitzer’s Silver Writing Box,” in Melville, The Lure of the Object, 39–58; Horst Bredekamp, The Lure of Antiquity and the Cult of the Machine, trans. Allison Brown (Princeton, NJ: Markus Wiener Publishers, 1995); Katie Whitaker, “The Culture of Curiosity,” in Cultures of Natural History, ed. N. Jardine, J. A. Secord, and E. C. Spary (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1996), 75–90. 124. Daston, “The Glass Flowers,” in Daston, Things That Talk, 228–31. 125. Dove to Elizabeth McCausland, Aug. 11, 1933, Elizabeth McCausland Papers, 2:5:11. See also the headline clipped from a newspaper inserted by Dove into a letter to McCausland; the headline reads “2 Convicts Shot 5 Fleas,” which Dove annotated with the words “Cat & Dog News” and “Extra.” Dove to Elizabeth McCausland, Jan. 1934, Elizabeth McCausland Papers, 2:5:11. 126. There Was a Cat Somewhere is in the collection of the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York; Face on a Bank is in the collection of the Amon Carter Museum of American Art, in Fort Worth, Texas. 127. Diary entry for Jan. 30, 1926, Dove Papers, 3:1:54. 128. Lewis Mumford, “The Art Galleries: Surprise Party—Wit and Watercolors,” New Yorker, May 5, 1934, 56; Lewis Mumford, “The Art Galleries: The Independent Show,” New Yorker 12, May 2, 1936, 59. One of Thurber’s more well-known cartoons, which depicts the profile of a three- story home morphing into the angry visage of woman who looks with scorn at a diminutive male figure, presumably her husband, as he approaches the front steps, puts one in mind of the abstract shapes that transmute into creaturely profiles in Dove’s Lake Afternoon. A 1935 essay on fantasy in art by E. M. Benson reprinted the Thurber cartoon on the page immediately preceding an illustration of one of Dove’s assemblages, Miss Woolworth (1924). E. M. Benson, “Forms of Art III: Phases of Fantasy,” American Magazine of Art, May 1935, 297, 298. 129. Hound is in a private collection. 130. Elizabeth McCausland, “Dove’s Oils, Water Colors Now at An American Place,” Springfield Sunday Union and Republican, Apr. 22, 1934, 6E; Elizabeth McCausland, “Authentic American Is Arthur Dove,” Springfield Sunday Union and Republican, May 5, 1935, 6E; Edward Alden Jewell, “In the Realm of Art: An April Shower of Exhibitions; Off the ‘Literal’ Trail,” New York Times, Apr. 6, 1941, 9. 131. Brennan, Painting Gender, Constructing Theory, ch.
Notes to Pages 241–246
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3; Paul Lewis, Comic Effects: Interdisciplinary Approaches to Humor in Literature (New York: State University of New York Press, 1989), ch. 2; Jan Bremmer and Herman Roodenburg, eds., A Cultural History of Humour: From Antiquity to the Present Day (Cambridge, MA: Polity Press, 1997); Ted Cohen, Jokes: Philosophical Thoughts on Joking Matters (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1999); Leonard Diepeveen, The Difficulties of Modernism (New York: Routledge, 2003), chs. 3–4. 132. Martha Ward, “Art in the Age of Visual Culture: France in the 1930s,” in Melville, The Lure of the Object, 86–100. 133. Arthur Dove to Helen Torr, Oct. 2, 1936 (postmarked), Dove Papers, 2:1:37. The feathers are included with the letter in the Archives of American Art. 134. For a relevant discussion of animals as generative of alternate models of relationality or temporality, see Ajay Sinha’s contribution to the “Notes from the Field: Time,” ed., Karen Lang, Art Bulletin 95/3 (Sept. 2013): 371–75. 135. Quoted by Lee Krasner, Oral history interview with Lee Krasner, 1964 Nov. 2–1968 Apr. 11, Archives of American Art, Smithsonian Institution, Session One, Nov. 2, 1964; Tina Dickey and Helmut Friedel, Hans Hofmann (New York: Hudson Hills Press, 1998), 82; Gene R. Swenson, “What Is Pop Art? Answers from Eight Painters, Part I: Jim Dine, Robert Indiana, Roy Lichtenstein, Andy Warhol,” Art News, Nov. 1963, 26. According to Krasner, Pollock’s statement was prompted by a question from Hans Hofmann, who asked Pollock whether he worked from nature. Warhol declared his interest in being a machine as a way of explaining his overall motivation as a painter and, more generally, his sense of the state of painting in the postwar period. 136. Helen Molesworth’s exhibition Part Object, Part Sculpture offered an incisive dismantling of analogous interpretive categories in the postwar period, one that has shaped my thinking about Dove. Helen Molesworth, Part Object, Part Sculpture (Columbus, OH: Wexner Center for the Arts / Ohio State University; University Park: Pennsylvania State University Press, 2005). See also Kate Nesin, Cy Twombly’s Things (New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 2014), for a relevant reconsideration of postwar sculpture and, in particular, questions of medium, intermedia, and materiality. Jo Applin, Eccentric Objects: Rethinking Sculpture in 1960s America (New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 2012), characterizes the revision of the fundamental precepts of sculpture that occurred in the 1960s with artists like Lee Bontecou, Claes Oldenburg, and H. C. Westermann. Potts, The Sculptural Imagination, chs. 5–9, offers a thorough account of the questions and problems that drove sculptural practice and theory during the postwar period. 137. Red Barge was acquired by Duncan Phillips in 1933, and Phillips purchased Sand Barge in 1931. Both works are in The Phillips Collection.
Epilogue 1. Martha Candler Cheney to Dove, Jan. 8, 1938, Arthur and Helen Torr Dove Papers, 1905–1974, Archives of American Art, Smithsonian Institution, 2:1:9 (hereafter cited as Dove Papers). 2. “Arthur Dove and Helen Torr: An American Place,” Art News, Mar. 25, 1933, 5.
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3. James Joyce, Ulysses, ed. Hans Walter Gabler (New York: Vintage, 1984), 93. My thanks go to the unidentified audience member who drew my attention to this passage on the occasion of my lecture, “Arthur Dove Paints the Weather,” at the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, April 14, 2010. 4. Arthur Dove, unpublished note, quoted in Frederick S. Wight, Arthur G. Dove (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1958), 58. 5. Arthur Dove, undated typewritten essay, Dove Papers, 3:3:3. 6. For a recent exception to this rule, and for an interpretation of O’Keeffe that resonates with my own claims about Dove and communication (and that also considers technologies such as flight and telephony), see Alexander Nemerov, “The Madness of Art: Georgia O’Keeffe and Virginia Woolf,” Art History 34/4 (Sept. 2011): 818–37. See also Kathleen Pyne’s Modernism and the Feminine Voice: O’Keeffe and the Women of the Stieglitz Circle (Berkeley: University of California Press, 2007), which brings to light the broader artistic context of Stieglitz’s promotion of O’Keeffe; DeLue, “Against the Circle,” in Inventing Abstraction, 1910–1925: How a Radical Idea Changed Modern Art, ed. Leah Dickerman (New York: Museum of Modern Art, 2012), 188–90; and Alan Braddock’s unpublished manuscript “Gun Vision: The Ballistic Imagination in American Art,” which includes a chapter on O’Keeffe and the First World War. 7. Paul Rosenfeld, Port of New York: Essays on Fourteen American Moderns (1924; Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 1961), 201, 202, 203.
Selected Bibliography
Archival Collections Arthur and Helen Torr Dove Papers, 1905–1974. Archives of American Art, Smith sonian Institution, Washington, DC. Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library, Yale University, New Haven, CT. Elizabeth McCausland Papers, 1838–1965, bulk 1920–1960. Archives of American Art, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, DC. Geneva Historical Society, Geneva, NY. Graphic Arts Collection, Firestone Library, Princeton University, Princeton, NJ. Heckscher Museum Permanent Collection and Newsday Center for Dove/Torr Studies, Heckscher Museum of Art, Huntington, NY. New York Public Library, New York, NY. The Phillips Collection, Library and Archives, Washington, DC. Suzanne Mullett Smith Papers, Archives of American Art, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, DC.
Selected Exhibition Catalogs and Brochures (in Chronological Order) Catalogue des ouvrages. Paris: Grand Palais des Champs-Elysées / Société du Salon d’automne / Librarie Administrative Paul Dupont, Oct. 1–Nov. 8, 1908. Catalogue des ouvrages. Paris: Grand Palais des Champs-Elysées / Société du Salon d’automne / Société Anonyme d l’Imprimerie Kugelmann, Oct. 1–Nov. 8, 1909. Arthur G. Dove. Geneva, NY: Hobart College, Oct. 7–9, 1909. Exhibition: Contemporary Art. New York: National Arts Club, Feb. 5–Mar. 7, 1914. The Forum Exhibition of Modern American Painters. New York: The Anderson Galleries, Mar. 13–25, 1916. Catalogue of the First Annual Exhibition of the Society of Independent Artists. New York: The Society / William Edwin Rudge, Apr. 10–May 6, 1917. Alfred Stieglitz Presents Seven Americans. New York: The Anderson Galleries, Mar. 9–28, 1925.
287
Exhibition of Paintings by Eleven Americans. Washington, DC: Phillips Memorial Gallery, Feb. 1–28, 1926. Dreier, Katherine S. International Exhibition of Modern Art, Assembled by the Société Anonyme. New York: Société Anonyme / Brooklyn Museum, Nov. 19, 1926–Jan. 1, 1927. Arthur G. Dove: Paintings, 1927. New York: The Intimate Gallery, Dec. 12, 1927–Jan. 11, 1928. Dove Exhibition: List of Paintings and Some Notes by Arthur G. Dove. New York: The Intimate Gallery, Apr. 9–28, 1929. Arthur G. Dove: 27 New Paintings. New York: An American Place, Mar. 22–Apr. 22, 1930. First Exhibitions. Washington, DC: Phillips Memorial Gallery, Oct. 5, 1930–Jan. 25, 1931. Painting and Sculpture by Living Americans. New York: Museum of Modern Art, Dec. 2, 1930–Jan. 20, 1931. Second Exhibitions. Washington, DC: Phillips Memorial Gallery, Feb.–June 1931. Arthur G. Dove: 27 New Paintings, Abstractions, Landscapes & Etc. & Etc. & Etc. New York: An American Place, Mar. 9–Apr. 4, 1931. Phillips Memorial Gallery: Exhibitions. Washington, DC: Phillips Memorial Gallery, Feb.–June 1932. Arthur G. Dove: New Paintings (1931–1932). New York: An American Place, Mar. 14–Apr. 9, 1932. First Biennial Exhibition of Contemporary American Painting. New York: Whitney Museum of American Art, Nov. 22, 1932–Jan. 5, 1933. Arthur G. Dove: New and Old Paintings, 1912–1934. New York: An American Place, Apr. 17–June 1, 1934. Harshe, Robert B. A Century of Progress: Exhibition of Paintings and Sculpture. Chicago, IL: Art Institute of Chicago, June 1–Nov. 1, 1934. Second Biennial Exhibition of Contemporary American Painting. New York: Whitney Museum of American Art, Nov. 27, 1934–Jan. 10, 1935. Abstract Painting in America. New York: Whitney Museum of American Art, Feb. 12–Mar. 22, 1935. Arthur G. Dove: Exhibition of Paintings (1934–1935). New York: An American Place, Apr. 21–May 22, 1935. New Paintings by Arthur Dove. New York: An American Place, Apr. 20–May 20, 1936. Third Biennial Exhibition of Contemporary American Paintings. New York: Whitney Museum of American Art, Nov. 10– Dec. 10, 1936. Barr, Alfred H. Fantastic Art, Dada, Surrealism. New York: Museum of Modern Art, Dec. 7, 1936–Jan. 17, 1937. Arthur G. Dove: New Oils and Water Colors. New York: An American Place, Mar. 23–Apr. 16, 1937. Retrospective Exhibition of Works in Various Media by Arthur G. Dove. Washington, DC: Phillips Memorial Gallery, Mar. 23–Apr. 18, 1937. Arthur G. Dove, Exhibition of Recent Paintings, 1938. New York: An American Place, Mar. 29–May 10, 1938. Trois Siècles d’Art aux États-Unis. New York: Museum of Modern Art; Paris: Musée du Jeu de Paume, May 24–July 31, 1938. Arthur G. Dove: Exhibition of Oils and Temperas. New York: An American Place, Apr. 10–May 17, 1939. Arthur G. Dove: Exhibition of New Oils and Water-Colors. New York: An American Place, Mar. 30–May 14, 1940.
288
Selected Bibliography
Exhibition of New Arthur G. Dove Paintings. New York: An American Place, Mar. 27–May 17, 1941. Arthur G. Dove: Exhibition of Recent Paintings (1941–1942). New York: An American Place, Apr. 14–May 27, 1942. Arthur G. Dove: Paintings, 1942–1943. New York: An American Place, Feb. 11–Mar. 17, 1943. Arthur G. Dove: Paintings, 1944. New York: An American Place, Mar. 21–May 21, 1944. Advance Trends in Contemporary American Art. Detroit, MI: Detroit Institute of Arts, Apr. 4–30, 1944. Arthur G. Dove: Paintings, 1922–1944. New York: An American Place, May 3–June 15, 1945. Recent Paintings (1946): Arthur Dove. New York: An American Place, May 4–June 4, 1946.
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Chamberlin, Joseph E. “Pattern-Paintings by A. G. Dove.” Evening Mail, Mar. 2, 1912, 8. Chambers, George F. Astronomy. New York: D. Van Nostrand, 1913. Cheney, Martha Candler. Modern Art in America. New York: Whittlesey House and McGraw-Hill, 1939. Cheney, Sheldon. A Primer of Modern Art. New York: Boni and Liveright, 1924. Cook, Charles Emerson. “Pictures by Telegraph.” Pearson’s Magazine, Apr. 1900, 345–48. de Zayas, Marius. “Caricature: Absolute and Relative.” Camera Work 46 (Apr. 1914): 19–21. ———. How, When, and Why Modern Art Came to New York. Edited by Francis M. Naumann. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 1996. Doerner, Max. The Materials of the Artist and Their Use in Painting, with Notes on the Techniques of the Old Masters. Translated by Eugen Neuhaus. New York: Harcourt, Brace, 1934. Originally published in German as Malmaterial und seine Verwendung im Bilde (Munich: F. Schmidt, 1921). Dove, Arthur. “A Different One.” In America and Alfred Stieglitz: A Collective Portrait, edited by Waldo Frank, Lewis Mumford, Dorothy Norman, Paul Rosenfeld, and Harold Rugg, 243. New York: Doubleday, Doran, 1934. ———. “An Idea.” In Arthur G. Dove: Paintings, 1927, n.p. New York: The Intimate Gallery, Dec. 12, 1927–Jan. 11, 1928. ———. “Some Notes by Arthur Dove.” In Dove Exhibition: List of Paintings and Some Notes by Arthur G. Dove, n.p. New York: The Intimate Gallery, Apr. 9–28, 1929. ———. “291.” Camera Work 47 ( July 1914): 37. ———. “A Way to Look at Things.” In Alfred Stieglitz Presents Seven Americans, 4. New York: The Anderson Galleries, Mar. 9–28, 1925. ———. “What Does Photography Mean to Me?” MSS, December 1922, 9. Dunwoody, H. H. C. Weather Proverbs. Signal Service Notes, no. 9. Washington, DC: Government Printing Office, 1883. Eastman, Max. “The Tendency toward Pure Poetry.” Harper’s Monthly Magazine, July 1929, 222–30. Eddy, Arthur Jerome. Cubists and Post-Impressionism. Chicago: McClurg, 1914. Frank, Waldo. “The Art of Arthur Dove.” New Republic, Jan. 27, 1926, 269–70. ———. In the American Jungle. New York: Farrar and Rinehart, 1937. Frank, Waldo, Lewis Mumford, Dorothy Norman, Paul Rosenfeld, and Harold Rugg, eds. America and Alfred Stieglitz: A Collective Portrait. New York: Doubleday, Doran, 1934. Grafly, Charles. “Art and Artists Pass in Review.” Philadelphia Inquirer, Oct. 17, 1915, 8. Graham, Andrew J. Handbook of Standard or American Phonography. Rev. ed. New York: Andrew J. Graham, 1894. First published in 1858. Gregg, John Robert. Gregg Shorthand: Light-Line Phonography for the Million. Anniv. ed. New York: Gregg, 1929. Hapgood, Hutchins. “The Live Line.” Globe and Commercial Advertiser, Mar. 8, 1913, 1. ———. “The Trend of the Time.” Globe and Commercial Advertiser, Mar. 12, 1912, 4.
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“Local News.” New York Evening Post, Jan. 19, 1942, 3. Longstreth, T. Morris. Reading the Weather. New York: Macmillan, 1920. Luckiesh, M. The Book of the Sky: A Résumé of Personal Experience and Observation. New York: E. P. Dutton, 1922. Lyman, Robert Hunt, ed. The World Almanac and Book of Facts for 1924. New York: New York World, 1924. Martin, Edwin C. Our Own Weather: A Simple Account of Its Curious Forms, Its Wide Travels, and Its Notable Effects. New York: Harper & Brothers, 1913. Mayer, Ralph. The Artists Handbook of Materials and Techniques. New York: Viking, 1940. McAdie, Alexander. Man and Weather. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1926. McBride, James. Symmes’ Theory of Concentric Spheres. Cincinnati, OH: Morgan, Lodge & Fisher, 1826. McCausland, Elizabeth. “Arthur G. Dove’s Showing of Oils and Water Colors.” Springfield Daily Republican, Mar. 28, 1937, 6E. ———. “Authentic American Is Arthur Dove.” Springfield Sunday Union and Republican, May 5, 1935, 6E. ———. “Dove: Man and Painter.” Parnassus 9/7 (Dec. 1937): 3–6. ———. “Dove Retrospective at An American Place.” Springfield Sunday Union and Republican, Apr. 2, 1939, 6E. ———. “Dove’s Oils, Water Colors Now at An American Place.” Springfield Sunday Union and Republican, Apr. 22, 1934, 6E. Moore, Willis Luther. Descriptive Meteorology. New York: D. Appleton, 1910. ———. Moore’s Meteorological Almanac and Weather Guide, 1901. Chicago: Rand, McNally, 1900. Mumford, Lewis. “The Art Galleries: Surprise Party—Wit and Watercolors.” New Yorker, May 5, 1934, 56–58. ———. “The Art Galleries: The Independent Show.” New Yorker, May 2, 1936, 59–61. “New Method of Transmitting Pictures by Telegraph.” San Francisco Call, July 31, 1898, 25. “News and Notes of the Art World.” New York Times, Mar. 3, 1912, 15. “New York by Cubist Is Very Confusing.” New York Sun, Mar. 18, 1913, 9. Ostwald, Wilhelm. Letters to a Painter on the Theory and Practice of Painting. Boston: Ginn, 1907. Pemberton, Murdock. “The Art Galleries.” New Yorker, Dec. 24, 1927, 57–58. ———. “The Art Galleries.” New Yorker, Apr. 20, 1929, 106–10. ———. “The Art Galleries.” New Yorker, Apr. 5, 1930, 93–94. Pitman, Sir Isaac. A Manual of Phonography, or, Writing by Sound. London: S. Bagster and Sons, 1845. Poe, Edgar Allan. The Narrative of Arthur Gordon Pym of Nantucket, and Related Tales. Edited by J. Gerald Kennedy. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1994. Pound, Ezra. ABC of Reading. New York: New Directions, 1934. ———. Literary Essays of Ezra Pound. Edited by T. S. Eliot. London: Faber and Faber, 1954. Price, Edmund W. The Essence of Astronomy: Things Everyone Should Know about the Sun, Moon, and Stars. New York: G. P. Putnam’s Sons, 1914.
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Richardson, Lewis Fry. Weather Prediction by Numerical Process. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1922. Riley, Maude. “Latest Doves Make Strong Impression.” Art Digest, June 1, 1945, 14. Rosenfeld, Paul. By Way of Art. New York: Coward McCann, 1928. ———. Port of New York: Essays on Fourteen American Moderns. 1924. Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 1961. ———. “The World of Arthur Dove.” Creative Art 10/6 ( June 1932): 426–30. Rosenfeld, Paul [Peter Minuit, pseud.]. “291 Fifth Avenue.” Seven Arts, Nov. 1916, 61–65. Rosten, Leo [Leonard Q. Ross]. The Education of H * Y * M * A * N K * A * P * L * A * N. New York: Harcourt Brace, 1937. Rotch, A. Lawrence. Sounding the Ocean of Air. New York: E. and J. B. Young, 1900. Sayre, Anne H. “New Exhibitions of the Week: Arthur G. Dove Seeks Cosmic Rhythms.” Art News, May 9, 1936, 8. Seaborn, Adam [ John Cleves Symmes Jr.]. Symzonia: A Voyage of Discovery. 1820. Gainesville, FL: Scholars’ Facsimiles & Reprints, 1965. Seligmann, Herbert J. Alfred Stieglitz Talking: Notes on Some of His Conversations, 1925–1931. New Haven, CT: Yale University Library, 1966. Stein, Gertrude. “Composition as Explanation.” Dial, Oct. 1926, 327–36. ———. “A Long Gay Book.” Dial, Sept. 1927, 231–36. ———. The Making of Americans: The Hersland Family. New York: Harcourt, Brace, 1934. ———. Tender Buttons: Objects, Food, Rooms. Mineola, NY: Dover Publications, 1997. Stein, Leo. The A-B-C of Aesthetics. New York: Boni & Live right, 1927. Stieglitz, Alfred. “How I Came to Photograph Clouds.” Amateur Photographer and Photography 56/1819 (1923): 255. ———. “The Origin of the Photo-Secession and How It Became 291.” Twice-A-Year 8–9 (Spring/Summer, Fall/ Winter, 1942): 114–27. Strand, Paul. “Alfred Stieglitz and a Machine” MSS, Mar. 1922, 6–7. First published privately in Feb. 1921 in New York. ———. “Photography.” Camera Work 49/50 ( June 1917): 3–4. Talman, Charles Fitzhugh. The Realm of the Air: A Book about Weather. Indianapolis, IN: Bobbs-Merrill, 1931. Taylor, Bert Leston. “A Line O’ Type or Two.” Chicago Daily Tribune, Mar. 21, 1920, 8. ———. “A Line-O’-Type or Two: Lines Written after Viewing Mr. Arthur Dove’s Exposition of the ‘Simultaneousness of the Ambient.’ ” Chicago Daily Tribune, Mar. 25, 1912, 10. ———. “A Line-O’-Type or Two: Post-Impressionism.” Chicago Daily Tribune, Nov. 5, 1912, 6. ———. “A Line-O’-Type or Two: The Brooding Dove.” Chicago Daily Tribune, Mar. 24, 1915, 6. Taylor, Frederick Winslow. The Principles of Scientific Management. New York: Harper & Brothers, 1913. Originally published in 1911. “Theosophy School.” Theosophy 14/12 (Oct. 1926): 562–63. Toch, Maximilian. Materials for Permanent Painting. New York: D. Van Nostrand, 1911.
Todd, David Peck. Astronomy: The Science of the Heavenly Bodies. New York: Harper & Brothers, 1922. Verne, Jules. Journey to the Centre of the Earth. 1864. Translated by Frank Wynne. Edited by Peter Cogman. London: Penguin Books, 2009. Warren, Richard F. Reading the Weather. New York: Macmillan, 1920. Weber, Max. “The Fourth Dimension from a Plastic Point of View.” Camera Work 31 ( July 1910): 25. Webster, H. Effa. “Artist Paints Rhythms of Color: Works Are Most Strange and Confusing; Need No Titles.” Chicago Examiner, Mar. 15, 1912, 5. Whatham, Richard. Meteorology for Aviator and Layman. New York: Frederick A. Stokes, 1930. “Which Animals Resemble One Another Most? Rabbit and Duck.” Harper’s Weekly, Nov. 19, 1892, 1114. Williams, William Carlos. The Collected Poems of William Carlos Williams. Vol. 1, 1909–1939. Edited by A. Walton Litz and Christopher MacGowan. New York: New Directions, 1986. Wilson, Edmund. “Opéra Comique.” New Republic, Jan. 20, 1926, 240–41. Wright, Willard Huntington. “The Forum Exhibition.” Forum, Apr. 1916, 457–71. ———. Modern Painting: Its Tendency and Meaning. New York: John Lane, 1915. Wright, Willard Huntington [S. S. Van Dine, pseud.]. The Bishop Murder Case. Middlesex, UK: Echo Library, 2006. Originally published in 1929.
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Armstrong, Carol. Scenes in a Library: Reading the Photograph in the Book, 1843–1875. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 1998. Arnar, Anna Sigrídur. The Book as Instrument: Stéphane Mallarmé, the Artist’s Book, and the Transformation of Print Culture. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2011. Arnheim, Rudolf. Radio: An Art of Sound. Translated by Margaret Ludwig and Herbert Read. Salem, NH: Ayer, 1986. Bachelard, Gaston. Water and Dreams: An Essay on the Imagination of Matter. Translated by Edith R. Farrell. Dallas, TX: Dallas Institute of Humanities and Culture / The Pegasus Foundation, 1999. Bailey, Craig R. “The Art of Marius de Zayas.” Arts Magazine, Sept. 1978, 136–44. Baird, Davis. Thing Knowledge: A Philosophy of Scientific Instruments. Berkeley: University of California Press, 2004. Baker, George. The Artwork Caught by the Tail: Francis Picabia and Dada. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 2007. Baker, James. “Prometheus in America: The Significance of the World Premiere of Scriabin’s Poem of Fire as Color- Music, New York, 20 March 1915.” In Over Here: Modernism, The First Exile 1914–1919, 90–109. Providence, RI: David Winton Bell Gallery / Brown University, 1989. Baker, Mona, and Babriela Saldanha, eds. Routledge Encyclopedia of Translation Studies. 2nd ed. London: Routledge, 2009. Balken, Debra Bricker. Arthur Dove: A Retrospective. Andover, MA: Addison Gallery of American Art; Washington, DC: The Phillips Collection; Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 1997. ———. Arthur Dove: Watercolors. New York: Alexandre Gallery, 2006. ———. Debating American Modernism: Stieglitz, Duchamp, and the New York Avant-Garde. New York: American Federation of Arts, 2003. ———. Dove/O’Keeffe: Circles of Influence. Williamstown, MA: Sterling and Francine Clark Art Institute, 2009. Barr, Alfred H. Cubism and Abstract Art. New York: Museum of Modern Art, 1936. ———. Fantastic Art, Dada, Surrealism. 3rd ed. New York: Museum of Modern Art, 1947. Barthes, Roland. Image/Music/Text. Translated by Stephen Heath. New York: Hill and Wang, 1977. Beer, Gillian. Open Fields: Science in Cultural Encounter. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1996. Belting, Hans. An Anthropology of Images: Picture, Medium, Body. Translated by Thomas Dunlap. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 2011. Bender, John, and Michael Marrinan. The Culture of Diagram. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 2010. Benjamin, Walter. Illuminations: Walter Benjamin. Edited by Hannah Arendt. Translated by Harry Zohn. New York: Schocken Books, 2007. Bergson, Henri. An Introduction to Metaphysics. Translated by T. E. Hulme. Edited by John Mullarkey and Michael Kolkman. New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2007. Berman, Avis. “The Quiet Man of American Modernism.” Smithsonian Magazine, Nov. 1997, 122–32. Bielstein, Susan M. Permissions: A Survival Guide. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2006. Bishop, Claire. “Antagonism and Relational Aesthetics.” October 110 (Fall 2004): 51–79.
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Brown, Bill. A Sense of Things: The Object Matter of American Literature. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2003. ———, ed. Things. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2004. Brückner, Martin. The Geographic Revolution in Early America: Maps, Literacy, and National Identity. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 2006. Burns, Eric. Invasion of the Mind Snatchers: Television’s Conquest of America in the Fifties. Philadelphia: Temple University Press, 2010. Burns, Russell W. Communications: An International History of the Formative Years. London: Institution of Engineering and Technology, 2004. Buskirk, Martha, and Mignon Nixon, eds. The Duchamp Effect. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 1996. Bynum, W. F., and Roy Porter. Medicine and the Five Senses. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1993. Cadava, Eduardo. Emerson and the Climates of History. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 1997. Calarco, Matthew. Zoographies: The Question of the Animal from Heidegger to Derrida. New York: Columbia University Press, 2008. Campbell, Lawrence. “Dove: Delicate Innovator.” Art News, Oct. 1958, 57–58. Campen, Crétien van. The Hidden Sense: Synesthesia in Art and Science. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 2008. Cardinal, Serge. “Radiophonic Performance and Abstract Machines: Recasting Arnheim’s Art of Sound.” Liminalities 3/3 (Nov. 2007): 1–23. Carr, David. Interpreting Husserl: Critical and Comparative Studies. Dordrecht, Neth.: M. Nijhoff, 1987. Cassidy, Donna M. “Arthur Dove’s Music Paintings of the Jazz Age.” American Art Journal 20/1 (1988): 5–23. ———. Painting the Musical City: Jazz and Cultural Identity in American Art, 1910–1940. Washington, DC: Smithsonian Institution Press, 1997. Chanan, Michael. Repeated Takes: A Short History of Recording and Its Effects on Music. London: Verso, 1995. Chave, Anna C. “O’Keeffe and the Masculine Gaze.” Art in America 78 ( Jan. 1990): 114–24. Clark, Constance Areson. God—or Gorilla: Images of Evolution in the Jazz Age. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2008. Clark, T. J. Picasso and Truth. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 2013. Clark, William. “On the Ministerial Archive of Academic Acts.” Science in Context 9 (1996): 421–86. Clarke, Bruce. “Dora Marsden and Ezra Pound: ‘The New Freewoman’ and ‘The Serious Artist.’ ” Contemporary Literature 33/1 (Spring 1992): 91–112. Clarke, Bruce, and Linda Dalrymple Henderson, eds. From Energy to Information: Representation in Science and Technology, Art, and Literature. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 2002. Cogdell, Christina. Eugenic Design: Streamlining America in the 1930s. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 2004. Cohen, Ted. Jokes: Philosophical Thoughts on Joking Matters. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1999. Cohn, Sherrye. Arthur Dove: Nature as Symbol. 1982. Ann Arbor, MI: UMI Research Press, 1985.
———. “Arthur Dove and Theosophy: Visions of a Transcendental Reality.” Arts Magazine, Sept. 1983, 86–91. ———. “The Image and the Imagination of Space in the Art of Arthur Dove, Part I: Dove’s ‘Force Lines, Growth Lines’ as Emblems of Energy.” Arts Magazine, Dec. 1983, 90–93. ———. “The Image and the Imagination of Space in the Art of Arthur Dove, Part II: Dove and ‘The Fourth Dimension.’” Arts Magazine, Jan. 1984, 121–25. Collier, Peter, and Robert Lethbridge, eds. Artistic Relations: Literature and the Visual Arts in Nineteenth-Century France. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 1994. Connor, Celeste. Democratic Visions: Art and Theory of the Stieglitz Circle, 1924–1934. Berkeley: University of California Press, 2001. Cooke, Lynne, and Peter Wollen, eds. Visual Display: Culture beyond Appearances. New York: New Press, 1998. Cooke, Roger. The History of Mathematics: A Brief Course. New York: Wiley, 1997. Cooper, Harry. “Arthur Dove Paints a Record.” Source Notes in the History of Art 24/2 (Winter 2005): 70–77. ———. “Speak, Painting: Word and Device in Early Johns.” October 127 (Winter 2009): 49–76. Corbin, Alain. The Lure of the Sea: The Discovery of the Seaside in the Western World, 1750–1840. Translated by Jocelyn Phelps. Cambridge: Polity, 1994. Corn, Wanda M. The Great American Thing: Modern Art and National Identity, 1915–1935. Berkeley: University of California Press, 2000. Corn, Wanda M., and Tirza True Latimer. Seeing Gertrude Stein: Five Stories. Berkeley: University of California Press, 2011. Corwin, Sharon. “Picturing Efficiency: Precisionism, Scientific Management, and the Effacement of Labor.” Representations 84 (Autumn 2003): 139–65. Cosgrove, Denis. Geography and Vision: Seeing, Imagining and Representing the World. London: I. B. Tauris, 2008. ———, ed. Mappings. London: Reaktion Books, 1999. Cox, Christoph, and Daniel Warner, eds. Audio Culture: Readings in Modern Music. New York: Continuum, 2004. Cronan, Todd. “Merleau-Ponty, Santayana, and the Paradoxes of Animal Faith.” British Journal for the History of Philosophy 18/3 (2010): 487–506. Crowe, Michael J. Theories of the World from Antiquity to the Copernican Revolution. 2nd rev. ed. Mineola, NY: Dover Publications, 2001. Curry, Kathy, and Esther Adler. American Modern: Hopper to O’Keeffe. New York: Museum of Modern Art, 2013. Damisch, Hubert. The Judgment of Paris. Translated by John Goodman. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1996. ———. A Theory of /Cloud/: Toward a History of Painting. Translated by Janet Lloyd. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 2002. Daston, Lorraine, ed. Things That Talk: Object Lessons from Art and Science. New York: Zone Books, 2004. Daston, Lorraine, and Gregg Mitman, eds. Thinking with Animals: New Perspectives on Anthropomorphism. New York: Columbia University Press, 2005. Davenport, Guy. Objects on a Table: Harmonious Disarray in Art and Literature. Washington, DC: Counterpoint, 1998.
Davidson, Abraham A. Early American Modernist Painting, 1910–1935. New York: Harper and Row, 1981. Davies, Hugh, Toby Kamps, and Ralph Rugoff. Small World: Dioramas in Contemporary Art. San Diego, CA: Museum of Contemporary Art, 2000. Davis, W. Bowdoin. Duchamp: Domestic Patterns, Covers, and Threads. New York: Midmarch Arts Press, 2002. Dayan, Peter. Art as Music, Music as Poetry, Poetry as Art, from Whistler to Stravinsky and Beyond. Burlington, VT: Ashgate, 2011. De Duve, Thierry. Pictorial Nominalism: On Marcel Duchamp’s Passage from Painting to the Readymade. Translated by Dana Polan. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1991. Deepwell, Katy, ed. Women Artists and Modernism. Manchester, UK: Manchester University Press, 1998. Deleuze, Gilles, and Félix Guattari. A Thousand Plateaus. Translated by Brian Massumi. Minneapolis, MN: University of Minnesota Press, 1987. DeLue, Rachael Z. “Art and Science in America.” American Art 23/2 (Summer 2009): 2–9. ———. “Arthur Dove, Painting, and Phonography.” History and Technology 27/1 (Mar. 2011): 113–21. ———. “Diagnosing Pictures: Sadakichi Hartmann and the Science of Seeing, circa 1900.” American Art 21 (Summer 2007): 42–69. de Mille, Charlotte, ed. Music and Modernism, c. 1849–1950. Newcastle upon Tyne, UK: Cambridge Scholars, 2011. DePietro, Anne Cohen. Arthur Dove and Helen Torr: The Huntington Years. Huntington, NY: Heckscher Museum of Art, 1989. ———. Out of the Shadows: Helen Torr, A Retrospective. Huntington, NY: Heckscher Museum of Art, 2003. Derrida, Jacques. “The Animal That Therefore I Am (More to Follow).” Critical Inquiry 28/2 (Winter 2002): 369–418. ———. The Animal That Therefore I Am. Edited by Marie- Louise Mallet. Translated by David Wills. New York: Fordham University Press, 2008. Dickerman, Leah. Dada: Zurich, Berlin, Hannover, Cologne, New York, Paris. Washington, DC: National Gallery of Art, 2005. ———, ed. Inventing Abstraction, 1910–1925: How a Radical Idea Changed Modern Art. New York: Museum of Modern Art, 2012. Dickey, Tina, and Helmut Friedel. Hans Hofmann. New York: Hudson Hills Press, 1998. Didi-Huberman, Georges. Confronting Images: Questioning the Ends of a Certain History of Art. Translated by John Goodman. University Park: Pennsylvania State University Press, 2005. Diepeveen, Leonard. The Difficulties of Modernism. New York: Routledge, 2003. Dillon, Diane, and Christopher Reed. “Looking and Difference in the Abstract Portraits of Charles Demuth and Duncan Grant.” Yale Journal of Criticism 11/1 (1998): 39–51. Di Palma, Vittoria. “Blurs, Blots, and Clouds: Architecture and the Dissolution of the Surface.” AA Files 54 (Summer 2006): 34–45. Doherty, Brigid. “See: We Are All Neurasthenics! Or, The Trauma of Dada Montage.” Critical Inquiry 24 (Autumn 1997): 82–132.
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Donald, Diana, and Jane Munro, eds. Endless Forms: Charles Darwin, Natural Science, and the Visual Arts. Cambridge, UK: Fitzwilliam Museum; New Haven, CT: Yale Center for British Art; New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 2009. Dorrian, Mark, and Frédéric Pousin, eds. Seeing from Above: The Aerial View in Visual Culture. London: I. B. Tauris, 2013. Doty, Robert. “The Articulation of American Abstraction.” Arts Magazine, Nov. 1973, 47–49. Douglas, Susan. Listening In: Radio and the American Imagination. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 2004. Drohojowska-Philp, Hunter. Full Bloom: The Art and Life of Georgia O’Keeffe. New York: Norton, 2004. Dudley, Sandra H., Amy Jane Barnes, Jennifer Binnie, Julia Petrov, and Jennifer Walklate. Narrating Objects, Collecting Stories. London: Routledge, 2012. Dunn, J. “Intersubjectivity in Psychoanalysis: A Critical Review.” International Journal of Psychoanalysis 76/4 (Aug. 1995): 723–38. Dupree, Mary Herron. “ ‘Jazz,’ The Critics, and American Art Music in the 1920s.” American Music 4/3 (Autumn 1986): 287–301. Dydo, Ulla E., ed. A Stein Reader. 1993. Reprint, Evanston, IL: Northwestern University Press, 2003. Dydo, Ulla E., with William Rice. Gertrude Stein: The Language That Rises, 1923–1934. Evanston, IL: Northwestern University Press, 2003. Eburne, Jonathan P. Surrealism and the Art of Crime. New York: Cornell University Press, 2008. Eco, Umberto. The Infinity of Lists. Translated by Alastair McEwen. New York: Rizzoli, 2009. Edgerton, Gary R. The Columbia History of American Television. New York: Columbia University Press, 2007. Edwards, Brent Hayes. “Louis Armstrong and the Syntax of Scat.” Critical Inquiry 28/3 (Spring 2002): 618–49. Egan, Susan Chan. “Painting Signs: Demuth’s Portrait of Charles Duncan.” American Art 22/3 (Fall 2008): 90–101. Eldredge, Charles C. Reflections on Nature: Small Paintings by Arthur Dove, 1942–1943. New York: American Federation of Arts, 1997. Elkins, James. The Object Stares Back: On the Nature of Seeing. New York: Harcourt Brace, 1996. ———. Six Stories from the End of Representation: Images in Painting, Photography, Astronomy, Microscopy, Particle Physics, and Quantum Mechanics, 1980–2000. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 2008. Ellenbogen, Josh. Reasoned and Unreasoned Images: Bertillon, Galton, Marey. University Park: Pennsylvania State University Press, 2012. Ellenbogen, Josh, and Aaron Tugendhaft, eds. Idol Anxiety. Palo Alto, CA: Stanford University Press, 2011. Erlmann, Veit, ed. Hearing Cultures: Essays on Sound, Listening, and Modernity. Oxford: Berg, 2004. Fer, Briony. On Abstract Art. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 1997. Fillin-Yeh, Susan. “Dandies, Marginality, and Modernism: Georgia O’Keeffe, Marcel Duchamp, and Other Cross- Dressers.” Oxford Art Journal 18/2 (1995): 33–44. ———. “Innovative Moderns: Arthur G. Dove and Georgia O’Keeffe.” Arts Magazine, June 1982, 68–72.
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Index
Abbott, Bernice, 258n15 A-B-C of Aesthetics, The (Stein), 215 ABC of Reading (Pound), 222 ABC of Relativity, The (Russell), 22 Abstract Expressionism, 4, 129 “Abstraction” (Dove), 76 actor-network theory, 6–7, 256n11 Adorno, Theodor, 162 Africa, 138 After the Storm, Silver and Green (Vault Sky) (ca. 1923) (Dove), 100, 105 Agee, William C., 255n1 agency, 8, 217 Agricultural Experiment Station, 118 Aisen, Maurice, 98 Akeley, Carl, 244 Alfie’s Delight (1929) (Dove), 232 Alfred Stieglitz (1923) (Dove), 194, 220 Alien Phenomenology (Bogost), 218 almanacs, 121–22, 124–25 America and Alfred Stieglitz: A Collective Portrait (Frank et al.), 30, 98 American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU), 243 American Communist Party, 98 American modernism, 4 American Museum of Natural History, 244–45
303
Amon Carter Museum of American Art, 255n3, 277n9 An American Place, 85, 108, 133, 173, 187, 232, 246, 275n106, 277n9 Anderson, Katharine, 117, 121–22 Anderson, Margaret, 270–71n150 Anderson, Sherwood, 3, 8, 98 Anderson Galleries, 3, 57, 192, 231, 274n6 Andrews, E. C., 51–52, 68, 72, 89–91, 115 Another Arrangement (1944) (Dove), 45, 96, 273n59 anthropology, and embrace of materialism, 244 Appadurai, Arjun, 215 Archives of American Art, 24, 270n139, 286n133 Aristotle, 142 Armory Show (1913), 257n2, 277–78n21 Armstrong, Louis, 182–84, 189 Arnheim, Rudolf, 174 Arp, Jean (Hans), 28, 284n109 Art and Agency: An Anthropological Theory (Gell), 215 Art as Experience, 98 Art Institute of Chicago, 261n69, 284n108 Artists and Models (film), 182 Art of Assemblage, The (exhibition), 214 assemblages, 145–46, 156, 164–65,
assemblages (continued) 191–92, 196–97, 199, 206, 217, 233, 240, 251, 254; agency, as form of, 203; animals in, 234; biographical meaning of, 193; curiosity cabinet (Kunstkammer) effect, 245; as defined, 276n1; as diagrams, 234; as diary-like, 194, 214; everyday quality of, 214; gathering effect of, 231; human and nonhuman, collaboration between, 219–20; immobilizing effects of, 204; and intersubjectivity, 203; list-like structure of, 213; metal-based pigments in, 221; precedents of, 195; reality, transposition of, 205; repurposed material for, 218; and substitution, 39; taxonomy, evoking of, 244; as “things,” 198, 201, 205, 215 Atom and the Bohr Theory of Its Structure, The (Kramers and Holst), 22 Autobiography of Alice B. Toklas, The (Stein), 29 Babbage, Charles, 270–71n150 Bach, Johann Sebastian, 84, 174 Baekeland, Leo, 200, 278n32 Balken, Debra Bricker, 255n1 Ballets Russes, 149 Barn IV (1935) (Dove), 209 Barn Here and a Tree There, A (1940) (Dove), 210 Barn Next Door (1934) (Dove), 209, 237 Barnyard Fantasy (1935) (Dove), 237 Barthes, Roland, 256n8 Bartram, William, 254 Beach with Sun Drawing Water (1872) (Richards), 263n102 Beckett, Samuel, 28 Belting, Hans, 257–58n14 Bement, Alon, 271n10 Bender, John, 234 Benjamin, Walter, 6, 157, 278n29 Ben Pollock and His Orchestra, 173 Benson, E. M., 285n128 Benton, Thomas Hart, 28, 165, 259–60n39 Bergson, Henri, 217 Berlin, Irving, 149, 157, 174 Bernstein, J. C. ( Jake), 138–39, 246 Bernstein, Julia, 138, 246 Beyond Abstraction (1946) (Dove), 264n13 Bier, Elmira, 232, 283n98 Bishop Murder Case, The (Van Dine), 88 Blackbird (1942) (Dove), 234, 284n108 Black Sun, Thursday (1932) (Dove), 232 Bluemner, Oscar, 280n57 Bogost, Ian, 218 Boltz, Oswald H., 200 Bonnard, Pierre, 267n68 Bontecou, Lee, 286n136 Book of the Sky, The (Luckiesh), 123, 133 Boston Museum of Fine Arts, 246 Boswell, Foster Partridge, 241 Bourdieu, Pierre, 215 Bourne, Randolph, 75, 98 Brancusi, Constantin, 257n2, 277n9 Braque, Georges, 195, 197 Brennan, Marcia, 79, 234 Breton, André, 28, 206 Brooks, Charles F., 141 Brooks, Charles Van Wyck, 187, 204, 210
304
Index
Brooks, Van Wyck, 3, 98, 187 Broom (magazine), 274n62 Brothers, The (1942) (Dove), 39 Brown, Bill, 216, 244 Burchfield, Charles, 224, 238, 254, 259n25, 266n54 Burchfield Penney Art Center, 266n54 Camera Work (magazine), 29–30, 98, 195 Canada, 247 “Can a Photograph Have the Significance of Art?” (Dove), 28 Cane (Toomer), 259n37 “Carafe, That Is a Blind Glass, A” (Stein), 29–30 Car in Garage (1934) (Dove), 237 cartography, 129 Cassidy, Donna, 148, 155, 158, 170, 177, 182, 273n59, 274n62 Cavalcanti, Guido, 222 “Cavalcanti: Medievalism” (Pound), 222 Cézanne, Paul, 163, 257n2 Chantes de Maldoror, Les (Ducasse), 206 Cheney, Sheldon, 66 Chinese Music (1923) (Dove), 168, 170–71 Church, Frederic, 9, 44 Cinder Barge and Derrick (1931) (Dove), 248 City Moon (1938) (Dove), 62, 180 Clark, Constance Areson, 243 Clouds (1927) (Dove), 131, 193, 232, 283–84n102 Clurman, Harold, 98 Cohn, Sherrye, 22, 91, 162, 176 Cole, Thomas, 9 College Art Association, 98 Color and Its Application to Printing (Andrews), 51, 68, 89–91, 115, 214 “Composition as Explanation” (Stein), 29 Composition in Green and Gray (Untitled) (ca. 1930) (Dove), 237. See also Green, Black, and White (1938) (Dove) Connor, Steve, 165 Cooper, Harry, 148, 155, 158, 165 Cornell, Joseph, 191, 195, 244, 278n29, 280n57, 282n72 Cosgrove, Denis, 129, 268n113 Cosmos (Humboldt), 131 Covert, John, 214, 259n22, 280n57 Cows in Pasture (1935) (Dove), 96, 234, 237 Cozens, Alexander, 269n128 Crane, Hart, 28, 98, 270–71n150 Craven, Thomas, 28 Critic, The (1925) (Dove), 192, 194 Crosby, Bing, 173 Cross and Weather Vane (1935) (Dove), 225 Cubism, 195, 197, 230, 253 Culture of Diagram, The (Bender and Marrinan), 234 Dada, 8, 28, 216–17, 257–58n14; sewing, as motif of, 206 Damisch, Hubert, 216 Darwin, Charles, 243 Daston, Lorraine, 216 Davies, Arthur B., 285n121 Dawn III (1932) (Dove), 53, 55 December Storm (1941–1960) (Burchfield), 266n54 Deep River Orchestra, 149 Deleuze, Gilles, 217 de Meyer, Baron Adolph, 75
Demuth, Charles, 4, 75, 195, 280n58 DePietro, Anne Cohen, 34, 261n67 De rerum natura (Lucretius), 162 Derrida, Jacques, 284n115 Descartes, René, 257–58n14 Descriptive Meteorology (Moore), 142 Dewey, John, 98 de Zayas, Marius, 28, 195, 254 Diaghilev, Serge, 149 diagram, 22–23; as term, 234 Dial (magazine), 29, 222 “Different One, A” (Dove), 30 diorama, 244–45 Di Palma, Vittoria, 269n128 Doerner, Max, 178, 258n13 Dogs Chasing Each Other (1929) (Dove), 234, 246, 284n108 Doppler, Christian, and Doppler effect, 184 Dorsey, Florence, 3 Douglas, Aaron, 98, 254 Douglas, Susan, 68 Dove, Arthur Garfield, 1, 14, 16, 20, 77, 138, 248, 257n2, 258n8, 258n10, 258n15, 259n25, 259–60n39, 263n106, 264n8, 264n12, 264n13, 264–65n33, 265n35, 266n50, 270n139, 271n10, 280n57, 280n58, 283–84n102; and abstraction, 26, 28, 158, 201, 203, 218; abstraction, as term, rejection of, 89, 134; and anthropomorphism, 284n115; artistic theory of, 96; astronomy, interest in, 230; automatic procedures, attentiveness to, 252; avant-garde press, contributions to, 28; background of, 3; Beaufort Wind Force Scale, 113; body and machine, collaboration of, 220; cartography, as conceptual model for, 219; collectivity, idea of, 98–99; on color, 90–91; communication, interest in, 26–27, 30–31, 53, 62, 69, 73–74, 79, 81–84, 97, 99–100, 111, 115, 125, 129, 133–34; condition of light, 89– 90, 95–96, 99–100, 115, 162, 163, 223, 261n59; connection and interchange, system of, 220; as craftsman, 200; curiosity of, 8; diagramming impulse of, 22–23; diary keeping, everyday quality of, 214; diary of, as analog for work of, 115–16; dioramas, effect on, 244–45; and Dove Block, 174–75, 232, 283n98; draughtsman, as goal of, 207, 209; extraction, operation of, 134, 136, 203–4, 218; extrahuman, embrace of, 253; failure to connect, embracing of, 198; first one-man show of, 3; friendships, importance of, to, 97; geometry, interest in, 26; and gravitation, 218; health of, 186; humans and things, as two-way street, 218; ideas (small-scale studies) of, 39– 40; as idiosyncratic, 2; image, as system, 85; influences of, 4, 28–30, 195, 230, 277–78n21; inspiration of, 11–12; instruments, use of, 198; interlinking network, vision of, 92, 96; intersubjectivity of, 84, 99–100, 115–16, 125, 165, 171–72, 203, 215, 217, 247, 249, 252–54; and jazz, 158; Joyce, influence of, on, 28; language, interest in, 6, 23–29, 44, 53, 73, 75, 78, 80, 83, 97, 111–12, 114–15, 129, 198; lightning, study of, 224; list making of, 213–14, 219–20; magic lantern, use of, 261n67; manual labor of, 199–201; materiality, investment in, 198, 200–201, 215–16, 219, 226, 240; media, experimentation with, 200; media boundaries, blurring of, 191; meteorology, interest in, 8, 82, 100, 114, 124–27, 135–36, 142, 217–18; mistranslation, possibility of, 251–52; mundane, value of, 254; music listening, habit of, 164–65; nature, interest in, 9; notational systems,
experimentation with, 33–34, 50–51, 78–79, 115, 182, 222; objects, as medium for connection, 217; occult, interest in, 31, 98, 162, 175–76; and O’Keeffe, 283n97; paint, properties of, preoccupation with, 51; painting, as kind of formation, 86; pantograph device, use of, 40, 261n67; pastel series of, 92–96; pathological individualism, 88– 89; and phonographs, 174; photography, importance of, to, 57, 59–60, 127; as pioneer, 4; poetry of, 8, 27–30; radio, interest in, 129, 173–80; relationality, reformulation of, 285n121; and representation, 203; rhythm, reference to, 85–88; self-acting painting, desire for, 136–37; self and object, interweaving of, 137; shorthand, use of, 34, 76–78; sidereal, allusion to, 27; signature, use of, 35, 42, 44–45, 50, 75, 79–80, 183, 210; signs, use of, 25–26; sketch-to- painting translations of, 41–42; sky, as medium of transmission, 181; and sociability, 97–99, 125, 140, 195, 220, 245–47; speedwriting, practice of, 34; Stein, influence of, on, 29–30, 277–78n21; Stieglitz, devotion to, 97; “Sweets” doodling of, 24–25, 27, 75, 172, 234, 246–47; technology, interest in, 30–31, 33; telegraphy, interest in, 30–31, 226; tempo, evocation of, 86; theosophy, attraction to, 91, 98, 162; translation, preoccupation with, 6, 23, 30–31, 33, 44, 52–53, 56, 62, 69, 72–74, 79, 81–84, 96–97, 99, 111, 115, 129, 133–34, 147, 158–59, 217, 251–52; utopianism, link to, 98, 100; on war, 188; weather, interest in, 2, 81–84, 100, 105, 108–14, 116, 121–24, 136, 140–41, 214, 252; white light, 90–91; wit of, 246–47; wordplay of, 25, 28; World War II, effect on, 139–40; on writing, 27; on writing and painting, 26. See also Dove’s art; and individual works Dove’s art, 129; abstraction of, 23, 26; abstract paintings of, 9; abstract vocabulary of, 22; animalism in, 238–41, 243; animals in, 234, 237–38, 240–41, 243, 246–47; assemblages of, 4–5, 9, 39, 145–46, 189, 191, 201, 203–6, 213–14, 217–19, 249, 278n27, 279n42; barometer, metal parts of, 127; body and machine, collaboration between, 221; charging of, 225; circle motif in, 17, 22, 45, 51–53, 55–56, 60, 62–63, 65–66, 68, 71–73, 81, 127, 140, 142, 145, 160–61, 217–18; critical responses to, 230–31; equivalency and substitution in, 79; and forecasting, 128–29; geography, as form of, 83, 129; as instrumental terrain, 129; landscape, as geography in, 131; lines, theorization of, in, 202–3, 209–11, 226; mark making in, 177; materiality of, 164; metal-based pigments, use of, in, 221; musical compositions, based on, 147–48; music paintings, 156, 158–61, 163–66, 168, 170–72; nonobjectivity of, 11; painting, and navigation, akin to, 126–27; painting, and translation, act of, 156; pigments, experimenting with, 89; poetry and prose, listing effect of, 212–13; as proposition, 112; radio paintings, 173–84, 188; record paintings, 148–49, 154–55, 166, 178; registration, as form of, 158; sawtooth motif in, 170–72; sewing, as subject matter of, 206–7, 211–12; spiral motifs in, 160–61; staged viewings of, 231; substitution and recombination, use of, in, 201–4, 219; and telegraphy, 127; translation, exploration of, in, 34–35, 129; unseeable forces, 12, 17, 21–22; viewer’s experience of, 231–33; visual language of, 164; war paintings, 188; watercolor, feel of, 11–12; wave forms in, 62–63, 66, 68–69, 71–74, 79, 81, 131, 133, 142; weather in, 81, 100, 105, 108, 126–28; weather in, as inspiration, 124, 140–41; weather in, as metaphor for art, 116; zoomorphic forms, use of, 181, 234, 237, 240, 243, 245
Index
305
Dove, Paul, 31, 154, 180, 199, 224 Dove, William, 22, 34, 39, 89–90, 138, 155, 176, 204, 257n15, 261n67, 266n50, 283–84n102 Dow, Arthur Wesley, 280n57 Ducasse, Alain, 206 Duchamp, Marcel, 28, 192, 195, 206, 248–49, 252 Duncanson, Robert S., 9 Dusenberry, Ralph, 193–94 “Eagle Cloud” (Dove), 105 Eakins, Thomas, 44 Eastman, Max, 259–60n39 Eco, Umberto, 213 Eddy, Arthur Jerome, 274n62 Einstein, Albert, 2, 8, 22, 26, 29, 88, 91, 142, 176 Electric Peach Orchard (1935) (Dove), 100, 226–27 Enigme d’Isidore Ducasse, L’ (1920) (Ray), 206 Equivalents series (Stieglitz), 57, 73, 135, 170, 204–5, 217, 231, 262n80 Ernst, Max, 28 Essai sur la géographie des plantes (Humboldt), 131 Europe, 129, 138, 154, 178, 265n35, 267n68; miniature eye portraits in, 205 Face on a Bank (1949) (Dove), 246 Factory Noise (1925) (Dove), 274n6 Fantastic Art, Dada, Surrealism (exhibition), 195 Faraday, Michael, 63 Farmer’s Almanac for the Year of Our Lord 1820, 121 Federal Arts Project, 98 Ferry Boat Wreck (1931) (Dove), 45 Fields of Grain Seen from Train (1931) (Dove), 14 Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco, 263n98 Finnegans Wake ( Joyce), 28 Fire Bird, The (Stravinsky), 148–49 Fire in the Sauerkraut Factory (1936–1941) (Dove), 188 flight, role of, in meteorology, 134 Flight (1943) (Dove), 134, 145, 178, 218–19, 252; as landscape, 129; propeller-like shape in, 135–38 Fog Horns (1929) (Dove), 16, 134, 252; concentric bands in, 184–85; and synesthesia, 185 Ford Motor Company, 144 Formation series, 88, 96; Formation I (1943) (Dove), 86–88; Formation II (1942) (Dove), 86; Formation III (Green Landscape) (ca. 1942) (Dove), 86–88 “Form of the Phonograph Record, The” (Adorno), 162 Four Saints in Three Acts (Stein), 29 France, 139 Frank, Waldo, 98, 134, 200 From a Wasp (ca. 1914) (Dove), 234 From Cows (1937) (Dove), 240 Frow, John, 216 Futurism, 197, 230 Gadamer, Hans-Georg, 6, 115 Galison, Peter, 216 Gauguin, Paul, 257n2 Geertz, Clifford, 5 Gell, Alfred, 215 geography, 129, 142
306
Index
George Gershwin—I’ll Build a Stairway to Paradise (1927) (Dove), 149, 158, 161, 164, 232, 283–84n102 George Gershwin—Rhapsody in Blue, Part I (1927) (Dove), 148– 49, 158, 161, 164, 196, 220 George Gershwin—Rhapsody in Blue, Part II (1927) (Dove), 148, 158, 161, 193, 196 Germany, 284n115 Gershwin, George, 147–49, 155, 157, 165, 174 Gide, André, 28 Goat (1935) (Dove), 234 Goin’ Fishin’ (1925) (Dove), 193 Golden Storm (1925) (Dove), 100, 194; sawtooth motif in, 171 Golden Sun (1937) (Dove), 17, 53, 54, 55, 60, 62, 73, 80, 126, 134, 180; signature, role of, in, 79 Goodman, Nelson, 5–6 Graham, Martha, 262n92 Grandmother (1925) (Dove), 192–93, 206 Great Britain, 139 Green, Black, and White (1938) (Dove), 237. See also Composition in Green and Gray (Untitled) (ca. 1930) (Dove) Greenberg, Clement, 195 Greenwich Village Follies, 65, 262n92 Gregg, John Robert, 34, 261n59 Gregg Shorthand: A Light-Line Phonography for the Million (Gregg), 34 Gris, Juan, 28 Grootenboer, Hanneke, 205 Gropius, Walter, 259n34 Ground Swell (1939) (Hopper), 68 Guattari, Felix, 217 Gurdjieff, George, 270–71n150 Handman, Lou, 173 Hand Sewing Machine (1927) (Dove), 148, 164, 195–96, 200– 202, 204, 206–7, 211, 213, 232, 243; assemblage, as embodiment of, 197; machine, operation of, 221; materiality of, 198; receptor surface, functions as, 199; staccato rhythm of, 197 Hapgood, Hutchins, 99 Hartley, Marsden, 4, 75, 263n106 Harvard Museum of Natural History, 245 Haskell, Barbara, 261n70 Haviland, Paul, 74 Heade, Martin Johnson, 9, 254 Heap, Jane, 270–71n150 Hegel, Georg Wilhelm Friedrich, 6 Heidegger, Martin, 215–16, 218, 249, 278n27 Helmholtz, Hermann von, 63 Henri, Robert, 98 Herford, Oliver, 29 Hertz, Heinrich, 63 Hirsch, Walter, 173 Hobbes, Thomas, 284n104 Hofmann, Hans, 286n135 Hollyhock (Dove), 210 Homer, William Innis, 168 Homer, Winslow, 44 Hoover, Herbert, 33 Hopper, Edward, 68 Hound (1934) (Dove), 246
Hunter, Matthew C., 216 Huntington Harbor (1924) (Dove), 278n26 Huntington Harbor I (1926) (Dove), 164 Huntington Harbor II (ca. 1926) (Dove), 164 Huntington Lighthouse, 276n112 Husserl, Edmund, 257–58n14
Long Island (1925) (Dove), 191, 243 Lopez, Vincent, 65 Lower Manhattan (Composing Derived from Top of Woolworth) (1922) (Marin), 206 Lucchini, Francesco, 216 Lucretius, 162, 221
“Idea” (Dove), 204 “Idea, An” (Dove), 27, 84, 156, 159, 163, 192 “I’ll Build a Stairway to Paradise” (Gershwin), 148, 155 Improvision (1927) (Dove), 149, 160 Improvision No. 27 (1912) (Kandinsky), 257n2 Industrial Workers of the World (IWW), 99 Ingold, Tim, 280n55 Inness, George, 1, 9 Intellectual, The (1925) (Dove), 204, 213, 233, 243 intersubjectivity, 5, 8–9, 83, 95–96, 99, 177, 247, 249, 252–54; and assemblages, 203, 217; as concept, 7; and radio, 175; subject/object relations, 7; as term, 84, 257–58n14; and weather, 125 In the American Jungle (Frank), 134 Intimate Gallery, 27, 75–76, 89, 108, 134, 148, 192, 196, 200, 231, 233, 259–60n39, 277n9 “Introduction to Metaphysics” (Bergson), 217 invisibility, 8 Italy, 139, 188 Italy Goes to War (1940) (Dove), 139, 188
MacDonald-Wright, Stanton, 88 Machine Art (exhibition), 260n54 Making of Americans, The (Stein), 29 Man and Weather (McAdie), 141 “Manuscripts Number Four New York December 1922” (O’Keeffe), 28 Marin, John, 3, 4, 28, 75, 84, 206, 259n25, 263n106 Marrinan, Michael, 234 Marshall, Jennifer Jane, 281–82n67 Martin, Edwin C., 134, 136 material artifacts, 205 material culture studies, 240 Materials of the Artist, The (Doerner), 178 Matisse, Henri, 29, 195, 257n2 Matisse Picasso and Gertrude Stein with Two Shorter Stories (Stein), 29 Maurer, Alfred, 3, 159 Maxwell, James Clerk, 63 Mazow, Leo G., 214, 259n22 McAdie, Alexander, 141 McBride, Henry, 27, 75 McCausland, Elizabeth, 29, 75, 85, 88, 136–37, 177, 200, 246, 284n116 Me and the Moon (1937) (Dove), 17, 68–69, 72–74, 96, 129, 173, 177–81, 182–84, 202, 206, 252, 274n69; circles and waves in, 65–66 “Me and the Moon” (Handman and Hirsch), 173, 180 Melville, Herman, 8 Menaechmus, 8, 26 Mental Radio (Sinclair), 176 Mergen, Bernard, 120–21 metal media, 232; and record paintings, 221; weather science, instruments of, 221 meteorology, 82, 117, 124, 252; and automation, 136; circle form, pictorial equivalent of, 140–41, 142; communication, as science of, 120; and flight, 134; popularization of, 121; registration, as science of, 120; sociability, as network of, 125; and “sounding,” 131; translation, as science of, 120, 123, 125–26; unseeable, themes of, in, 123; as visual practice, 120, 125–26; wind, measuring of, 136 Meteorology for Aviator and Layman (Whatham), 142 Metropolitan Museum of Art, 261n66, 263n99, 284n108 Michaels, Walter Benn, 263n105 Michelson, Albert Abraham, 51 Mileaf, Janine, 257–58n14, 278n29, 282n72 Miller, Daniel, 216 Mills Blue Rhythm Band, 173 Miró, Joan, 195, 284n109 Miss Woolworth (1924) (Dove), 194 Moby-Dick (Melville), 8, 148 Modern American Painters (Koontz), 26, 89 modernity, 4, 159 Moholy-Nagy, Lázló, 226, 259n34
Jack the Ripper (Breton), 206 Japan, 138, 140 Jewell, Edward Alden, 26–27, 34, 76, 164, 212, 223, 246 John Reed Club, 98 Johnson, Dorothy Rylander, 193, 285n118 Johnson, Philip, 260n54 Joyce, James, 2, 8, 26, 28, 142, 214, 252 Kafka, Franz, 28 Kahn, Douglas, 156, 220 Kandinsky, Wassily, 2, 9, 27, 84, 88, 159, 163, 220, 222, 226, 230, 257n2, 259n34, 264n8, 274n62 Kelly, Julia, 217 Kim, Miri, 265n41 Klee, Paul, 28, 84, 195 Kootz, Samuel M., 26, 89, 91, 94, 166, 264n8 Krauss, Rosalind, 170, 205 Lake Afternoon (1935) (Dove), 39, 237, 241, 243, 285n128 Lamb, Jonathan, 284n104 language, 6–9; communication, 23–24, 26; notational system of, 5; paintings and assemblages, as forms of, 78–79; signs, 25–26; translating operations of, 53; translation, 23, 198 Latour, Bruno, 215–16, 218, 256n11, 281–82n67 Lattice and Awning (1941) (Dove), 138 Lawrence, D. H., 28 Lawrie, Lee, 65, 262n90 Lévi-Strauss, Claude, 276n1 Little Galleries, 3 Lobster, The (1908) (Dove), 3, 255n3 “Long Gay Book, A” (Stein), 29
Index
307
Mona (boat), 3, 11, 23, 110, 142, 181, 185, 193–94, 199, 218–19, 249 Monkey Fur (1926) (Dove), 2, 204, 233, 243–44; and Scopes Trial, 285n118 Moon (1935) (Dove), 1, 16, 23, 44, 53, 105, 134, 184, 252 “Moon Is Grinning at Me, The” (song), 173 Moon Was Laughing at Me, The (1937) (Dove), 173, 177–79, 181, 183–84, 206, 237; Morse code, evoked in, 182 Moore, Willis Luther, 142 Morgan, Ann Lee, 22, 257n15, 263n102, 273n59, 284n109 Moth Dance (1929) (Dove), 234 Mount Chimborazo, 131 Movement No. 1 (1911) (Dove), 166, 168 Mr. Knife and Miss Fork (Answers all the wishes of René Crevel) (1944) (Ray), 206 MSS (magazine), 28, 57, 260n40 Mullett-Smith, Suzanne, 31, 33 Mumford, Lewis, 246 Murphy, Jessica, 266n47 Murphy, Owen, 65 Museum of Fine Arts, 261n72, 283–84n102 Museum of Modern Art, 98, 195, 214, 260n54, 270n139 Museum of Natural History, 89 music: as translation, 157; weather, connection between, 171 Music (1913) (Dove), 166 “Music—A Sequence of Ten Cloud Photographs” (Stieglitz), 57, 170 Naples Yellow Morning (1935) (Dove), 20, 21, 53–55, 62, 180 National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP), 98 National Gallery of Art, 261n66 natural history: diorama, use of, in, 244–45; materialism, embrace of, 244 Nature Symbolized No. 1 (Roofs) (1911–1912) (Dove), 168 Nature Symbolized No. 2 (ca. 1911) (Dove), 94–95. See also Wind on Hillside (ca. 1911) (Dove) Nebel, Rudolf, 2, 40, 118 Neighborly Attempt at Murder (1941) (Dove), 2, 140, 187, 241; overhearing, importance to, 188 Nemerov, Alexander, 68 Network of Stoppages (1914) (Duchamp), 206 New Freewoman (journal), 222 Newman, Hugo R. B., 262n90 New York (New York), 97 New York Daily News (newspaper), 121 New York Telephone Company, 262n90 Nietzsche, Friedrich, 8 Nikhilananda, Swami, 8 1941 (1941) (Dove), 140, 188 No Feather Pillow (1940) (Dove), 41 North America, 119–20, 126 “Notes” (Dove), 202–3 #4 Creek (Dove), 66. See also Penetration (1924) (Dove) objecthood, 8; and agency, 216; as changing and migratory, 215; human-object relationality, 218; as mode of being, 216; sets of relations, as multiple, 216; things, essence of, 215 O’Keeffe, Georgia, 2, 4, 8, 28, 53, 75, 97, 109, 127, 170, 181, 193–94, 200, 234, 248, 258n15, 263n106, 271n10, 277n9;
308
Index
Dove, installation of shows, 283n97; flower-movements, 253–54 Oldenburg, Claes, 286n136 “On Reading the Current Papers” (Dove), 28 On the Radio (Lopez and Murphy), 65 Oppenheim, James, 98 “Orange Grove in California, An” (Berlin), 155 Orange Grove in California, by Irving Berlin (1927) (Dove), 76, 149, 158, 161, 196 “Origin of the Photo-Secession and How It Became 291, The” (Stieglitz), 97–98 “Other Criteria” (Steinberg), 199 Our Own Weather (Martin), 117, 123, 134, 136 Outline of a Theory of Practice (Bourdieu), 215 Over Seneca Lake (1935) (Dove), 209 Ovid, 257–58n14 Painted Forms, Friends (1925) (Dove), 59–60 pantography, 136 Parsons, Jennifer Stettler, 274n68 Partly Cloudy (1942) (Dove), 105, 116, 122, 127, 129, 145, 180, 214; as translating device, 128 “Pasted-Paper Revolution, The” (Greenberg), 195 Peale, Titian Ramsay, 244 Pearl Harbor, 138 Peirce, Charles Saunders, 261n64 “Pencil Notes on a Boat” (Dove), 90–91, 219 Penetration (1924) (Dove), 68, 71–72, 74; wave metaphor in, 66, 69. See also #4 Creek (Dove) Phillips, Duncan, 3, 231–32, 245, 264–65n33, 283n95, 286n137 Phillips Collection, 1, 286n137 Phillips Memorial Gallery, 232 phonautograph, 272n24 phonograph, 155–58, 161, 163, 166, 198; materiality of, 162; as stitching together, 220 phonography, 165, 171 photography, 57, 74, 221; reality, as transposition of, 205 Picabia, Francis, 75, 98–99, 231, 248, 277–78n21 Picasso, Pablo, 28, 191, 195, 197, 253, 257n2, 278n26 Pierce-Arrow (Howe), 263n105 Pinney, Christopher, 218 Plaster and Cork (ca. 1925) (Dove), 277n9 Plato, 220 Poe, Edgar Allan, 142 Point and Line to Plane (1926) (Kandinsky), 2, 27, 159, 226, 230 Pollock, Jackson, 158, 195, 247, 286n135 Popular Astronomy (journal), 230 popular music, and association with the moon, 179 Porter, Cole, 262n92 Port of New York (Rosenfeld), 96, 234, 238, 253 Portrait of Alfred Stieglitz (1924) (Dove), 193 Portrait of Ralph Dusenberry (1924) (Dove), 193–95, 220, 234, 246, 275n106 Pound, Ezra, 252; charge, use of, as term, 221–22; translation work of, 222 Pozzuoli Red (1941) (Dove), 21–22, 44 Pratt, A. W., 232 Precisionism, 253 Primer of Modern Art, A (Cheney), 66 Primitive Jazz (1929) (Dove), 166, 273n59
Primitive Music (1944) (Dove), 166; sawtooth motif in, 171 R 25-A (1942) (Dove), 34–35, 202 radio: collective experience, condition of, 179; community, form of, 174; connection, as technology of, 179; DX fishing, 180; and intersubjectivity, 179; occult, associated with, 175, 177; radio talk, 182; sound in, as airborne, 179; telepathy, parallel between, 179; water, associations between, 68 Radio: An Art of Sound (Arnheim), 174 Radio Headquarters catalog, 65 Rain (1924) (Dove), 39, 100, 145, 193–94, 203, 213 Rain or Snow (1943) (Dove), 105, 108, 127, 129, 134, 171, 252; as translating device, 128; vertical lines in, 126 Rathbone, Basil, 88 Rauschenberg, Robert, 191, 195, 199, 282n76 Ray, Man, 28, 206, 280n57 Raye, Martha, 182 Reaching Waves (1929) (Dove), 231, 263n99; waves, metaphor of, in, 72 Reading the Weather (Warren), 117, 122, 125 readymades, 195, 201 “Ready Reference Diary” (Dove), 124 Reasonable Facsimile, A (1942) (Dove), 35, 41, 202 Red, Olive and Yellow (1941) (Dove), 45, 237 Red Barge (1931) (Dove), 249, 286n137 Reds (ca. 1926) (Dove), 233 Red Tree and Sun (1929) (Dove), 231 Rembrandt, 8, 26 Reminiscence (1937) (Dove), 240–41, 243 Republic (Plato), 220 “Rhapsody in Blue” (Gershwin), 147–48, 155–56, 165 Rhythm Rag (1927) (Dove), 149 “Rhythm Rag, The” (Robison), 149 Richards, William Trost, 263n102 Richardson, Lewis Fry, Forecast-Factory, 142, 144–45, 233, 249, 270–71n150 River Bottom, Silver, Ochre, Carmine, Green (1923) (Dove), 69, 72, 74; coextension in, 71 Roberts, Jennifer L., 274n67, 281–82n67 Robison, Willard, 149 Rose, Billy, 261n59 Rose and Locust Stump (1943) (Dove), 39 Rosenfeld, Paul, 3–4, 96, 98, 234, 238, 240, 248, 253–54, 260n40, 283n95 Rosten, Leo, 25 Rotch, A. Lawrence, 131 Rugg, Harold, 98 Ruskin, John, 269n128 Sails (1911–1912) (Dove), 92, 95, 226 Sand and Sea (1943) (Dove), 96, 134, 178; as assemblage, 133; as landscape, 129, 131; as sounding and mapping device, 133 Sand Barge (1930) (Dove), 249, 286n137 Schwitters, Kurt, 28; Merzbilder of, 195 Sconce, Jeffrey, 175 Scopes, John T., and Monkey Trial, 243 Scott, Nancy, 277–78n21 Sea I, The (1925) (Dove), 194, 226–27 Sea II, The (1925) (Dove), 39, 192, 194, 226–27
“Seafarer, The” (poem), 222–23 Seagull Motif (Violet and Green) (1928) (Dove), 12, 39, 72, 96, 100, 114, 145, 148, 163, 202, 231. See also Sea Gull Motive (Sea Thunder or The Wave) (1928) (Dove) Sea Gull Motive (Sea Thunder or The Wave) (1928) (Dove), 69, 75, 80, 112, 263n98; Gregg shorthand in, 78; ribbon forms in, 76–77, 79; waveforms in, 79. See also Seagull Motif (Violet and Green) (1928) (Dove) Sears, Roebuck and Co., 65 Second World War, 138 Seitz, William, 214, 276n1 “Self Portraits by Others” (Dove), 2, 26–27 Sentimental Music (ca. 1913) (Dove), 166, 168, 184 “Serious Artist, The” (Pound), 222 Seven Americans (exhibition), 3, 28, 59, 192, 195 Seven Arts (journal), 98 Shakespeare, William, 2, 8, 29, 166 Sheeler, Charles, 254 Shelton with Sunspots, N.Y., The (1926) (O’Keeffe), 170 sign: letters, 25; punctuation marks, 25; symbols, 25; types of, 25 Silver Cedar Stump (Dove), 194, 202–3, 211 Silver Sun (1929) (Dove), 17, 56–57, 60, 68, 71, 221, 231 Silver Tanks (1929) (Dove), 62, 232–33 Silver Tanks and Moon (1939) (Dove), 62 Simmel, Georg, 97, 265n35 Simpson, Marc, 72 Sinclair, Upton, 176 “Singing to Tens of Thousands” (Duthernoy), 174 Smith, Pamela Colman, 271n10 Smithsonian Institution, 117 Snowstorm (1935) (Dove), 284n116 Snyder, Joel, 216 Soby, J. T., 270n139 Social Life of Things: Commodities in Cultural Perspective, The (Appadurai), 215 Something in Brown, Carmine, and Blue (1927) (Dove), 237 Song of the Telegraph (Burchfield), 224 sound, 162, 185; phonographic effect of, 157; visualization of, 184 Sound (1934) (Lawrie), 65 Sounding the Ocean of Air (Rotch), 131 Soviet Union, 138 Stafford, Barbara, 278n33 Starry Heavens (1924) (Dove), 22, 193–94, 227; visual notation, forms of, in, 230 Stein, Gertrude, 2, 8, 22, 28–30, 195, 214, 277n21 Stein, Leo, 215 Steinberg, Leo, flatbed picture plane, 199 Stettheimer, Florine, 75, 254, 263n106 Stewart, Garrett, 263n105 Stieglitz, Alfred, 2–5, 8, 14, 22, 27–31, 57, 59–60, 72–73, 75–76, 79, 84–85, 90–92, 108–9, 124, 127, 135, 140, 148, 161, 164– 65, 173, 176, 181, 186, 188, 192–95, 200–201, 204–5, 212, 217, 230–34, 241, 243, 246, 249, 253, 257n2, 260n40, 266n50, 278n32, 283n95; cloud photographs, 170–71, 262n80, 262n81; collectivism of, 97–98; cult of personality surrounding, 98; Stieglitz circle, members of, 248, 254, 259n25 Still Life with Chair Caning (Picasso), 278n26
Index
309
Storm Clouds (1935) (Dove), 100, 105, 232 “Straight Streets” (Frank), 134 Strand, Paul, 3–4, 57, 59–60, 75, 170, 176, 192, 243, 248, 258n15, 260n40 Strand, Rebecca, 59–60, 170, 192, 243 Stravinsky, Igor, 147, 149, 157, 163 “Suggested Interview” (Dove), 176 Summer (1935) (Dove), 44 Sun (1943) (Dove), 42, 44, 110 Sun Drawing Water (1933) (Dove), 1, 11–12, 14, 16, 22–23, 54, 75, 80, 105, 112, 114, 134, 145, 163, 168, 171, 202, 234, 252; as instrumental work, 73–74; as landscape, 129; photographs of, and weather map, as parallel, 135; ribbon forms in, 76–77; signature in, 79; as summary image, 74, 81 Sun on the Lake (1938) (Dove), 44, 261n72 Sunrise, Northport Harbor (1929) (Dove), 17, 56–57, 60; concentric circle motif in, 68, 71 Sunrise I (1936) (Dove), 17 Sunrise II (1936) (Dove), 17 Sunrise III (1936–37) (Dove), 17 Surrealism, 195, 216–17, 230, 252, 257–58n14, 264n12, 284n109; sewing, as motif in, 206 Swift, Jonathan, 257–58n14 Swing Music (Louis Armstrong) (1938) (Dove), 170, 182–84, 188, 237, 275n106 Symmes, John Cleves, Jr., 142 “Task of the Translator, The” (Benjamin), 6 Taylor, Bert Leston, 283n95 Team of Horses (1911 or 1912) (Dove), 93, 95, 168, 170, 226 Telegraph Pole (1929) (Dove), 31, 44, 223–27 telegraphy, 226–27 telepathy, 175–77, 179 Ten Cent Store (1924) (Dove), 194 “Ten Commandments, The” (Dove), 92, 96, 168, 231 “Ten Commandments, The” (exhibition), 3, 12, 99, 283n95 Tender Buttons (Stein), 29 theosophy, and white light, 91 There Was a Cat Somewhere (ca. 1940) (Dove), 246 Things That Talk: Object Lessons from Art and Science (Daston), 216 thing theory, 240, 281–82n67 Thompson, Emily, 156 Thoreau, Henry David, 267n68 3 Standard Stoppages (1913–1914) (Duchamp), 206 Thrift, Nigel, 215 Thunder Shower (1940) (Dove), 44 Thunder Shower, Thunderstorm (1921) (Dove), 100, 105 Thunderstorm (1921) (Dove), 170 Thurber, James, 246, 285n128 Thyssen-Bornemisza Collection, 284n108 Torr, Helen, 2–3, 8, 11, 24–25, 29, 31, 33, 35, 57, 75, 77, 97, 105, 108–9, 111–12, 123–24, 147–49, 155–56, 159, 165, 171–72, 173–79, 180–81, 187, 188, 192, 194–95, 199–201, 204, 206, 214, 231–33, 241, 246–47, 249, 253–54, 261n59, 273n59, 283n98 transition (journal), 28–29, 259n37 translation, 5–9, 23, 54, 185; blueprints of, 205; concentric circles motif, 52; as interchange, matter of, 53; and metal, 221; and radio, 175; signature, as function of, 44
310
Index
“Tree” (Williams), 280n58 Tree Forms (1932) (Dove), 225–26 Tree Forms II (1935) (Dove), 237 Trees on the Pond (1941) (Dove), 209 Turner, Elizabeth Hutton, 255n1 Twain, Mark, 246 “20th Century Limited or the Train Left without Them, The” (Dove), 84, 124 “291” (Dove), 30 “291 Fifth Avenue” (Rosenfeld), 98 Ulysses ( Joyce), 214, 252–53 United States, 83, 91, 119–20, 124, 129, 137, 154, 174, 178, 184, 247–48, 265n35, 267n68; weather reporting in, 117 U.S. (1940) (Dove), 139–40, 188 US Signal Army Office, 117 US Weather Bureau, 117–18, 122, 125; as household presence, 120; weather maps of, 119–21, 220, 267n77, 267n82 Van Dine, S. S. See Wright, Willard Huntington Verbeck, Peter-Paul, 282n71 Verne, Jules, 142 Vincent Lopez Orchestra, 65 von Freytag-Loringhoven, Elsa, 28 von Humboldt, Alexander, 121, 131 Walk, Poplars, A (1912–1913) (Dove), 225 Walkowitz, Abraham, 3 War (1939) (Dove), 139 Ward, Martha, 246 Warhol, Andy, 247, 286n135 Warren, Richard, 122–23 waves: communication, as motif of, 81; translation, as motif of, 81; transmission, as shorthand for, 81 “Way to Look at Things, A” (Dove), 2, 28, 30, 105, 192, 212 weather, 81–82; almanacs, 121–22; as global phenomenon, 117; and intersubjectivity, 125; as irregular process, 123; as network, 116–17, 119; prediction of, 142; science of, 117–23, 125–26, 177; and telegraph, 117–18; translation, as form of, 118; transnational nature of, 120; as unseeable, 123; weather lore, 125; weather science, circle form, as prominent in, 140–41; web of relationships, model for, 125 Weatherly, Newton, 2, 22 weather maps, 123, 126; circle form in, 141; as global phenomenon, 120; isolines of, 119, 133, 220; relationships, as image of, 119; symbols of, 120 Weather Prediction by Numerical Process (Richardson), 142, 145 Weather Rambles (Humphreys), 125 Westermann, H. C., 286n136 Whatham, Richard, 142 “When Things Dream” (Tzara), 280n57 Whiteman, Paul, 147–49, 157 Why the Weather? (Brooks), 141 Wichita Art Museum, 88 Wilfred, Thomas, 164 Williams, William Carlos, 28, 280n58 Wilson, Edmund, 164 Wilson, Kristina, 260n54 Wind (No. 3) (1935–1936) (Dove), 100
Wind on Hillside (ca. 1911) (Dove), 94. See also Nature Symbolized No. 2 (ca. 1911) (Dove) Winesburg, Ohio (Anderson), 277–78n21 WLS (radio station), 65 Wood, Grant, 165 World Almanac and Book of Facts for 1924, The, 122 Wright, Willard Huntington, 88 W. Scott Thurber Galleries, 3, 92 Young, Thomas, 63 “Young Americans,” 98 Young Old Master (1946) (Dove), 44 Your Baby (1942) (Dove), 138 Yours Truly (1927) (Dove), 148 Zoler, Emile, 262n81
Index
311