PDF Transcript - 1972 February 5
Transcription
PDF Transcript - 1972 February 5
Interview of Ivan Le Lorraine Albright Conducted by Paul Cummings February 5, 1972 TAPE-RECORDED INTERVIEW WITH IVAN LE LORRAINE ALBRIGHT IN HIS STUDIO: 47 ELM STREET, WOODSTOCK, VERMONT FEBRUARY 5, 1972 INTERVIEWER: PC Paul Cummings IA Ivan Albright PAUL CUMMI?-.TGS (born Feb. 20, 1897 in North Harvey, Illinois) PC Let me say it's February 5, 1972 - Paul Cummings talking to Ivan Albright in his studio in Woodstock, Vermont. That gives us a good level. Could we just start with some family background. IA Well, yes, I imagine one starts with "I was born" and I am going to die; those things are positive anyhow in this world. I was born a twin, an identical twin. My dad, Adam Emory Albright, was an artist. I don't think he made more than fifteen dollars a month in those days, if that much. But they did have a little girl to take care of us. One twin had a red ribb.o n around his wri s t and the other one had a blue ribbon. '!'his is a fact. T always accuse my dad of having wanted to throw us in a drainage canal; but he denied it. What happened was that one day one ate more and one slept more. This little girl wasn't very smart (the way I am) and she got us mixed up and I'm sure I have my brother's name and he has mine. So if anything happens I can lay it on my brother, don't you know. My dad painted children and so forth. At the age of about two months I began posing for him. My brother and I posed for him from about the age of six years to about twelve. We started drawing I think at about the age of six or seven. PC Did you start drawing by yoursel f ? IA Well, no. We were very silly; we even had a model; we'd hire a model for a little bit and draw in charcoal for an hour a day from the time I was about seven years old. We should have started drawing casts. Later on we drew casts for a summer or two. All the time up until I was about twenty-one, until World War I, T was drawing every summer. PC Were these formal classes with your father? IA No, no, my dad didnwt teach us; at least he didn't say anything. Which was good. And I didn't know anything. So the combination made perfectly zero. Except that I did know what charcoal was and we did meet all the contemporary artists of Chicago. We used to go to the Chicago Art Tnstitute from the time T was three or four on. So I was acquainted with American artists mostly. I knew the names of all the artists, knew about the work, the exhibitions, where each one showed, all the grievances of getting in, being kicked out, and so on. So that by the time I did become an artist there wasn't anything to it. It was just the same as if Twas a butcher. There was no glamour to it at all; it was just a matter of a lot of work and trying to make a thing better and better. PC Were you interested in your father's paintings? - because they were around. -2- IA I knew this much: I called him a short-term artist; most of them are that. He was after sales. Like N. c. Wyeth and so forth - well, Childe Hassam or Gari Melchers, or Tarbell, the whole crowd was trying to paint pictures. I figured I'd go to the University of Illinois and become an architect or a chemical engineer. I found out that there was too much math involved. Then in World War I I was in service for a year in France. When I came back I went to the University. During the summer I worked for an architectural firm - Perkins, Howells, and Hamilton, school architects. One of the firm, an old chap of about eighty was out selling. The engineer was putting in plumbing and wiring and so forth. The architectural chaps would follow and drill a scroll on a chimney and that was design. And that was it. I realized that it took a great deal of money and a great deal of salesmanship to put up a million dollar building and then there wouldn't be any art in it at all. So I figured that if I was any good I could make a little canvas two by three feet and it wouldn't cost much. PC What got you interested in architecture? IA Because naturally I wanted to get away from painting. Painting was the last thing in the world T wanted to do. I had lived with it all my life. So I was trying to get away from it. But, you see, I couldn't; I mean it was just impossible. I saw that the other field was sort of a hollow name. But I did figure I wanted to be a long-term artist. I wasn't going to make a thing fast and sell it. I don't care much if a picture is hanging on a wall. To me it's more a bit of philosophy the same as a writer who writes a book, unless it's Christie or somebody. A painting should be a bit of your philosophy and that's what I've been working for. It's rather hard to make a living that way. My brother was a sculptor. He and I started out by building a few houses and getting our revenue from that and not prostituting our art. We showed in all the shows. My brother later became a painter. But we never prostituted our art for money. I worked ten years on The Door you see. One time for a belt I had a rope around my waist and some society people from Chicago came out to the studio. They didn't look at the pictures much but when they went back they said, "Ivan had a rope around his waist for a belt." PC You said you were trying to get away from art because you grew up with it. Why was that? IA Well, one Spring we had twenty-two club women out at the studio and they'd all say, "Little boy, you're going to be an artist, you're going to follow in your father's footsteps." And I said, "No! No! No!" It was pretty bad. They 1 d have their sandwiches and coffee and look at art and say, "Isn't that adorable!" "Isn't that nice!" "Isn't that sweet!" You see, my father painted children, country children. They'd say, "We have children too, something in common, a common denominator." My father painted children and they had real children so they had something in common. All this was very distasteful to me. PC How did you like modeling for your father all these years? IA Well, I didn't like it. My father used to have a few bags of old clothes; when he'd find something that he thought he could use he'd pick it up, say, an old pair of pants, or a colored hat; for a girl a sunbonnet and so on. (Unlike Hollywood where they'd buy the clothes and make them up.) Every -3little boy that he ' d try to get to pose the mother would wash his face and put a clean shirt on him, such as he probably hadn ' t had on for a week, and fix him up so nobody could paint him. Except J. D. Brown, who you probably don't remember. PC Yes, sure, polished. IA He painted children. This wasn't any rebellion against my father; it was against the attitude of the people in general and wh at they liked . I think finally you accept it and go ahead and figure out you ' d better do what you want to do. PC Did your father have a lot of artist friends that came around? IA Oh, yes, there was that whole crowd in Chicago. There was Stacey, Jurgens, Recker, Pauline Palmer. And a New York artist , Who was that chap who wrote those fabulous kid stories? - he ' s more famous as a writer than as a painter . He painted woods . I can't think of his name right now. He ' s very famous. We ' d meet all kinds of artists in a crowd. Dad wore his hair a little long which was more or less original at that time , Elbert Hubbard used to come out, He had the Raycroft Shop in East Aurora, New York . He had long hair, too . Long-haired people were very scarce in those days. Now we're just getting over the hippie period where we ' ve had five million people with long hair. PC Right. 1A Mostly art . Every summer we'd go away. We've been to Annisquam, to Williamsfield , to Noank, to Millheim, Pennsylvania and Birmingham, all through Pennsylvania and through to Connecticut and to near Gloucester, Massachusetts, Falmouth Cove. Charles Grafly, the sculptor, was up there . He was a classmate of my father ' s. I guess he was the best known. My father studied under Thomas Eakins in Philadelphia for four years. He was the monitor there. And he went to Paris . To be an artist then you had to go to Europe, He studied in Paris and then in Munich under Carl Marr from Milwaukee who was president of the Royal Academy, you see , For instance , when Whi s tler brought back the portrait of his mother he couldn ' t sell it for $500 in Chicago to Potter Palmer or to anybody - when he came back at the time of the Chicago World ' s Fair in 1933 they had a million dollar price tag on it. It ' s just a case of demand. The same picture only his mother had gotten older . PC Did you paint in these summer trips around? IA Oh, yes, I want to mention that when I was about twenty or so we went down to South America and I painted. 1 thought I was an artis t . I didn ' t realize how bad I was. I didn ' t go to art school really until after World War T, PC Rut your father never gave you criticism? IA No. He made one of the worst teachers in the world, But the only good thing was he didn ' t criticize so you were on your own. Unless you have a good teacher it's much better not to be taught at all, for the simple reason At home was there interest in music or literature? -4- that they teach you all the bad things and you've got to throw them out later on . Whi ch you should do anyhow . The trouble is that in life we ' re taught so many things which are wrong and you constantly have to destroy and then build up on your own . You know, like Buckminster Fuller. He destroys and builds up and really this is a good principle . You have to do it constantly . And when you're painting the minute your picture begins to look good just forget it; it ' s getting bad . And that means you ' re losing your sense of judgment . PC What do you mean ''when it begins to look good?" TA Well, if you ' re happy with it or anything. I've seen so many artists walk back and forth and have a martini and look at their picture and paint and think: my r.od , this picture is coming fine. But they don't know which way they ' re going and either they're copying some other artist or what they think they want or are making something pretty bad. PC Were there any special artists that you were interested in as a young painter? rA Nobody at all . PC Old Masters? TA No . No. And then at school I had Leopold Seyffert and different teachers but I didn ' t pay any attention . I mean the ones who would let you alone would be the main thing; you might learn something from other students. I mean they were equally bad so you could understand them. PC How did you pick the university to go to? IA Which one? PC The first one - what? - Northwestern? IA Northwestern . We lived in Humphrey Woods which is right nearby. And they had a bunch of beautiful girls and everything . It was very nice. I got on the Daily Northwestern and I worked so much on it that I got kicked out of Northwestern University . I didn't go back there again until - gosh , I don ' t know - i n 1951 or 1952 when they had a Northwestern Centennial. They had present nine governors and Adlai Stevenson and a whole bunch of senators and different people. They gave me a certificate of award. I'm sure I'm the only one who ever got kicked out of there that was called . They didn't realize it - when they first put it out they were delighted . I said to the chap ahead of me - Adams , I think it was, from the University of Illinois, I said , "It ' s too bad they don ' t give us a degree." He said, "Oh, what do you want a degree for? I ' ve got thirty-five now . " They gave us a little book with a seal on it. He said, "This is much better." I thought to myself: it's not so hot. Being Albright I was second in line. The chap ahead of me was a big lawyer, I don't know what law firm he was with, and · he tipped his mortarboard. I said: brother, I ' m not doing that. So the others followed me. (You ' re not supposed to tip it . ) PC How did you like the University? T despised them all. 1 didn't care for any of them . None of them? -5- IA We went to the Illinois School of Architecture. We were in some town in Pennsylvania - I forget where - oh, it was Tiodesta, Pennsylvania. I remember when my dad got the notice from Northwestern saying that I was bounced out he was sad but it didn ' t bother me any. My brother and I tossed a coin, a pe nny, to see whether we ' d take up chemical engineering or architecture . The coin came down for architecture. Either one would have suited me. In chemistry I wanted to look for an element . I thought if I could find a new element I'd be happy . At that time they had ninetysix; now I think probably they've got to a hundred and ten. I wanted something of that sort. I didn ' t want to join a powder company . I wanted to do research mostly . PC It ' s interesting there ' s always that kind of - I get the feeling you're always looking for something . IA I ' ve been looking for something. My brother wanted to be an inventor . When he was in high school he spent most of his time working on a perpetual motion machine. We didn't have any brains between us but I think we were divided, cut in two, and he has all the mechanical ability and invention. He could think of all the things that came out about six months ahead of time and would have made a great inventor. He thought of the zipper six months ahead. I said, "Oh, that's crazy . " Now take gardening. He said why plant each little seed separately; why not put the seeds on a kind of filament that will decay and get ten yards or five yards or ten feet or two feet; why go around like a bird pecking in the seeds. We both lacked a little math although our family goes back direct to Kepler, the astronomer . I guess he took it all with him when he died . PC You know, I'm very interested in the whole background because in one of the exhibition catalogues there's a great description of your family background going back to the Revolution. IA Yes. On my father's side of the family they were gunsmiths in Pennsylvania. The family name was Millheim. They must have been Pennsylvania Dutch. My, let's see, great-grandfather who made these guns was a pretty good shot out there. They made what is called the Daniel Boone gun. In Kentucky they never made a gun. They just shot them; they shot the bull, too, but they didn't make any guns. These were Pennsylvania guns. They had a long bore about - well, six feet almost, and very heavy. In the other building here we have the first double-barreled gun that was made in this country by an Albright. You can twist it around, you see. My great-grandfather, as I said, was a good shot. He'd go to these meetings, fairs, exhibitions. If the prize was a horse he'd take a halter with him. If the prize was a turkey he'd take a basket to put the turkey in. He knew how to shoot so he ' d take the prize. Naturally he was n't very popular. He was a typical Albright. Finally they banned him. But he had an assistant who went with him and they couldn ' t stop him . He taught the assistant how to pack the gun, how to get the direction and velocity of the wind, how crooked the gun would shoot. So they still carried these halters and stuff. And that was an Albright. PC Was it double-barrele d an over under? IA Yes. As I said, I have it in the other building here . -6- PC IA That's fantastic. They used to engrave them in gold and silver. Dad had a chance to buy a good gun with gold away back in about 1908 but he didn't want to pay $150 for it so we didn't get it. We got one with just silver mounting. They'd be worth about a span of horses mostly, you know, or whatever else they had. They were craftsmen, you see. On my mother's side the family name was Carpenter and Wilson. My grandfather (I never saw him) was a Scotchman. He lived down in Missouri. Besides being a country doctor he spent his whole life writing an encyclopedia. He didn't want to be a doctor. He had to get up at four in the morning in a blizzard to go out eight miles to visit patients. It wasn't too much fun. He was married to a girl named Carpenter. The family came from Rhode Island in about 1632 I believe. They shifted around. My grandmother Carpenter went to college in Ohio. She was born in about 1842. She died in Ohio. My mother went to college in Lawrence, Kansas. She took a year or two off to teach. When she was a freshman in college she was teaching the seniors Latin. She had eight years of Latin and six years of r.reek. T think my dad had about one term in school, about three years in grade school. He was a good salesman. When he was nineteen years old they wanted to make him cashier of a bank but he didn't know how to add. He had an older brother John who was a sharpshooter in the Civil War. My dad was born in 1862. When he was just a little boy his older brother came home. Let's see, John was born in 1842 so he'd be twenty-one years old. He didn't say a word. He could just hit a squirrel right in the eye at any distance. He was a little chap just about my size. The next brother of my dad's, Sam, was twelve years older than Dad, He sounds like a typical Californian; he could sell anything. I don't know what Twas going to say now; well, let's skip it for a while. Sam had a general store. Once when my dad was about nineteen he went down to Missouri. During the summer my dad was going to work for him doing some selling. They had one of these wooden pumps outside. My dad went outside for a minute, looking around I suppose for customers. Four horsemen with blood on their hands came galloping along. They said to my dad, "Pump some water on our hands." And he did. The men threw him a silver dollar. They were the James brothers. They never robbed any banks down in that section because they had a hideout rigged up nearby. PC Wild Americans. IA Well, no. The James brothers were very polite and everything. They were more gentlemen than a lot of the people they robbed I guess. Now robbers don't think of robbing a few little banks in Missouri; they rob millions. PC Right. IA Yes, PC Was that by choice? IA Oh, yes. We enlisted. Our older brother enlisted and we thought we would. Everybody was talking about the war. Before we did, however, we worked down at Standard Forging Company for a couple of months. I didn't like the work. My brother wasn't too bad at turning out artillery wheels but I was What about World War I? - because you were in the Army - right? -7- bad. I was making a gun bore test and I went off and got a newspaper and sat in the corner reading it for two hours. The foreman came around. I had drilled not only through one gun but through about four of them I guess . So we enl isted. The whole state of mind emotionally at that time wasn't bad . We all more or less were patriotic . It was a real not a phony war . It wasn't a political thing where you were sent over to k ill somebody you didn ' t know who had never touched you . When some foreign nation invades us we don ' t mind fighting but going around the world and being a general policeman isn ' t to my taste . We were in service for about a year . I made medical drawings when I was in service. PC 1A How did you get into medical drawings? Because I didn ' t want to dig a ditch . I was a buck private and I either had to clean latrines , dig a ditch or something . This was in a medical corps. We were supposed to be in a base hospital up at the front. They put us on a freight train and we went south . We got out near Nantes. You had thirty doctors who were officers and who didn ' t know which direction the war was anyhow. Some were good and some were bad - but in a general hospital we had thirty to fifty of them. They knew 1 could draw. In Des Moines in the X-ray department some of them knew my dad's name . I think Dr . Osler ' s outfit was there . He was a famous Chicago surgeon and was a friend of my dad . We got in this outfit. We were in Des Moines for about six weeks and then went overseas I think in July of 1918. I was overpaid; I got thirty dollars a month ; I got three dollars for overseas; I was buying $10,000 insurance; I bought two Stars and Stripes; so I was getting five francs a month for my service overseas . Don't you think that was pretty noble! That's equal to a dollar . I'm sure the government wasn't losing any money on me no matter how dumb I was. Well, I decided that I'd draw. In France I made a few sketches of the town for these doctors of mine for five dollars, ten dollars, or even less, so T'd have something with which to buy a little wine or something . That kind of started it. One day T was in the operating room and Captain Flannery came in. He sa;i.d , "Oh , Albright, do you want to make a drawing of this operation? We ' re going to have an aneurysm of the neck." I said, "Sure." I had a watercolor tablet and water colors along. I stood there. The nurse was cutting away and I made this drawing . The blood was flowing out and everything. You know it's against the medical code sort of - or they don't like to have a person die while they're working on him - if you get him outside the operating room it's not so bad. So finally they shoved t his guy out pretty fast. (They had busted the thing, you know.) That was the first medical drawing I made. Then they said, "We'll put you on guard duty" - they were threatening me with that because I wasn't working much, doing this, you see. So I took it upon myself to go to one of the ward s . I located the worst case of shrapnel where they were using these vaseline pads and dacon tubes, as they did in those days, and I told the nurse I was going to make a drawing. While I was doing this the captain came by and said, "Albright, you ' re in here. That's great!" So from then on I was my own boss. Actually I was trying to get a promotion. I think this calls for a captain or a major. I was the only one in the A. E. F. making these drawings . Then about two weeks later I ' d make another drawing of that shrapnel wound showing how it healed; I worked on the X-rays which showed where the shrapnel was and if there was a broken tibia or anything; and then my drawings would show how the wound healed. T did six or eight books of these. By the time the -8 -- war was over I ended up with a little office with a desk making copies of these books. When the evacuation outfit came in I had this nice polished desk and the major had a soapbox . They ' d come and try to get my desk for the major . I ' m just · a buck private . After two or three days this poor major said , "You know how it is . " I said , "Yes . Sorry, Sir. No luck." So I sat at this polished desk making watercolor drawings and the maj or sat on the soapbox for the rest of the time we were there. Actually I retained two of the books. On the way back to this country my barrack bags were stolen; I think the Merchant Marine took them. But I carried these two myself all over France and came home with them , Senator Benton called up last night and said they ' re going to be given to the Medical Center of the University of Chicago. Isn ' t that something? PC That ' s great . You went to the Ecole des Beaux-Arts in Nantes at one point? IA Oh, really that was hooey - let ' s put it down - let ' s cancel that . I went two days and two nights . I thought I could draw; that ' s the period when I thought I was an artist, you see. Well, they had little kids there six years old . Finally , I was sitting back with all these little ones . That's where you think you ' re an artist and you find that you ' re not . Believe me, I wasn't any good . I just thought I could draw. But I thought the name sounded good and that I might as well get something besides the dollar a month from the government, so I added that on. PC You did some other drawings for a doctor? IA Oh, yes. But first to finish up on the drawings I did in the Army: What I was doing in this office was making copies of these drawings for the doctors . Each doctor - Captain Flaµnery particularly - wanted to have all the drawings. Then other doctors wanted all of them : Doctor Schia , who was head of all the tuberculosis cases; the doctor in charge of all the fractures go t a book; and a chap named Dr . Dobeler got a book or two . I don ' t know where he is; he may be dead . There was a Southerner named Alexander in the hospital. A very nice chap . He came back from the front shot up . He liked my drawings, He said, "I'm going to take one of those books . " Well, he stole one and, bless his soul, he ' s got i t somewhere down in Virginia or wherever he came from. So I had only two books. But I met a Dr . Sylvester, a brain surgeon from Oak Park, Illinois. In the summer following my return from the war I made about twenty eighteen by twenty-four illustrations for Dr . Sylvester . Me was planning to put out a hook of big colored reproductions on brain surgery. I don ' t know whether it ever came out or not, I drew tumors of the brain and God knows what, I had books in German and other languages with these color reproductions and I made these things that big . They weren ' t so bad . I think I got five dollars apiece for them . I wasn ' t overpaid for them because I had to pay for my transportation to Oak Park and back . PC Did you ever make drawings while Dr. Sylvester was operating? IA No, he wouldn ' t operate. I made these drawings from these books. The only drawings I did in operating rooms were the ones I made in France: The one of the aneurysm of the neck and I think I did a drawing of an amputation, I'm not sure: But that's about all. The other drawings I did in different wards, We had twenty wards in this hospital, twenty different -9- buildings, little barracks and each barrack had about fifty wounded men . I would pick out the most interesting cases, the one who had, say, the most shots. I drew one chap who had a hundred and t h irty - six pieces of shrapnel in him; they weren ' t too big, from the size of your thumbnail to maybe four times that size, but all over; he just got shot . Oh, he got well. The worst cases would be head or chest . They didn ' t bring these cases back from the front much . I made one drawing of a head wound . The worst cases they left . We didn ' t get those . We ' d get amputations and so forth. PC But it ' s all kind of background . IA Well , if you want background: In the hospital they tried to get me to sterilize the surgical tools . I said, "Absolutely not!" They had a bunch of medical students there . I said , "Give that job to your own bunch who are interested in medicine . I ' m not that kind of a fool . " They said, "Oh, we ' ll get you . " Well, they didn ' t get me because I got out; I wouldn't do it . One morning before an operation I was in the washroom just outside the operating room and there was a hand sticking out of the wa s te paper basket . You know, you ' d bury those later . But you get used to that . PC When you came out of the Army did you have any particular thing you wanted to do? IA Yes, that summer I worked for Perkins, Howells & Hamilton . I was going back to the University to be an architect . My brother worked with Oliver & Root that summer . After working there we realized more or less what the situation was: That you ' d have to have a lot of financial backing and everything and there wouldn ' t be much of what I like about architecture, which is designing . It was mostly plumbing and plans and square feet and location and how many stories . It wasn ' t really what I call architecture, not the type I ' d want to do anyhow . PC What did you really want to do? IA Well, I didn't know . Maybe create my own buildings, don ' t you see . But I didn ' t realize that you have to have money to create your own buildings . They haven ' t created any here anyhow except lately . I came in whe r e they still made crisscrosses on bank windows and where they believed in the five orders - don ' t think of a new one, don't you know . I know my brother said, "How about putting a dome on? 11 And the teacher said, "Oh, no. Wait until you ' re a sophomore and you go to the library and look it up." That kind of stuff . They hadn ' t become creative. Frank Lloyd Wright was still nailing his chairs down in the buildings in Chicago . You know, so they couldn ' t move them. And Wright was not an architect . He never passed the examination; he couldn ' t . So he had a partne r who had a right legally to practice architecture . It was like David Adler - not David - who was the decorator in Chicago who had to have a partner, too. But generally those chaps are the ones who have more artistic feeling than the ones who can pass examinations but can ' t do anything else. Don ' t you know lots of times it ' s so. Well, you see, the period of Frank Lloyd Wright hadn ' t come on at all . It was the worst period in the world; they were just changing, or I should say ready to change. It was an awful period. One of my classmates, an old man, put up the St. Clair Hotel in Chicago and another building I mean what kind of architecture? - 10- and they still had the old feeling . Another chap, Louis Somno, put up a theater building. But there wasn ' t anything that came out of there, though Illinois did have one of the best architectural schools . I think Yale had a good one. And a few others . But the time wasn't right for architecture yet. Not that I knew that. PC Did you continue painting at this point? IA I started painting. I started going to art school . I had four years after that. I went to the Chicago Art Institute School for four years . Then I went to the Pennsylvania Academy. Later I went to the National Academy . That was for Hawthorne. Bellows was in Europe . The only one I wanted was Bellows, or Hawthorne; I preferred Bellows at the time . PC How was the Chicago Art Institute School? IA Who I studied with didn ' t amount to anything. I was free. I started right out painting . I didn ' t go through the drawing part. Again I thought I knew that. I was monitor in two or three c l asses. Then I went to the Pennsylvania Academy in Philadelphia. You had to make a charcoal drawing to pass no matter how much previous training you ' d had. In Chicago all I inherited was a whole crowd of my dad ' s enemies. The Institute had a few scholarships for study in Europe. I was making full-length painted figures in one afternoon . I couldn't compete for these scholarships. I mean they ' d eliminate me. There were too many enemies. When I first got there I ' d see them walking through the halls with banners saying "Stop Albright" - my dad, you see. And here I was in there. Well, the last year I decided I ' d enter the competition. I didn't put my name on my entry . I got up to the finals and then when they found out there was an Albright 1 was automatically out . Then when I went to the Pennsylvania Academy they had twenty Cresson scholarships, but I couldn ' t compete for this because you have to be there for about two or three years . So I was out of luck there. It ' s just as well . PC What was the problem in Chicago? IA Well , they didn't like my dad so they took it out on me . PC Were there any students at the Institute in Chicago who were special friends or who you were particularly interested in? IA I was in painting classes . My twin brother studied sculpture under Polasek, who was a figure for four years . There were a few chaps in the painting clas ses that were pretty smart . One was Lubin. He was very talented. He went back to Israel after about four years. I think his family was pretty well off . There was another student named Chapman who tried out for the Tribune mural . They had a competition for the mural in the Tribune building in 1924 when they were getting through . The jury awarded the competition to Chapman, but he didn ' t get it. The Tribune wanted someone else , a Sunday commercial chap who worked at night, you know, with a magnifying glass, one of these typical fairly goo d commercial artists . The Tribune saw that this other chap got the job . I don ' t know whether they ever painted it or not . So the two students I remember best are T.ubin and Chapman. T.ubin was very brilliant and talented . He disappeared . He went to Tel Aviv in 1924 . Who did you study with there? -11- About three years ago we were in Israel and we saw Lubin. We flew overnight from Iran where they were just having a celebration - I don ' t know what - the coronation of the queen or something. All the streets in Iran were lined with roses and so forth . The planes wouldn't fly through; they were breaking down. Finally, we took off and arrived at Tel Aviv about 5:30 in the morning . There were flowers around . Since it was morning the re was n o use going to bed . I went down to the basement of the hotel where we we r e staying . I looked around at antiques they had there. I said to the man there, "Is there a chap by the name of Lubin around here?" I handed him the phone book saying, "You can read this script better than I can." So he called up and said, "Yes, he lives in the apartment house right across the street from here." So I telephoned Lubin; I said, "Hey! Remember me? I'm Ivan. How are you, Leo?" I invited him to come over and have a cocktail. So that evening at five over he came. Well, it was quite a shock. I mean time ages one. After fifty years to see a white haired little guy come in when the last time you saw him he was young and had black hair • •• I imagine I looked the same way to him. Stouter and stammering and walking crooked - here were two contradictory old guys sitting down with a martini jiggling in our hands. In a way Time is wonderful. Anyhow, it gets rid of everybody eventually, good or bad. Well, that ' s that. The Institute was all right. I kept studying. I think it was in about my third or fourth year I started to try to think for myself and realized that there was such a thing as stars and such a thing as this and that. I didn ' t learn much from my teachers. I avoided them because they were more or less pals or contemporaries of my dad ' s but not quite as successful. I didn ' t listen to anyone much . Finally I started to analyze and take notes. I got notebooks and started to write down what I was trying to think and what I was going for. I was going for form. In those days everything was color . They didn ' t know what form was. I kept asking. Th:ey'd say, "You don't know what you ' re talking about. Why don't you just copy the model." But I wouldn ' t go for that . PC What kind of color? - and what kind of interest? IA Color, for instance, without any relationship to anything . What I mean is that they didn't know - for instance , say, J 1 m talking about a model now . First there's a body and then there ' s light on that body and then there ' s individual color on the body . But they were confusing the form of the body and the color of the body and the light on the body all together . There wasn't anyone at that time - Prendergast - little notes - Henri would paint thirty or forty pictures a summer and would have one of two that were su ccessful . I mean he was highly admired at that period but he knew nothing about composition. He had amputation here, amputation there, the legs were cut off, the arms were cut off . If by accident he got the figure in so that it looked pretty good , why that was successful. They weren ' t great students then. One chap came on - I wanted him - Academy of Rome - Stickroff like Eugene Savage. I even thought of trying out for the Academy of Rome. In those days it was supposed to be an honor . But to try out for it I would have had to go to Yale. (It must be like professional politics; you had to get in with a crowd.) I could have gone to Yale and entered under Eugene Savage who was a former American Academy of Rome man . If I did that the chances were I ' d have the possibility of really competing and might get it. In Chicago they wouldn't let me have anything . But studying under a -12- former Academy of Rome man and then doing a good job I ' d have a chance. Al so I could have had a Yale degree. What can you do with any degree? You can't live on i t, you can't use it. But it sounds fine . 'J'hat ' s why people go to Harvard and Yale; it sounds fine . Every lawyer in the country comes from Harvard or some place like that; but there are very few good lawyers. The point is that T didn't go to Yale . Also after World War I, Thad a chance to go to the University of Chicago. They didn ' t have any GI Bill of Rights there . I didn ' t get anything over there; T didn't get anything after I came back; not a penny , you see. But the Institute by the time T got ou t I was on the way to thinking of studying, of thinking outside of making a picture . Then I went to the Pennsylvania Academy. It had a fairly good bunch of teachers like Daniel Garber, Charles Grafly, and other ones . I should mention that in Chicago I did take up heads under Polasek, the s culptor . PC IA Is that when you started sculpture? - in Chicago. Well, no. All these terms are cra zy, they mean nothing. I mean anything is not hard; anything is not easy. Those two words should go out completely. Whether we ' re speaking of watercolor or lithograph or etching or sculpture we say, "Is that harder?" Well, that ' s crazy because they are all more or less the same . If you eliminate the word "hard" everything disappears . If I teach anyone I say, "Eliminate that first." But in sculpture I think there ' s a sense of approaching a thing and you can come up to the surface and then stop . If you're making a stone sculpture you stop because you can't go into it. If you're making something that's fleshy, a woman or a man, your finger can sink in like it can sink into a pillow. Then you get gradations of shading and modeling . And all that a shadow is, is the opposite side without the light hitting it; but it's underneath; you've got to make the form underneath and then you want to shade on top; you go through it delicately to reach that. But all that any shading means is that you've got uphill and downhill; you've got a mountain and a valley. If you didn't have that you'd have a sheer cliff or a big flat mesa, a plane. I never use artificial light . The strongest and best light is light from the sky when it's cloudy , because there you've got like a reflector with the white clouds with the light pouring down. Leonardo knew that . If you take a small chamber like outdoors and run to the top, say, twenty or thirty feet, inside you'll have the purest light. The minute you put up a glass, a skylight, you diminish the strength of your light; you diminish the strength of your form. So you have to put more work into building it up into a beautiful form. For instance, here in Woodstock , Vermont is fine. Up in Canada the light is better . T went up there on the border the other day . It ' s better light . If an artist ~wants to really model and see things correctly he should go as far north as he can. He might be uncomfortable but the farther up he goes the better light he gets. It's a white light and it ' s a beautiful light because it shows the form of things, that is, if you're looking for the form. I'm not talking about abstraction. Everything is abstract anyhow . As far as that goes who knows what anything is? The more abstract you want it should be based only on nature. Nature is abstract. You don't create a nightmare or a dream. You don ' t have to. It's right here. Also in our thinking I think we have too much of identifying things. We say, "I am I." "You are you." "That's a stand." "That's a chair." "That's a table." That doesn't e xist. It gives all the names. Say you just came to this earth as a -13 · visitor for five minutes and you look at things and you don ' t know the names of the persons or the things, it would be wonderful. What happens then is this: you ' re arriving at the truth; it ' s all one. We kind of separate: We say here this is this . And that isn ' t so. As I sit here this is one; including myself it ' s iust one thing . And that ' s where people get lost . With their little knowledge they ' re confusing their minds and making a lack of knowledge. The Greeks in a good deal of their sculpture had what is called unity . Unity would be looking at the top and bottom of a figure and seeing it as a unit . If you look at sections you see a section and then you ' d have to join them all together to make a unity. My brother is trying to make a thing like the Greeks did top t o bottom. I thought I'd break away and make mine through repetition. A person can count up to seven and you put eleven things down it ' s confusing; you ' d have to guess . If you put down twenty-two things nobody can guess, It ' s just how good are you at guessing . You don ' t know. Now if you put a thousand things down you come on repetition by which again you arrive at unity but in a different way. We have a hundred billion stars yet we say we have a unit, you see, But if you try to encompass all those together then in one way it sort of rounds the thing out into a unity . Now it's a question of what is one driving for: In one picture you could drive for unity, in another picture you could drive for separation, and in another one for motion, or of force , If you want power, how much power do you want . What does power mean? We haven't changed the position at all . Now suppose we take a canvas, a square like a canvas, the ultimate of two squares put together and you start repeating, So your whole limit of size is two squares. It's very simple. So what are you going to do about it, you see . PC IA It just goes on and on and on . That ' s right. The height of what you can do is in two squares . Now when we think in dimension we have two eyes, Physicists and so forth say that there's a third dimension. I don't believe that at all. I do believe in an absolute dimension . We have two eyes . I think that space varies with the individual . Rodin had widely-separated eyes and could see. The King and the Queen of England have eyes that are right together almost on the same spot; they probably have never seen any space. The further apart the eyes are the bigger your vision or the bigger your space and your sense of space . Therefore a person with eyes widely separated can see form more easily . For example, let ' s take an apple . If your eyes are, say, normal you'll see it this way. If they ' re wide apart you ' ll see around it more. In other words, it' l l draw the apple closer to you. I mean you ' ll feel both sides and the front more. If the eyes are very close together all you ' ll have is a sort of narrow shape like a lemon sque ezed toge ther as if you squashed the thing, you see. There ' s nothing wrong with the but they ' re totally different. But for a painter it's pretty nice to have more force, more vision for the simple reason that he can create more easily the thing he ' s trying to create. T walk around things. I'm probably the first artist who ever found out he had a pair of legs . Rembrandt sat down. Holbein, the whole bunch , sat down . They didn ' t move. And they didn't want t he model to move. Now T take a number of positions and join them toge ther. If you can conceive of looking at an apple from every viewpoint at the same time you ' ll find that your mind cannot entertain it -14- and it'll go outside; you see, the mind doesn't want to have that. If you put that same apple in full light you won't have any form; you wouldn't see it. 1f you put it in full darkness you don't see it. We've gone from full dar~ness to full light. What we want is light in between, one light. If you have two lights you've got two apples with overlapping light, you see. I mean I have one skylight . Whereas in motion pictures they take a big aluminum panel or tint and throw it on the model, they throw it on the face of a girl , or they throw it on part of her dress. They are composing with a whole bunch of lights, you see. Which is all right. There is an absolute dimension. I have to involve science in this thing. We'll ju st keep on with the apple. Put it on the table there. It has a million shapes . Tt has a mill ion viewpoints. It gets small up to where it could disappear. It'll come up to you. You have no sense of measurement. Mow take a man made scale, put, say, a yard measure or a foot measure in front of you; that is not any check for that thing changes too with your eyes. You have no check except what you think. You can say this is a check but it isn't. Now with this sense of the two eyes there's a curvature. Everything has to curve slightly according to your eye r For instance, take two tracks running down . They don't go in straight lines. In architecture they have perspective; there are about three different types. They're all wrong. But they constantly curve. For instance, you take a wall twenty feet high and you're looking at this upright, say your eye is half way up - ten feet. Say it's a column. It has to slant, get smaller and it doesn't zigzag up there; it curves up there. And also it has to curve down below. In other words, it's part of a great, great arc, about two degrees varying with the separation of your eyes. It has to be that, you see. So here's what happens. Through seeing (we're told of this doggone third dimension which doesn't exist), a person who doesn't know anything sees more or less correctlyo Van Gogh saw correctly. In the painting of the floor in the bedroom scene with the red pil l ow or whatever it was he tipped the thing up for the simple reason that it does tip up. The fact that I can see the floor here means that it's raised up. But we're told that it's flat, that this is upright, this is flat here. Which is all fallacy. What actually happens: This tips up and that tips up and that is built by construction on it, that has to lean forward and the other thing comes down. The Greeks early had an understanding of this sight. For example, when they built the Parthenon from a certain viewpoint they had the pediment curve about two degrees. I got a book out of the library once on The Refinements of Architecture which mentions this curvature but they didn't know what i t meant . When I was a student in Philadelphia there were a few bank buildings along Broad Street that had a pediment. Walking along just with pure uncontrolled vision the sensitive eye will observe that the base of the pediment sags. If you make a thing straight by construction it will sag. What one should do from the position you're going to look at it and from the height of the person, you make it curve a little bit and then it will come down to be perfectly straight. Which is what you want. That's very important. People don't understand that. And that's true with everything. That's why on my "Door" I took an arbitrary line about three-and-a-half feet above - like at the doorknob and said: this is my axis across here, then an upright; therefore from here it cannot stay the same. The only way it'll stay the same is if you run -15- your eyes up and down that thing . END OF TAPE I - Side 1 Do you want to stop? -16 - TAPE I - Side 2 PC Let me say this is Side 2. IA I got sidetracked. PC That's okay. IA I might as well get back to the Pennsylvania Academy. to me. PC How did you pick that school to go to? IA Because my dad went there. And at that time it was supposed to be almost a hundred percent just fine arts. They had about 350 students. From its inception it had been noted for being about the best art school, not commercial at all. The Institute in Chicago at the time I was there had about 4,000 students and taught everything from knitting to weaving to hand printing; they would have taught finger painting if there was such a thing in those days. The Pennsylvania Academy was noted as being strictly fine arts. They had a few other schools on Broad Street. They claim that Robert Henri went to the Academy but got kicked out. But he never did go there; he went to a commercial art school up on Broad Street. Thomas Eakins was at the Academy and after him there was Anshutz. At the time I was there Grafly was teaching, and Daniel Garber, Arthur Carles (who you may not know but he has a certain name), and, oh, Mccarter who was a classmate of my dad's. He lied a little about his age; he was about four or five years older than he said he was. Then he went to France and knew Toulouse-Lautrec. At the time I was at the Academy he taught composition. He was a classmate of Charles Grafly but they hated each other. At that time Grafly was known as the best portrait man in sculpture in this country; and he was a realist. And Mccarter was talking about the abstract. And they did not click anymore than they do nowadays, more or less. It doesn't matter We had a composition class on Fridays. There were about eight or ten students in this class and we talked about this and that. I remember one Friday I made a little still-life. The way it was set up they had a stilllife building in the Academy off a ways. I put my canvas on the floor and painted this still-life to make it flat. I wanted to have the things rise up. I thought: This vase is sitting on a table, it's not laying down flat on the table, it rises up. So I put my canvas on the floor and painted the thing rising up . When it came time for Mccarter to give us a criticism he went around and looked at each one's work. When he came to mine I said, "This is supposed to be flat on the floor." He said, "You' re not painting a rug." I said, "I know I'm not painting a rug." He said, "You don't put it on the floor or the ceiling." And he shook his head. The next Friday when he came around he said, "You're a real modernist." He said, "I've been thinking it over. That's all right." It wasn't a very good painting but the idea, you see. Now we always have our canvases upright when we hang them. Isn't that great? Now why in hell should they be upright? There's no reason in the world for it except that it's a fad. In the last few weeks I've been thinking that we paint pictures at every angle, so why do we make all these darn upright pictures. What's the matter with us? We don't see things upright. Actually we're standing upside down on this earth so why in hell do we always have pictures standing upright. -17It's silly, ridiculous. We should kill that idea. Everybody is taught the wrong thing all the time. Let's make them at angles; let's make them upside down. If they don't like it, okay. They can stand on their head if they have to. But we're too much with one philosophy which is wrong. It's not right. If everything were upside down it would be wrong too. Let's give everything a fair chance; divide the pie equally. PC Who did you study with that you f ound congenial at the Academy? IA I liked Mack (Mccarter) pretty well. I mean his philosophy. What I ' d really been looking for was what's back of painting as far as artists are like, I mean good ones, whether it's Bellini or Velazquez, El Greco, Michelangelo, Raphael, (Raphael is a little sweet). You keep changing. Which you should do. I think you should admire a great numbe r of them at different periods but I don't think you should copy them or be influenced by them. After all, they enjoyed what they were doing. As I say, you have one enemy and one friend. You have one competition only and that's yourself. Only one. Forget the others. The span of success of anything in the world isn't any thicker than a sheet of the thinnest paper. Failure is just as good as the greatest success that ever lived; just about; it's that close. But it's hard to work. Everyone could do much better than he does. We're lazy; at least I am. Just making another thing like an I . B.M. machine is of no interest to me. You should be able to improve on what you've done and to repeat and make one after the other. Everything T've done anyhow has been slow growth. I started out making motion one little thing. In an early picture I did - the Chicago Art Institute has it now - it 9 s called Flesh; I had a bowl in it. I tried to turn the water upside down because actually what is a glass bowl? It's only through knowledge - or experience we call it - walking up to the bowl, feeling it, putting your hand inside it (which is no proof that that thing is hollow). So I pretended it was just the opposite. And it works just the same. There were a few flowers in it. I turned it around the other way. And then the next fime I painted Ida, I had a handkerchief - I tipped it over a platform where I had the model and it hung down. I painted Ida that way. It wasn't flat on the floor. And on The Door I painted acorner of a door, made a piece of wood, painted it black like the corner and then reversed the thing on it. These things are very subtle. They only show a trifle. I put a key in the door. I painted it from the opposite angle from what I looked and naturally it follows your eye. And people say: isn't it amazing that that follows your eye. I'd say, "I didn't notice that before." Well, I changed my position on the roses in the wreath. I think I had twelve roses. I painted each one from a different level. I painted one rose in it. I remember thinking of Christ. I'm not very religious - I believe in God though. I remember thinking of Christ all the time and it looked sweeter than the others. Now if you can take any object and paint it with a feeling of hunger - of course you don't want to take a pottery plate and think of hunger because you couldn't eat it if you were hungry - say you took a roll in that case and you didn't eat for a few days, I mean you can't build up hunger, you can't make a false hunger, you'd have to just not eat for four or five days, or eat so little that it would look good to you; it would have a -18- different feeling. Now what changes? Does your shape change? No. But something changes. Now love can change things. I don't think that you can paint hate. Hate would just destroy it. You can paint - if you were thirsty and painted a rose it probably would have moisture on it or tend to have that. It would not have a dry feeling I guarantee you if you really were thirsty; if you kept to the stage where you really were thirsty you're bound to have some of that feeling. You're not changing the shape; you're not changing the color. You're putting something else in it which it has, you see. That means that when we paint a picture and stuff we think we're not putting anything in it much. Or we're mixing all our emotions, see. We're well fed, we drink well, you do this. What are you putting in it? And that's wrong. You should be thinking. Now if you want to be subtle and you're trying to get some texture you almost ought to sandpaper the ends of your fingers. How about a guy opening a safe? He sandpapers them. Why? To be more sensitive. How about the artist? He should sandpaper his fingers all the time to get form because the minute you approach it you can almost have an extension feeler. I love form, I mean sculpture. You should feel it. You don't want to go through it, you don't want to go in it unless youvre trying to make a certain curvature. Now that makes a thing. Now you take all these things. So you want to have absolute accuracy. ~o have accuracy I pinpoint my pictures by putting on dots of white or whatever other colors. With one you have nothing. Take these violet costumes in my paintings. I had dots all over them. I don't want to keep spending my time trying to see where I looked before. Like you get off in New York or Chicago or San Francisco and wonder "where am I?" - when you can call it like three little dots. So I put down two, which gives only a line; it doesn't give any sense of space, I mean of area. So, as a rule, I put down three dots. And then if I keep on putting them down I'll start out with white, and then use yellow or blue or whatever the material so the dots will show. Then I can identify. Then you look at the thing you're making and maybe you want love. You have cloth; you want separation; you want movement. You're playing with motion instead of designing with area. The way it's painted first without doing anything T call the thing "static". Now if T want to move around T'll have a certain thing curve around without changing anything. I don't mean by a drastic motion. I'll get on the other side and pull it this way. And then if I want it to stop T'll pull on the other side. Or if you want to, you can make it go faster. You play around with that. When you walk around an object you're doing the same thing whether you know it or not. PC You walk around a setup frequently rather than just looking at it from, say, behind a canvas, don't you? IA Yes. Here - let me show you something. There's a position. PC Oh, I see. IA There's my position, for damn thing . This is for That's too complicated. made of Senator Benton. Here is my plan for The Window. God's sake. And I worked twenty years on this The Window here. Let me get the picture out. It won't make any difference. The small one I This is the sixteenth -- you haven't seen that. -19'T'here's The Cornfield. The scene is Georgia. Here's my plan. Down in Georgia I covered an acre walking. I took a bunch of old white shirts or sheets and tore them into rags and tied these cornstalks all around here. And this is my motion, my movement walking around, you see. PC It's a real map. IA It is a map, yes. You're darn right it's a map and if you donvt follow it right you're out of luck. Now here's my motion. Here you are, see: "Place canvas on left side. Place canvas on right side on bottom of easel" all around here, see. Now here, take a look at those clouds. Notice what feeling you get. I painted them upside down. A thing painted upside down has to roll over. I'm just getting it so I know what I'm doing and so forth. They have to. The light's true and everything what's wrong? Now here. My oldest son saw this and said that it looks like a battlefield (which irritated me). Now look here, there's motion all over the darn thing, see; although in places it's static. Look at the thing. But they're all drawn realistically, all drawn possible; they're drawn from standing here it's true; they're all true ; People talk about abstraction - and it's all right here. We've got this, see. PC I see. IA But it has to be done subtly; you can't make a crude thing of it or you'll have nothing. It's hard enough with realism. Therefore, the easiest thing you can do is a round thing; otherwise it'll be like Saturn with a ring around it. If you turn this table top around you'll have an outside area, you'll have an inside area, and then you'll have the main core which is solid. So something that approaches a solid core is easiest to turn around because you've got all the body inside of that. Now here, I walked from here across the Ottauquechee River on this thing. And it creates a wonderful feeling. Then I drew this all correctly. In other words, I'm making the observer look exactly where I want him to look. And it's an amazing thing: this thing hates to be confined; nature does not like to be told how you handle it; it fights all the time. Now if you put that against a conservative painting -- I get into both abstract and realistic shows because I am abstract. I'm not just making a pattern like a Persian abstraction or like - I don't have to make Homage to the Square like Albers. That's a silly little abstraction that doesn't do anything. T'm working with nature, with what nature does. Now here where's this other one? I'll explain this with a picture. This thing here. I'd better give you the picture, otherwise you'll be confused. I didn't know that then. This one I used it in more or less. PC What's the title of that? IA Wherefore Now Ariseth The Illusion of the Third Dimension. When I first started finding out about it. Now here's a still-life. It's lace with these objects on a bureau. This would show actually. I did this in about 1931. I walked around this table. T' ll go around this way. These apples are painted here; these gloves are here, this apple is there; and I took a round object. Now here I made a conflict by painting this this way, this way, that way; and they want to separate. And then this is here. _ And the result is that you go around. -20PC What started you to move around? IA Well, because I was fascinated. I thought: why am I standing still? What's the matter? I mean I said: I've got legs. 'Ibis apple or whatever it is has a viewpoint on the other side. Why do T just confine myself to one part of it? Why don't T explain it more? We had all this talk about Cezanne and other artists getting space but I couldn't see where the hell the space was. I found out that what Cezanne did was he used a set palette. You know what a set palette is, don't you? PC What is it? IA Well, suppose we take red, yellow and blue and you put a little red in the blue and a little yellow in the blue and vice versa with each color. And if you had all the colors you'd do the same thing. So what you would have - first, we'll say we have just ~he same amount, just a little bit of each; or you'll have a harmony without working. Upstairs T have this painting I did of the Man in Georgia. Say you wanted to make up a different set palette we'll say more artistic and in a certain way like The Fisherman, and wanted to run toward a yellow, he had this yellow slicker on and everything, I could balance it all running towards the yellow or greens and mute it down up to the full extent. I could mix them all together and make them tertiary and do it two or three times until the thing has to be in tone, T suppose you'd say. Not only that but you could run it any way you want it up to the nth degree. Cezanne did that a little bit; you see he mixed them up. T mixed up a set for a picture of mine and, my God, T found out it's just like Cezanne; all the poor guy did was have a set palette. So that's nothing mysterious. That's just that. Now this came slowly. I was interested in doing some of these things in The Door. In that painting I kept changing things around. J had moldings on The Door this way and I had so much time I'd twist it around this way. All you have to work with is light falling on an object. So on the molding I had the light falling on one thing. I thought: why couldn't the light fall on the other side? Why do I always work the whole thing as if the light I mean, heck, I'm just dealing with a fantasy, anyhow, or a vision. So I made certain sections with the light falling on the opposite side. And all you get then is a reverse thing. But that makes the other part stronger. And also it takes it away from being like a Van Dyck or a Velazquez, like something which is static. These things are static; they have no movement. Rembrandt did have great atmosphere but all his figures are just like a frozen dummy like in a wax museum. Let me get this one picture. 'l'urn that --- until J: was finishing '!'he Window and I thought "I know what I'm doing" and they can have it now because I didn't want to have it copied. r pretended T was just dumb and didn't know why these things happened. I had this at Carnegie Institute years ago. Some artist said he'd give anything to know what I was thinking about. I said, "Aw, nuts!" Well, because you have imitators before -- Come over to a better light. On The Door, which I worked on for about ten years - I first spent about a yeardrawing it. On The Window, which I worked on for about nineteen or twenty years T spent about a year and a half drawing it first. I got -21- married during that time and moved down to Chicago. I made a brick wall for The Window. I went to Aurora, Illinois and spent three days picking out the brick. 'they had a pile of old bricks. T think they must have thought I was nuts. I'd say, "This is a pretty brick." "This one isn't so good." Some of the bricks were burned where they had got too near fire and there was a glaze like lava, yellow and green running down the sides. I'd say, "'that's a fine brick. It's beautiful." If anyone had heard me muttering I'm sure they would have gotten a strait jacket right away. I picked out about 500 or 600 or maybe 800 bricks . It took me most of a week. Then I carted them down to Warrenville. For The Window I looked around for the sill or frame. T couldn't find anything I wanted so I made one. I got old parts and put them together trying to make up a portion a little bit narrower than usual so it would have a little character outside of mine. For background I got a not very good rug for the floor and I got an old bureau and put a lamp on it and so forth. Here - we'll start with the lamp. No - I ' ll start with this thing here. 'T'his is my general plan. I use it all the time . PC How did you decide to use a window as the main -- ? IA I had painted The Door and had painted wood for ten years and I didn't want to see any more wood as long as I lived . Refore that I had painted a fat man, I mean a strong laborer - I called this painting Room 203 He posed for me for thirteen months. He had a derby on his head. He had been a bartender, he had been a labor leader; during Prohibition he used to have an iron chain in the back of his truck that he would let down and swing at the cops who followed him and knock them off the road. He was that sort of chap. He was about sixty years old. He had white hair. And he thought he was good-looking. He used to drive horses into Chicago and bring in freight. He told me, "You know, those horses are smart. I can get drunk and they'll take me right home." I heard horse talk all the time. I painted that guy. Well, after painting him for thirteen months I didn't want to see any flesh. So I painted The Door. When I got through with The Door - well, say, you ate eggs for ten years in a row you'd get tired of eggs. The same with fish. If you had it at every meal you'd get tired of it. So why did I paint brick? I wanted to get away from wood. When I got through with brick I didn 1 t want to ever see a brick again. So that's about it. PC Constantly changing. IA Some people get tired of their wives after ten years or twenty years. Some don't. It's just a matter of that. Now here's this thing. By this time I was beginning to understand what motion was. I laid this out. Now I'll explain this: "F" means front side. "L" means left side; by that I mean I put the picture on the left side. Now here: "Right side" I put it this way. PC The canvas keeps turning then? IA Oh, yes, sure. But you've got to compose it so that it will do something when it turns. You don't want to have all your motion go outside. I'm trying to contain the motion inside the picture, have the motion control your emotions as well as the picture. But I'm going to make the picture -22- as realistic as I can and follow minutely what nature does and forget about whether it's realistic or not. If the hair has hairs on it I want to put the hairs on the hair, you see When I studied at the Chicago Art Institute some chap said, "Don't put a hair on. It's the worst thing you can do." Okayo People are afraid of photographs because they can't reach it. A photograph is false anyhow. If you're afraid of anything ••• '!'hey used to talk about feeling. Now feeling is just unanalyzed knowledge. The minute you figure out what that thing is there's always feeling ahead. You don't have to be afraid of getting so much knowledge that you won't have feeling. Most of the artists go by feeling, which is just bunk; if you go by feeling you're going by lack of knowledge. Now here - this is the front side. T'll demonstrate . from my diagram: "Left side" - that means I stand as is first. "Back" I get back of the object. Say, I'm painting you; instead of painting here I get back of you. Now here your hand is placed upside down. "LS" place canvas under the other (that's repetition). "H" is front view looking directly at object. You can look a certain way; looking up at object, looking down at objecto You see, you can look down and so forth. "M' ' is looking and moving around object; you see, you give it a swing. Now here wevll take this object here; that's a flask. Here I have "B" - what the hell is that? I have to look myself - this is the "back" - the window was here and I got back of it. I put my easel in back on this other side and not in front. Look, there you are. That's normal, see. Look here, look what it does: it wants to fold. Let me show you: now we'll take the lamp. 'The lamp is "Back RS" - that means place on the right side. And I looked left. You see, here I get in back of the thingo I put the canvas on the right side and I look to the left, not right in front. Now here we are; it's on the right side, I'm in back of my setup and I'm looking to the left this way, not that way. Now you see what this has: it has a tendency of falling. See this thing here, see how that is; there's a tendency to roll down. It's upside down. 0 PC I see. TA See, this is upside down. PC The picture - right? IA Yes, the picture is going to roll. Now these three things here, I use these --- the objects mean nothing except that you don't want to have something fancy that doesn't fit it; otherwise the objects are immaterial. PC Do you collect all the objects for a particular reason? IA Well, yes. Just so they fit in. I use this old thing here; I don't want to have a new Tiffany pitcher, for God's sake, or one from Spalding. (I don't like that new polished stuff anyhow.) Here - these are three beer bottles. This is more or less like the center of that job I did with the lemons where I had three apples in that bowl. Now here I have these three and the result is rather amazing. This one here is standing in back, that means T have the canvas way around in the back - "HU" means front view and looking directly at object. And it's upside down. Now here: this is the way I looked at it; see that; it's back looking right at it. Look here, it's going to roll. -23- Now look at the object - have I got a finished one of it? - wait a minute - no - I'll show you the picture. Here : you ' re looking at this one, see: see it standing there? see how it stands up nicely? PC IA Right. Now I'm in the back looking at it that way. Now here you are - where is the darn thing? Here, see - see what that does: it's falling; it has to fall. Now these others I put in opposite as a foil. This thing here is left side and so forth. Where the heck am I looking? - this way and this way. See this one. So they fight, you see. I have those three. Now I'm pretending that I'm in the center there, looking at these. You understand? I don't want to sound too nutty. I could do it another way; I could stand outside this way and look this way and look that way and then they'd crowd in on each other. Now if I had an area like this where they want to expand, next to it, , if I wanted to, I could have a thing pushed in . That's only where the composition comes in, whether I want it. Now this thing is upside down more or less . See, that ' s falling . This thing here is upside down. Now look at this thing here -- this is back right side upside down - no - what's "R"? - right side back. '!'here. Now look at that crazy thing, see. Tt looks like it wants to roll over. It looks like it wants to fall off . It canvt stay in that position. You see, it cannot stay in this position although they were in that position. If you took an apple and painted it from three positions i t says: look, you can only look at me from one place; don ' t you dare look at me from another; I don't like it. So this thing is unhappy and fighting itself all over . Now I had an awful time with this chair, darn it. I painted it from three directions; I had this way, that way and that way. Now this picture frame back here I got way in the back with my canvas, my setup was about halfway from here to there bigger than that . It took up quite an area. I gave the thing to the Institute. They have my setup . I still have a few of the props, the chair and a few things; they didn ' t want them . I ' d rather give them a diagram but they ' d never accept it . You see, for this thing I got way over against that wall with my canvas, the picture is hanging there; and, you see, I did this on the thing. And all the way through. Now along the window sill it may not look like anything but I had that as if Twas walking along this way, this way, and this way. PC Did you make all these decisions about points of view after you built this? IA Well , I made these somewhat knowing what I was going to do. It took me a month or so to arrange the thing. You see, I don ' t make a thing fast. Once I arrange it and the scale I just start drawing. When T painted 'T'he Door I drew it. I painted just once. on it - I did so much a day I knew just where I was going - I didn ' t go over and repaint at all; hell , I knew what I was doing. That was it. A definite statement. And the same way with The Window. I had a little trouble becau se I moved out from Warrenville. I put tape on each one of the bricks and marked each one , say, "Brick 108 is a fine brick" and so on. When I moved I thought I could use the drawing I had worked on for a year. I had to draw the whole damn thing over: T lost a lot of time. The drawing was okay. But the mortar would be different. What's the use? I was kidding myself. Jt was just impossible. T couldn't do it. T mean I had to have this -24- definite statement. Now this tree, which is very important - I put that and I had each of these on a platform. I could move it out. I made that so it twists, was a spiral, kept turning it around and drawing around, you see. So it isn't a static tree. The hell with it! I knew what a branch looks like; I could paint it like a branch; pardon me, like Andy Wyeth if I wanted to. But I mean I'd walk around that thing. You see, if this tree has all those viewpoints, why the hell cheat it? Now here's where I was picking out a pretty brick, you know, the glaze and so forth. I even got burned bricks. I've got some up her yet from the thing. I didn't finish - this thing is in charcoal, which is all right, I think. It's kind of nice to leave a little piece that way so they can see how you work. And all the way through there's motion in this darn brick here. I had "less wide, wide, wider, widest, wider, wide, less wide, narrow, more narrow," and so on down. In other words, this is my center, my axis. Like in looking at anything I've got to know - I'm here at Woodstock, I'm not at Hanover, New Hampshire. So I pinpointed it this way and that. It's arbitrary. It doesn 't mean anything. But if you don't do that your eye would run up and down this thing and what the hell would you have. You wouldn't have anything. In other words, you'd be making a thousand statements without knowing what you're doing. I'm making one statement, right or wrong. I'm tieing myself here; I don't say it's the best view; and then I tie myself in space there that way; and so forth. ~ow this drapery I painted from the back side, some here and some here to turn it. That window - that was a son of a gun! I had this window - where is it? it looks pretty -- I tried to paint through it the w~y it is. It was impossible. So I took the window --- I painted all the brick first. Then I had to put the window over it, because the other way it wasn't accurate enough, it wasn't accurate and I'd be just kidding. So I had to paint the building all in and then turn that thing. That was painted backwards from here. But it has enough truth in it that you'd call it realism, wouldn't you? Yet it isn't realism at all . It's variety is emotional. PC One of the things that intrigues me is the fact that there are so many objects in this picture. IA That doesn 1 t make any difference. I mean if I had a simple object - let me just show you -- I don't make drawings much, you know. We 've been doing some remodeling here, the bathroom and so on. They started working on December 10th and are still working. Putting in a bathroom and other little changes. This studio had shelves; I had them taken out and put in panels. And they are going to raise the skylight. So I made a drawing up from above. Would you like to see it? PC Yes. IA I didn't intend to do much. This will show you a little something. I've only made one other drawing that I did years ago of a figure of a girl. That's in Israel. I gave it to Jack Weinberg a few years ago to give to the museum there. Have you ever been there? PC No. IA They have a beautiful museum. It has about eight levels. They have a building for sculpture. They have Velazquez and so on. They wanted -25- something of mine so T gave him a lithograph and a drawing to give to them. He can take it off. T couldn't. PC Oh, this is the view out --? IA Yes, from the bathroom where you'll be. This took three weeks. ~ow here, we have the thing standing up where you can see the things. Can you see it all right there? Well, I'll explain: This thing here - "one half right side" - actually the tree would look like that otherwise. "One half right side" I bent it there. 'J'his one I made "one half left side" so they'll fight. I showed it to my wife when I had it about half done. She said, "That's terrible." You see first winding around. Now I built this snow. This here is normal right here. But this is all different so I could pile it down. Now I made this thing here "one half right side." Let me show you what happens there: It has a tendency to fall. I make my things move by direction; do you see that? And the river, I had some of it upside down and everything. It was kind of fun. Here T swung the things around - I'll just show you - "one half left side, one half left, one eighth right side, one eighth left side, one eighth le ft side, and one half le ft side." And the bridge here is "one half left side, one half right side." So I turn the road around like this. Actually it comes down like that. I swung this around like this and that so I can turn it this way and turn that around that way and you get much more feeling out of it. PC Well, before you did that drawing you made this chart - right1 IA No. As I was going along I started on this tree and I figured that if I'd have this tree bend this way - I wanted full action so then I made that go the other way. This one forces that more there. Then r pull it together by having this static or normal which makes this more evident yet. You want some normal positions. Come out here and you can look out there. Tt's static. It isn 1 t anything. You look at the bridge. What does it mean? I moved this thing around so I have quite a lot of motion in that, you see. This goes this way and that way and so forth. PC No, I was just trying to get the relationship between the finished drawing and the -- TA Well, I 1 m showing you this, which is fascinating; it's easier to see just what I do. You see this bridge? Now Byron Thomas made one like this. The thing looks close to a photograph, for God's sake. Now the truth is there's no reason in the world why I can't walk over there and see this in that position. When I was making these outdoors in Georgia I walked around from that viewpoint and tied it together. Take this tree over here, say I made it from here, I mean, say, I started from here, I'd make the first five feet from here, then I'd go over there and continue up each five feet from a true thing, we'll say the same distance apart, so you keep the same size (otherwise you'd run into trouble), I'd have a true thing. And yet the conception of it is totally different. You understand that more? PC Right. -26TA Now if you're dealing with a picture you've got color too, you've got light and color. Say you take a red you shadow to light again. It's like morning and evening. You run around the whole ••• I made a thing one time later -- does that make any sense to you? PC Yes. IA That's a watercolor. PC What's the title of that one? IA Ah God - Herrings, Buoys, the Glittering Sea. I made this in Philadelphia. It was awarded the top prize in Philadelphia. A two hundred dollar thing. But what I did with this: It was too bright to look at. I happened to have an old mirror and I painted this in reverse, painted it backwards. See here, if you were a sailor you'd know that; this rope is just opposite from the way it looks. That's your proof, you see. It's all painted in reverse. If I put a mirror up and you looked at it then you'd see it correctly. PC That's fantastic. IA PC See this, it's all backward. Everybody wouldn't know it. But, you see, it was too strong the other way. I worked all summer on it. And this was in color, this was sunlight. This was a harbor in Korea. This was green, this was yellow. I haven't got a mirror - yes, I have. But that wasn't intentional. And that was not a - almost a set palette - no. Now in this shadow if you look at anything - I'm pretending it's in a brighter light - all you have to do when it's in a duller light is to look at it longer and you get the same result. It doesn't make any difference, you see. If I put it in full sunlight it's one thing - okay, one minute in full sunlight or maybe half an hour in a dull light is the same idea. So put that in. Your eye is an instrument and gets tired and when it gets tired - everything in nature is looking for a balance. A stream never runs uphill; it runs downhill. Beauty is the line of least resistance. It has to be that. A stream runs downhill, water falls down Raphael - if you make a curve (if I knew more about mathematics it would probably be a hyperbolic curve or something) - you would have what they call the line of greatest beauty where there aren't any interruptions. The minute you have an interruption it will change the flow. Suppose you look at the color of the vermilion hat for ten minutes. Your eyes will become saturated with the color and then will start to see the opposite color. So you close your eyes and you get the de f inite opposite color. You don't want any imagination; we're not going for theory; we're not going for anything except proof. So I take these sticks here that were made as far back as when I was in Hollywood, and I look at any of these in strong light for about three minutes and close my eyes and I'll get what the opposite is. Or with shapes. So I'm using quite a bit of that method on this. It's the first one I've used it on all the way through. It creates an illusion of there being a lot of color. Which it doesn't have. So that's a whole thing I'm working out. Did you make those sticks or wands? -27IA I had them made in Hollywood (or I made them in Hollywood.) all. I'll tell you how I started on this thing I made them PC Were they different shapes? - were they round and square and triangles? IA Yes, they were different shapes, round and square. And, you understand, the same thing would hold with a pattern. I haven't gone into that yet. You see, if you look at this thing under strong light, say, three minutes (until your eye is fatigued a little), then you close your eyes, the eye will throw the opposite. That's balance. And earlier I also figured out: I think that to create more form, I mean more color or more illusion of space, one eye sees warm and the other sees cool a little bit. It has to; because it wouldn't be sensible for God to make man with both eyes with the same thing. They're constantly shifting. That gives you an idea of form. For example, if a man with one eye walks up to a wire he will constantly hit himself. You know that. With two eyes you constantly shift the warm color and the cool color. That creates more of a sense of form too - the color. Am I boring you with all this? PC No, i t's fascinating. IA Very slowly. T did it in Bollywood. When T was painting The Picture of Dorian Gray I had a junior kleig light on it. It was so intense and everything - the reason I used the junior kleig light (they were hard to get) was: I thought that if I paint this picture without any lights on it and they will show it under light, I ' m a fool, you see. So I painted my picture under the kleig light. Therefore, the colors were corre c t for artificial light. PC So you had the light on the canvas . TA So I painted it so it would be right when they got through. I didn ' t know much but T didn't get caught that way. So that's how I started it there; that ' s the way it started. PC I see . Well, the color pattern on those wands - are they the same? do you change them? IA Well, for instance, I was making a 1 ittle thing the other day •••• Well, if I were painting this coat I'd match the color. 'T'he green or whatever T happen to be painting . Or the chair. And of course the duller the color of the object, say, the chair, the longer it takes to react. 1'hen I put these afterimages in the shadow for the simple reason that I don't want to make it too conspicuous. See, that enhances the other color. And then you have a second and a third thing that appears . So maybe I ' ll play with the second afterimage, not the first; or the third even. Then, again , I ' m playing not with feeling but with what happens. I don ' t give a damn what I feel - I don ' t know - I don ' t feel anything except that I want to have it accurate. Now this thing here -- PC But the thing you want to be accurate becomes the distance traveled? IA Oh, yes. I want it to work. I have a diagram on all kinds of things. Let me see if I can find a notebook. I haven't had a chance to work on How did you develop that? or -28- this for quite a while. I work on it for two or three months, then I get tired and fed up, then we generally go away and when we come back I can see what I want to do. You may think you're wasting time doing this but really you aren't; you're working all the time. It's just that it starts to get dull. I have all these notebooks. This is The Vermonter. I I 11 get a piece that you can see. You know, you can get good ideas but they don't always work. (sound of leafing through notebooks) Here are two sleeves. (moving easel or something) - ~- PC I love that easel. IA Don't you love that easel! I have to watch my fingers, I'm a little bit scary about getting them pinched. 'l'his is done in chalk, it isn't painted yet. PC Do you use the chalk as --? IA Well, I'll tell you: I started this thing on canvas and I worked on it for six months and I noticed the darn weave was going to show. So I lost six months on it, I got this Masonite and put it on that, So in this one I can compose more as I go along - the first one I can - because the one on c ~nvas was more or less definite. This will be a column; this thing here is going to be, look, up here see this - do you know what that is? That's an apple corer. PC Oh, right. IA They have twenty kinds. Come here, I'll show you what I'm going to do here on this thing: Start from here and come around here, you see like this right at you and then around here I'm putting this thing in some place yet. You see this color? PC Oh, I see. IA Now here, this thing here look I 1 m going to have it hit you right in the eye there. Come around this side . I turn around and turn this way, see. So it can't exist and yet it's true. I mean this is true from this angle; that is true from that angle. But you have to combine them intelligently enough so they don't be ridiculous. This thing is upside down, see. Then I 1 ll paint this column, which I haven't started yet, more or less static to tie things together; and these will have more force yet. PC Right. IA And this goes up here and then I'll have to make this dark back here and so forth. Around this spot you're getting a few afterimages. Now here, this sleeve, look at the dang thing! "Shirt, place canvas on left side;" I went all the way around; I went around like here and then that way. I don't know - you'd have to study it for about half a day to see - to find out just what I did. I tried to get reverse motion. Now when I get to this thing here - I haven't started it yet - I'll try to swing it around here. The coattails go down there, see, the red will come down here and swing it around like that. Well then, I can't turn his head; I can't play Right. -29- with the head yet because if I distorted it people will know. Say I want to turn him that way; see, I have him here; I'll make the motion go around this way more; more than it is. Not oniy will I get the form of the thing, but I mean I want it to turn . Say I want it to turn here well then, to make it turn more here I'll turn this column this way, you see, so I'll have that coming this way and this turning that way. I'll get a confounded movement going, you see. And then over here to get space I'll probably slant planes down like at this angle, see, in there to get distance. But it's fun. It makes fun out of it. PC Yes. IA Yes. And you don ' t realize there ' s that much motion or what it really is until you put it next to, say, a Van Dyck. People say this thing starts wiggling and moving. It drives them nuts. You know what I mean? Because this thing turns ; -- PC What are these little highlights that you've just mentioned? IA Those are the afterimages of these colors next to it. For instance, this pipe was painted upside down. That ' s the way it's supposed to go. It doesn't like the position it has now. See, that's up, down. In here I have his shirt open (this is not finished), you ' ll notice he's wearing a chain with a cross attached. (He wouldn't carry either. ) I want to open the shirt; now how do I open it? I'll work from this side around here, then I'll work from this side on that side. Possibly you can open it more than you could by just painting the thing, you see. It should open some. And then I've learned this -- Then I'll write down what I should do. (Looking for something in a notebook) PC Do you make a lot of notes like this on everything? IA It's active - all those things. Oh, yes. I have two or three notebooks. I made notes all along on !he sure. Now here, here's the cross. I have notes on the whole thing. "Bottom first chain links normal" and so forth. Yes, I have notes. I have to have. The cross is upside down . Here I think I've found out how I can twist the chain with this motion , see. It's a gold chain. Now I don't care much what the object is. Look over here: I ' m using a heavy chain because it's easier to handle. It doesn't matter to me whether it's as big as a chain that you'd pull a log with. I think I can make it spin and twist. Actually there ' s no object in making it twist but I like to see if I can make it twist. You know what I mean? So the first section I'll have normal; the second, left side; the third, upside down; the fourth, right side; the fifth, normal . And doggone it, I think I can make that thing twist. I ' ll try. What will happen is the light will keep changing on it like shadow and light. We have two squares in anything: We have light to shade and shade to light. That's all we have in the doggone thing. And the other is just color, see. I have notes on all of this. (Turning pages in notebook) Regarding the lamp I was studying that doggone thing and I get this (this is Metro-GoldwynMayer paper) - about afterimages. Where the hell is it? - I have one little thing I want to show you. I have it fairly well down. I've been working on it long enough. I'm gradually beginning to understand what the ~indow, -30- other dimension is, you might say. It would take a' long lifetime to master this. Now here's a thing I've figured out: if it's placed on the left side an object rises to the right about ninety degrees; if you place it on the right side it falls to the left about ninety degrees; about I mean. Now upside down reverse the position of area end to end 180 degrees object becomes or area upside down. One half left side rises to right forty-five degrees, one half right, and so on. See, this is what happened; the left side goes this way here. Then, you see, I have this diagram here of this darn man, of a position. Here's your man there. We'll say this is normal position, this is that way, that way, that way. I tip it around like that, see. PC I see. IA And then finally you get what they do and then you've got to play with those darn movements. Then is how well you can handle it. Well, like the old-fashioned composing with areas. Naturally you compose with areas too. Rut you'll probably get more force this way than you can the other way. PC I see. IA Oh! It drives you nuts sometimes. Without those diagrams T wouldn't be able to do anything with that thing. Tf T lost this diagram I couldn't work. Tf T went away for half a year how in hell could I come back and work on it! PC Does the diagram develop as you're working? IA Well - on this thing here it's developing more, see. I've had a rest from painting on this. This is going to be very amusing. I want to paint around here - let me show you this thing. This is an old one - it means nothing. I can explain it to you anyhow. I try constantly to figure which way I want to move. I don't want to move all in the one direction. ! want to swing stuff this way and then that way. Tf it gets too violent T1 ll tame it down with a few static things or opposite things. Let me see whether I've got it in here. Just a minute. PC Why don't we stop now. It's very condensed because it's only a little -- END OF TAPE I - Side 2 TAPE-RECORDED I"TTERVIEW WITH TVAN LE LORRAINE ALRRIGHT - 'TAPE TI IN HIS S'T'UDIO IN WOODS'l'OCK, VERMONT FEBRUARY 5, 1972 INTERVIEWER: PC Paul Cummings IA Ivan Albright PAUL CUMMI~GS PC This is Tape 2, Side 1. IA It's fairly static, isn't it? PC Right. IA Look here at this PC 'This is The Window. IA This is The Window. It's fairly static, look here, here, hereo I had a girl pose for that hand for about six months at the end but to start with I used this plaster case of a hand. Rut, look, what the hell are you going to do with that? - not much. I have drawings here of all the different positions; I have to, to know what 1'm looking at to handle an area. Let's see now, have T got the right one "here? PC What starts an idea for a painting? - do you know? IA Well, it generally takes me - when I'm through with this and if I wanted to start another serious painting, if I need a model the first thing I'd have to think about is: can I get a model; then will the model stay with me. I don't want to get one that will die or become incapacitated or won't pose or is too fussy. T mean, say, T want to make a figure piece, that would be the first thing to consider. Of course, if I want to make a still-life I'm on my own and they can't stop me. Then I try to run through my head some subject which might be of value to somebody philosophically, some conception other than painting something like, say, a Childe Hassam - a fish and a bowl of grapes, for God's sake. I mean to try to have something that will pertain to some phase of life that might have a little more meaning if possible. Then I'd go on from that. This chap - I haven't got - I mean what can you do with a man without company? What are you going to do with the old bird? I don 't know. PC I've always been curious about how you would accumulate all the objects that you use. IA Once I know what I want - well, with The Door I kept collecting thingso For instance, the doorstep was a tombstone. I got it in Naperville for thirty-five cents. My study of architecture came in handy here. I knew I'd have to have a threshold I went down to the junkyard and finally found a nice brass thing that looked paintable , old, battered, not true, that I put down there. Then I thought a girl's hand would give it a little human interest. If you get a human being into a thing you have something 0 0 -32closer - a piece of wood is not your roommate or your bedmate. I think it 1 s better if you can tie it up somewhat with a person. So I got a girl with a small hand and posed the hand leaning - symbolism - a funeral wreath, it could be anything. My mother had a very fine handkerchief of allover lace that probably belonged to her grandmother. It was very silly in size, unusable, it was white and I dyed it blue; I don't know why except that I didn't want to paint a white handkerchief . I supp ose I thought white would stand out too much there, that it would be too important . The brass key was from the door of my old studio which I had built. I found an old door at a junkyard in Chicago . I didn't want to have an ordinary outside stock door three feet by seven feet made of white pine. I looked around until I found an old door that looked kind of drab like an Adams or from a ghos t house, one that would have a little character in itself, that had been painted and had started to fade. You want to pick something which looks as if it's lived its life, possibly like everything goes from finish down to dust and from dust down to finish with a little life of its own . The funeral wreath - I got a cheap one so it wouldn ' t look like a gangster ' s funeral or a rich person ' s . I had to replace those calla lilies three or four times. The wires last only so long; you see, they're made for you to die and then be buried, not to have someone look at them for ten years. When I sent the painting to the Carnegie Institute I made a frame for it. I l didn't have it finished, I had it curved, so I made a curved molding for it. It was terribly hard work. I wanted to line it with casket lining. T had to get a permit from the undertaker in Naperville to go to the casket company to buy that. Did you know that they ' re really unionized? At the casket company I bought that drab black c loth. I asked , "How would you put that onto a frame?" The man said, "Well, what we use is library paste. They only want it for two or three weeks anyhow." Then I got fuzzy stuff for this frame, this curve. They had two or three kinds that were very nice; it looks like a whole row of caterpillars only one color. I carved it like the h andle of a casket. I know how to carve. I had always carved all the frames for my dad and for ourselves for years. I started at the base of the canvas and made them eight inches tall, and then six inches, and then about four-and-a-half inches to throw the frame in perspective, you see. 1 made writhing figures and laid them in silver leaf and put it on. I sent the painting to the Carnegie Institute and the critics wrote more about my frame than they did about the painting. So that ' s the way it goes. The next time the painting was shown T put an ordinary frame on it and it got a prize. T sent that picture to the Artists for Victory in New York in - what? - 1941 or 1942, wasn't it? PC Yes, it was 1942 or 1941. TA They had ten thousand entries. They accepted it. There were seven or nine art museum directors on the jury. When Dan Rich came back I thanked him. He said, "Don't thank me. You got seven firsts." I got every first in the jurying. Well, I did not compete for the prizes because by that time I had a hundred thousand dollars on this Door. The prize was $3,500. I had worked on it for ten years. I don't know what they thought I was. So they had to change everything . They didn ' t change it with money. They gave me the first medal. So Curry had to take his 3,500 bucks and the -33- Metropolitan had to hang that up. But mine was first. That's how that started me on the road of publicity you might say. The prize for The Door was in 1941-1942. Then it got the Temple gold medal in Philadelphia . Then the Harris medal in Chicago. And so forth. And, oh, yes, in Chicago through a friend of mine I met a nice girl, a Cabot. I said "Oh I ' don I t know who the Cabots are." "Oh, you know, the lighthouse in ' Boston and at Harvard." I said, "I never heard of Cabot Lodge or anybody." Anyhow, she said, "Oh, Ivan, I've heard by remote control that Campbell, the New York undertaker, (where they buried Valentino and that crowd) had offered $26, 000 for !_he Door.• " Why don 1 t you hang i t there? When I 'm down in New York shopping I'd love to stop in at Campbell's and rest in those chairs." I said, "No dice, kid, no dice." So T took my tin medal. And that was it. But the picture is hanging there still. That's a true story. PC What kind of reaction did you get from people? TA Oh, I don't know. I didn 't go into that. nut I had The Door out in Hollywood in 1945. I sent some pictures on. Our director, Albert Lewin, was a wonderful chap. He had it in his office in the administration building for a while. After it had hung there for about four days he said, "Tvan, take that damn picture out. 'rhey don't look at me anymore. 'l'hey come in to look at 'l'he Door. T can't stand it." So I took it out and hung it up in my studio on the lot. We had a big studio there right over -- PC How did that whole Hollywood experience come about? IA They wrote to me. I mean Albert Lewin wrote to me about how Metro Goldwyn Mayer ••• I thought it was a phony letter. The Moon and Sixpence happened to be playing in neighboring Naperville. I went to the theatre to make sure and there his name was on 'T'he Moon and Sixpence. It was true. He came all the way out from Hollywood in a big limousine about as long as this room. So that's what happened there. As I said, I had 'T'he Door hanging in my studio on the lot for a while. One day someone came up and said, "What 1 s back of The Door?" I said, "Wait just a minute, I' 11 open The Door and you can take a look and find out for yourself." Well, you have to give smart answers to people who ask questions like "what's back of The Door." His guess is as good as mine. And then another couple came up there - Al Lewin's wife and somebody else, I won't mention her name, she's a writer, a very well-known woman, she's still alive. Ber husband was terribly sick. She had a boy friend who was stopping there, one of the top publicity guys in the country staying at her place. You know , the title of 'l'he Door is That Which I Should Have Done I Did Not Do. Well, after she left I got a phone call from Santa Monica wanting to know if T could put this man up for the night; he was headed back to New York. So it did do me some good. Sometimes you wonder what pictures do. Tn this case it did some good, maybe - I don't know. It may have made him unhappy. I mean it depends on what you call good. Tf happiness is good why it did; if morality is good why it did good. PC How did the long titles develop? IA Well, T'll tell you, my dad and all the artists of that early period - -34I'm talking about from 1903 up through 1912-14 - used titles such as: Boy with Sunflower, Sunbonnet, Man Standing by River. Even Cezanne had titles like Apples, or Apples and Napkin. And I thought, my Lord ••• And I would have loved to have been able to write. When I was a student at Northwestern University T tried to write. T got kicked out. I thought, well, here I not only have a chance to paint but if I make the titles long enough I can write. In those days I was writing poetry. Do you want to hear a poem? PC Sure. Do you still do it? IA No, I haven't done it for many years. PC When did you stop writing them? IA Oh, more or less after I got married. I used to write a lot in Hollywood under the piano when I got drunk. Well, you see, there was Albert Lewin there. We were located in Santa Monica right down on producers' row. Every Saturday and Sunday they had these big cocktail parties. They never had writers there. They never had actors there. You know, if they had actors they might try to get a job; for instance, once George Sanders did go there and tried to get a job; he made an ass of himself. So it was mostly producers like Loew and Jean Renoir, Anita Loos, people of that type. Al Lewin was a little guy, my size or smaller. And he could talk. He was professor of English at Harvard at one time. He had a good sense of amusement. He'd get up and tell story ·~ a fter story. He ' d get up on a chair. Maybe there ' d be about thirty people present. And Herb Staud was there. He was a musical chap; he had seventeen hits on Broadway. He'd get at tµe piano. Well, after, say, the nth drink I used to think: what the hell can I do? So I only had to take my paper and pencil and crawl under the piano and come up with a piece of poetry all in forty seconds or half a minute or a minute. Al Lewin would look at my poem and say, "Damn it! It's pretty good anyhow." Well, anyhow, here's a poem I wrote, oh, many years ago: (reading) But I have about 300 poems. "A painter am I of all things An artist who sees a door and chair And sees them smooth things a flaw there And sees them round things a hollow there And colors are to him but the form within He knows not but that the world is colored and strong With light and shadow and forms that intertwine And the sky is not blue to him as it runs over the meadows and trees And the river is not held within its banks As the colors swim over the land And the tree is not a tree to him But a song of beauty in the sky And color is not just colors to him But each a dream and a fantasy that makes unreal this world of yours to him to this painter man." (sound of pages turning) Let's see what T've got here. I'll condense this line of information. I had never given a speech in my life. But last year I got caught at Dartmouth. I got up there anyhow and had to -35- talk for a few minutes. And in Chicago the Ameri can Broadcasting Company did a film on me. I had nothing to do with it. They got me involved. The first time they called me and asked me to do it I was too timid and afraid and I said no. And my wife said, "Don't you do it. You'll make an ass of yourself." The next time they asked me my wife was in New York. I felt in a good mood and I said, "Sure, come on." So the next day I had four guys: a cameraman, a director, sound, and so on. So we got started. Half way through this vice-president of broadcasting got fired or something. So this other chap kept it going. There ' s a half hour film in color done on me. For it I walked up and down the streets of Chicago feeling good with them panning me up and down; I went through buildings, you know , like all these guys mysterious and all this junk. Now this is just a very condensed thing that I wrote for the catalogue. Once in a whil e if I get in the right mood maybe I can write a little. My spelling is bad and the tenses may not be right. But it's not bad. Here I'll read this: (reading) "The simplest things confound us. We look for the explanation but never find it. There is no limit to the division of things. There is no limit to the size of things. 'T'he answer is not in the eye nor in reason. They make of the really abstract and the mind gropes in the subconscious for an unanswerable answer. Put everything in total darkness and you see nothing. Put everything in full powerful, brilliant light and you see nothing. We are workers, seers in a twilight world of shadow. In painting what do I have to work with? Darkness and light fused in the twilight and shadow movement and emotionless. In a room if I move all things move with me. If I stir they stir. If I stand arrested all things become motionless. But on canvas, a single plane, I cannot paint motion. So all the things around me are deadly still, so still they hurt the eye, still and flat, and only the light from the sun that half enters turns and wheels them about bringing to them new facets and forms. The sun becomes the mover , the disrupter of the deadliness of the quiet. I have tried in a small way to enter the principle that is implied in motion on my flat area pictures. Motion is merely the change of position, of size, of angle, causing a change of color and change of light with resultant change of shadow. These effects I achieve in my canvas by walking around my objects and painting them from numerous angl e s. I walk about and put things at different positions to break up the deadness of their eternal death. I like to see dust move and crawl over an object like a film. I like to see the objects scream and work against their positions, against their size. Our world of sight is built around a world of very slow motion. If everything rolled around a room you would see nothing, just as a flywheel becomes a mass of light, formless and light. For a moment before you reach high speed you would discern objects through the speeding light, then on faster motion nothing but light. We live in a land of shadow and sorrow and blinding light. Our efforts are as weak as our shadows. We exist in a clouded sphere of doubt, of uncertainty. Through this haze no clear thoughts, no clear perceptions can penetrate far. In this eternal smogland of ours if the real truth appeared it would blind us, it would incinerate us as the sun would blind and incinerate us on close approach. We are shadows of the real but not the real. We live by half truths and half facts. We live in a two-dimensional world with a perception of space granted to each individual according to the distance set between his eyes. His space consciousness is no more or no less than the width of the bridge -36- of his nose. Each man carries his own space with him. The sight sense we use in our shadowy, slow-m6ving, half-human world in which we gropingly strive. Mortally we cannot get out. Knowledgeably we do not know how we got in. We expect the part we haven't seen, the soul, to get us out . But did the soul have a part in getting us in?" PC That was written when, roughly? IA That last one was written in 1967. PC The one you ' re going to read? IA Yes. It's somewhat like the one I just read, which was written for the catalogue in 1967. This was written in 1971, I'll just say what it is. This is part of a little talk I gave at Dartmouth. I just wrote out a few notes - I had a few notes and a few poems and so forth just to kill time. I put on dark glasses so I wouldn ' t see the audience and they wouldn ' t see me. I'm so short I didn ' t stand over the pulpit so that's all right. These are reflections on artists that were written last year, in 1971. (reading) This end one here was written in 1971. "We are t he captured, tormented victims in a world of shadow, motionless and dead. Our world is a world of illusion and falsehood. We have not one sure thing to hang reason on and knowing nothing realize not that we know nothing. We are subject to pain but how much pain can man take? Too much and he blacks out. We are a weak machine made to do weak things in a weak way . The body is our tomb. Shake the dust from our soul and maybe there lies the answer. For without this planetary body, without eyes, a light would not hurt. Without flesh the pain would not hurt. Without legs our motion might accelerate . Without endless restrictions our freedom greater, our slavery less . Without examples all around us our originality migh t be different. Without a body we might be men." I started making notes in little notebooks at the time I got out of the Chicago Art Institute. I ' ve done it continuously since then and am still doing it. Whenever I start out to make a new picture first I ' ll start thinking and writing notes. I begin thinking about the idea of what I want to achieve. I ' m not looking for a model yet. I'm looking to know: shall I make motion? shall I make illusion? shall I make things transparent? shall I make them heavier than they are? shall I make them go faster? The philos ophy comes first. And then if it ' s going to be a human being I pick out a model. I ask: will you live until I get through? Having that answer I take my own chances. T look him over, I look at his teeth, I look at his eyes, I send him to his doctor, and so forth. 'T'hen I ask him: are you reliable? are you going to sit still? you won't talk too much, so I won ' t have to hear about horses hour after hour, or about your girl friends, and so on. Then if you can pick out a fairly dumb model (and most of them have been fairly dumb) you know you can enjoy yourself; you can make sure that they won't talk constantly. Some days you don't feel like listening to them. On the other hand, if they don't talk at all they begin to look like a poker player, no expression at all. I don ' t want to paint a poker player. T like to have a little emotion. The poor little thing can't get much expression -37- anyhow. Once in California, in Oceanside, I painted a monk. The poor chap was about eighty-two or three and I was yelling at him, "Can't you feel more religious?" He'd say, "I'm doing the best I can." Well, he'd been a baker in the outfit for thirty, forty, or fifty years. When we'd stop for a rest period all I can remember his doing is he would take me outdoors and show me the vault they were going to put him in, the third vault from the ground on the left-hand side. He thought he'd like to give me some wine to drink. But it was sacramental wine and he couldn't do that. He said, "I can get you some milk." I thought, well, hell, I can do without milk. I s uppose that was the milk of human kindness he offered me. PC Have you found it difficult to find models who have the time and everything? IA Well, in the city it's very easy. In a small town, here as well as others, there aren't any young people. Most of the old people I've painted here but I wouldn't care to paint them. There are lots of people I wouldn't care to paint either including the president of the United States. PC You haven't done very many portrait commissions, have you? IA Oh, I'm a figure painter essentially; I mean hell I love the figure. I painted a nude girl once years ago. It was a seven-foot canvas. But I never finished it. I worked for ten months on the drawing. She told me she was eighteen. After I had it drawn she grew an inch and a half. I thought, my God, I can't be that far off. I measured her. She was sixteen when she came. And eleven months after she came she got married. That was the end of that. I had a wonderful drawing plus a little painting of the face and a chair in it. So you really have to pick your model carefully. If you only need them for a short period, say a month or two, it's pretty easy. But on this painting I've worked for two years just on the head and hands. And then I bought his clothes, even his underwear - no - I think I got the type of underwear he wore and bought it at the store. PC What will that painting be called? - do you know yet - the one you're working on? IA No. I have a working title - The Vermonter - which means nothing. Only when I have it finished I'll look at it for two or three weeks and I'll write out maybe fifty titles in which I'll try to convey eventually some meaning and philosophy in that title. You see, after all, a painting can't talk. A lot of people won't even bother - They'll just say: "It's a fish." "It's an apple." "It's a man." "It's a woman." "They're swimming." After seven years working on it I haven't gotten it far enough along to have a title. I had some suggested titles written on the back of it somewhere. I thought I had a title one time (unable to find it). But when I get through as a rule I will take an opposite if I have to. Like · I had Ida; I call that painting Into the World There Came a Soul Called Ida. !""thought people might say:~she1s ugly and is a -prostitute and all that stuff. She is twenty years old, married, and a very decent, nice girl. Human nature - especially when looking at art work - is such that the layman who doesn't know much about art will look and if the face isn't -38- painted like a beautiful polished, smooth pie ce of pottery, they won't like it; they'll think it's bad. Of course if they understood that when you look in a mirror you see only one-fourth of one's actual area - you see, if they had a mirror which would show their face as big as it is they would never talk about how ugly anything is because they'd find that they don't have to go far from home or from their room or the mirror to see it. PC You've been working on this for - what? two years? IA For seven years. PC Will you do other paintings along with it? IA When I go away I will. This is just the one T'm working on now. If you have two you will be running from one to the other; at least I will. 1 tried that with ~he Door . I had that and I had the Showcase Doll or something started. I worked on one in the morning and one in the afternoon. I had these two setups. For the Showcase Doll I had a case made as if it were in a store with the doll and i"ice8"nd different stuff all around, not like dolls. This was a certain type and I put different things in that would be this and that. And I found that I was running back and forth from one to the other. The light would get good over one, say, The Door and I'd run over and work on it. Then I 'd run back to the other one. Finally I said to myself: for gosh sakes, Albright, make up your mind: it's got to be one or the other; now which one? Having no one else to decide for me I chose The Door. I w~rked on it for ten years. The other one is still a drawing, one of the few drawings I have; a drawing with just a little bit on the face. That's the way it is. Now if I had two of these and the light got good for the other one then I'd run there and I 'd run back and forth. You waste a lot of time doing that. Anyhow one is enough to work on and get finished. Rut it'll move along pretty fast now. PC What about the lithographs you've done? IA T made one of the Showcase .Doll, T made one of The Fisherman; T've made about five. PC But they're after the paintings, aren't they? TA Yes, they're after the paintings. I've never made any of the other. Let me read just at random some notes. These are notes that can pertain to art, to philosophy, to anything. One will say one thing, and the other just the opposite. It doesn't make any difference. But they go along. I'll start. I have filled about forty notebooks. 1 don't know what year this was written. This is recent. (reading) "A cold sound as of a breeze whistling, a spirit ••• Before art was man; man is art ••• A life is a life and dedication is dedication ••• Every minute and every hour has to bend to the element force of your full integrity and devotion. What prophet says 'Maybe I believe?' - To succeed consider oneself nothing and the motive or object everything and go at it from that basis disregarding all personal feelings, likes or dislikes ••• The -39- shortest distance between two points is a curved line." I have written - this is about the mirror: (reading) Then further on "A mirror shows you about a quarter of your area; it diminishes all blemishes and is considered wonderful . Do not paint like a mirror. But if you do you too will be a liar and a flatterer." How do I separate these thoughts? just put down a dash each time? PC All right. IA (continues reading) "Our mind is incapable of judging exactly . Everything must be judged in motion. Every thought is motion . There isn ' t such a thing as complete rest, inactivity . Everything is changing constantly or there is not any motion but a series of changes.-- A straight line is a fragment of a circle. Where two lines meet there is an explosion. When two airplanes meet there is death • •• Compose with your eyes shut and your mind open • . • In painting when your work begins to l ook good it is bad • •• That which is at your feet at a distance becomes a horizon • • • The side of a skyscraper walled curve light pushes wall in a darker wall comes out •• • On a moving train clouds keep lifting • • • Every color influences every other color ••• There is no sorrow like existence ••• Light is time •• • A solid is spread out plane • • • A fast motion looks like a sol id and one that is square can be perpendicular to but one eye . " That kind of stuff. "Notes on a portrait of a man, any man, the painting. Put all the hurt feelings of humanity in it (that ' s what T should use ). Does it breathe? Make it . Does it think? Make it . Does it pray? Make it . Alive? Make it. Eternal? Make it . The creator keeps quiet. Let the man move . Let it rise. Let it rest on top of ideals and ideas. For a split second of a second let it live and do untold good . " You see, I will write notes - and it ' s not about this picture which is a bit of philosophy and stuff - but about - what will I do with this? I have to love this. I have to do this, I have to push this back and do this and so forth . It ' s all a case not of painting (which is nothing, the technique is simple ) ; it's what I'll do, Now look at this chain here. This is upside down; so it twists this way and that way, up and down . So the minute you get a thing that way it ' s angry and unhappy. So next to it I put something static . That ' s all there is to it. And color the same way. This guy can ' t talk . So you've got to talk for him . And a picture isn't anything; I mean what are you going to do with a picture when you get through with it. I put it aside; I never hang my pictures . You see these white spots around here? - that's to identify the positions I painted. I ' ll rub them out . All over and so forth . Now what do you want? PC I ' m interested in the whole idea of the philosophy behind these things . IA Well - would it be worth a hoot? PC Is this a privately-developed philosophy or one that you --? IA Oh, yes, the motion - that's my own . I mean the movement of different positions that's all my own. I don ' t think anyone else has eve r attempted it or even thought about it; they wouldn't know what to do with it. Unless you ' re very realistic it wouldn ' t work; it couldn't work. If I take an object, see - this thing here, I'm going to have to incorporate that thing and tie it together so it will work , for God's sake . And without thinking about it from one thing to the other you couldn ' t possibly do it because one wouldn ' t know what he was doing. Also if I tie that together T've got to leave this and have it - look, I want this pillow when I get to it to push this body away . PC Right. IA Then I want this arm to push toward the pillow. Then I ' ve got to leave space to get in there. You see, so that the whole thing will work. My ideas don't always work; some of them do. But I hope that enough work so that when I get through it will look like an entity and simple, and all that people will say is, "Do I know that man? What's his name?" Well, his name is Atwood . He ' s a native of Bridgewater here. He was seventysix years old when I started on this; now he ' s eighty-three or four. PC But the whole idea. Say, the philosophy behind the picture. Are you interested in philosophy in general? Or are you interested -- ? IA No. The philosophy I use more or less goes with space and nature. I mean another man ' s philosophy wouldn't do me any good and probably did the other man a lot of good, don ' t you see. I can ' t use the other man ' s philosophy. As a matter of fact, I'm not interested in his philosophy any more than he ' d be interested in mine . It wouldn ' t do him any good. As long as I have a painting it wouldn't help him a bit maybe. But if I can turn an object and make it go up and down then I can create more a feeling of motion t han the other ones and with the feeling of motion it will take on a new dimension. 'T'hey can use this in movies or anything. Which, sadly, they haven ' t done . When I was in Hollywood they had me shoot my Picture of Dorian Gr.2_Y . They gave me a crew and said, "Ivan, you ' re going down and- shoot that tomorrow." I said, "I am not . I won't do it." They said, "Oh, yes, you are . " They decided I was; they had a whole camera crew for me, about eight guys. I didn't know what to do; I had never shot anything . So I took my picture down and I panned on Dorian's stomach . You know what panning is? I put the floodlights on his stomach and I modeled with the lights all over. I built the stomach rounder and sticking out and so forth . And then I had to light it, to try to create some motion in it, you see. I know that - not Pan Berman, he was the producer - but his partner was a woman - I forget her name now - she went over the rushes five times and didn't even change it for the movies. I was playing with the light to model, you see. What they do is throw the light on but they throw it in the wrong place. I was handling light like a sculptor or a painter building with it. You build with light and with shadow. I said, "I have a wonderful idea. I'll have the light on and then turn it off back and forth." And Al Lewin said, "r,ee, that's • •• " So we were there one day and Mrs . Lewin and Mrs. Loew came there. Al said, "I have a terrific idea." He took my idea and used it on George Sanders and Hurd Hatfield, for the love of Mike. That's the way they do it. 1 said, "You're putting it on my picture. That ' s my idea." Of course that's the way they go. Great stuff, you see. So you can build with light. I think in movies they have too much action. I think -41- they should have the light move around and change things instead of having the actors jump around too much. You can do wonders with light, have things grow and disappear . They have the light on the same man solidly all the time . You can play with light, have the thing solid for a while and then have it dematerialize. Flowers on the table or food or stilllife or anything 9 you can have come out and be reality and then have it be not reality almost. It depends on the mood of the picture. You could have a number of things changing all the time instead of having just light, light, light. Light without your knowing what you're doing with it isn't so hot It ' s like if you put this whole room in light you have light; but wnat does it mean? You ask me: what ' s my philosophy? I say: do what you want with it; what do you want to do with it? It depends on your theme . If you want a happy thing you can make it happy, build with light. You won 1 t have to talk; nobody would have to talko Or you could have it sorrowful. Or you could have it racing along by having all the lights going this way so darn fast and you wouldn ' t have to have a lot of people doing things They make it common , make it ordinary. They think ordinaryo 0 0 PC Did you like working in Hollywood? IA No. It was fun for a while, you understand. But I mean you wouldn 't do good work. It takes too long and I ' m not interested in it . It was fun for a while, for this one picture. If I wasn't a painter and wanted to make a movie I ' d like to deal with lights. Just to see what I could get out of them. Let me put it this way: I ' d want to treat the whole movie as a picture with a philosophy without talking . I wouldn ' t want to have the actors talk; I'd like to have the light make them talk almost, if I had to get involved with their acting, their t hrowing around the way they do. What ' s that got to do with real emotion? You've got their reaction, not the reaction of art. It's the reaction of each man . They aren ' t knib together, tied together. Say, if I ' m making a big picture with five figures I'm making them all do something, but in Hollywood each one is a separate actor doing some little thing . It isn ' t re l ated even. What they need is a set palette. PC But just to kind of go back to doing the Picture of~orian Gray, I ran into somebody a few weeks ago who said he ' d seen your studio out there at that time and how the whole thing was set up. How did you find working with a kind of schedule in fact? IA Well, I never work - - I'll tell you what : I didn ' t read the book The-1'._~ct~ £}_Dorian G~2J until we actually got to Hollywood. My brother came along wi th me . We got a big studio ab out four times this big . Then we figured the first thing we'll do to get in the mood is fix it upo So we got props and rugs and vases. They had to take out the two skylights. They put the stuff in the studio on the second floor . Then we had too much stuff . They had to take half of it out. Jn that way it was comfortable. I had specified previously that I had to have two or three dummies dressed up like Dorian r,ray . I figured these actors would not always be available when I needed them; well, Hurd Hatfield was sick for a while . I didn ' t need him anyhow . I didn ' t care whether it looked like Hurd Hatfield or Wallace Beery or George Sanders; I didn ' t have any interest. The thing was the phone was ringing all the time and people were corning up . You see, we were the only -42- ones on the whole lot who could have drinks. We were independent; the others, say, Gene Kelly, Spencer Tracy, any of them, they wouldn ' t let in the studio because they might get a drink. So we did have a lot of fun and a lot of contact . It was all spontaneous. We just made the thing and that was all there was to it . I did learn about using the kleig light under the painting . You see , violet would turn gray; if you painted violet and then put it under the light without anything, you would have gray, all your colors would be wrong. So I made use of that . That's about it. I wouldn ' t want to do any more work in Hollywood. PC You also did another Hollywood project? IA Well , yes , I did one . I wasn ' t really involved in that too much . I introduced Sidney Janis - you know who he is? - to Albert Lewin . I was getting a little too hot . A few weeks after I introduced them Al was going to make a movie on The Temptation of Saint Anthoni and was going to have me paint the picture . Janis said, "Oh, let 9 s have an international competition instead . " The jury consisted of Janis, Duchamp and Alfred Barr. They had about eight guys - what ' s this other guy ' s name? - this American who's in Paris now - I can ' t think of his name - not Berman - but he's well known; they were all well known . Well, I got second. Dali got about seven I think. But later Al told me that the guy that kept me down was my friend Jan is. He gave me third vote. Duchamp and the others gave me up there. It was Sidney Janis who kept me from getting it . But I had part of the world take separately ; they didn't know about that. But the damn movie was more or less a flop. I had part of the world take or I wouldn't have entered the competition . It didn ' t pay off . I guess The Moon ~nd ~i29:'en~ paid very well. But T don't know how good it was . That' s a small part of the thing . And I made lithographs and I made s ome sculpture. PC How about the sculpture? When did you start that? IA I don ' t know - years ago I did a piece; my dad posed for it . He had a pretty good-looking face anyhow. He said, "Ivan, I ' ll take a club • • • I said , "I'll make just half your head. Both sides are supposed to be the same, aren ' t they?" nh, he was f urious . I said, "Why should I make the other side? Aren't they equal?" That was the first sculpture I made. It's in the Chicago Art Institute now in bronze . Then I made a head of my wife he r e, or a case ; the thing fell down and the nose got broken. Maybe I ought to do like Rodin did and have it cast as "woman with broken no s e . " But I have that - I'm going to make a head here . I have a model. PC Have you made many pieces of sculpture? IA A couple . I ' ve made these two . Jo posed for me one whole summer out in Wyoming where I made this head . Jo didn ' t like the head ; and her sister said, "That's cause for divorce . " I didn ' t say anything. I had it in plaster. T had it shipped home to Chicago. And T had it cast. Then I got a quantity of powdered metal, you know, iron - did you know you c an buy powdered iron? well, you can . And then T used some dry color - yellow ochre burnt sienna and a few colors and T put that over it to make it ' look antique . Then ' on the bottom T put a sheet of lead for a base so you cou l d lift it. So I had it looking antique with a patina . r placed it in -43the entrance hall of our place in Chicago. One time we had about a dozen people over and during the course of the evening after they'd had a cocktail someone said, "Ivan, where did you get this wonderful head! It's beautiful." And then Jo came out and s aid, "r.ee, that's a nice head." She didn't know that I had (inaudible) Well, the Institute has it now. You've seen it, haven't you? You probably have. Let me show you this one. I have a model for this head here. PC 'T'he big one you're working on? IA Yes. Would you like to see the model? Milan - it's been there for three or four hundred years. These spots here - it was in a tube with a silver lining and other lining. Jt caught fire two or three hundred years ago and burned the spots down here, see. Christ was five feet eleven inches according to this shroud. T have books on it. When the camera came into use - you know, Tommy Eakins worked with Malbridge. Malbridge - they developed the first motion picture with the camera, you know? PC Right. IA Now I'm not too sure about this but I think in 1897 or 1898, along in there, an Italian photographer was allowed to photograph the Shroud. Tt's only displayed once in a while. The negative was in reverse. So when he photographed it he got the reverse, This clotted part up here is dried blood. This was measured. His nose was broken. You know how all artists picture Christ with the nails in the palm of the hand. Well, that's impossible. Anyone would pull it off. You'd have to put the nails here at the wrist to hold. Tt's silly; you might as well put a nail in the end of the little finger and expect it to hold a body up. It can't hold. So the nails were put in between there. And the Crown of Thorns was not like the artists make it. It was knit (plaited) crisscross. I've got a band - it was like these lemon - let me show you something - can you see this up here? PC Oh, yes, right. IA That's a lemon, In Jerusalem they had a thing about like that. And the Roman soldiers had a thing like a policeman's club with two or three leather thongs with little things like a dumbbell of lead on the end. With this they beat Christ. He had some 150 or some odd wounds - bruises on his body which showed, You see that rush? Then around here they put that on his head, it was plaited. They knocked him with these clubs and then they put this plaited wreath or crown around here. I have other photographs of it. They ran that around his forehead and plaited it. He had a tremendous, beautiful head. He doesn't look like a man; he's not a man; he's God. Look, I have this man Atwood, flesh, a pound of meat, a pound of meat! Just a pound of meat. And look at that, a man like no man. This shows the whole figure. I'm making it this size. I'm going to make it in the round, I don't know how I'll get it cast. I had this stand made, I'm going to make it in the round, His beard comes down here. He had a pigtail; did you know that? Let me show you the back. You've never seen this? PC No, I haven't seen this. PC I'm Episcopalian somewhat. The dean of St. James Cathedral in Chicago died -44- and his widow gave me these books about five years ago. I've been starting work on this ever since, about. I had a head started. This is the back. See now here this is all dried blood. These are the marks of the whips. They broke his nose. If you get way back you can see how the head went. Isn't that amazing! I have some definite measurements. He was five feet ten . This is blood. The hair came down here like that. Now here ' s something which is amazing. They don't know how it happened but the blood came - I thought of it after I had this for a while - the blood is white. From a photographic standpoint I ' d have to get the reverse - another one I had this photograph made in Chicago - because then the blood would go at this angle from the head. The face is right but the blood is all wrong. Isn ' t that something! PC That's strange. IA And I got the book - a doctor wrote about this - maybe I have one here; I have four or five books on it. It's really something. Then half the artists in this century couldn ' t paint this; Holbein or no artist could possibly paint this, couldn ' t possibly touch it. Here's the figure. And this is blood; look here; see down here. Here is his hand; here ' s where the nail was, see. Look. See that . This is blood. See down here. That's amazing! Now I ' m going to make - I've got some bigger ones here - I mean detail diagrams of this. This is one the same scale as mine. Now let's see, wait a minute - I'm going to put that up there. T think if I put this light out when it ' s dark it will be easier to see. You feel the force of that face. My Lord! PC How long have you been working on this now? IA I started it thre e or four years ago: First I made a head about this big. Then I thought I'd make a bigger one. Then I thought if I made it that big it ' ll weigh five hundred pounds and I won ' t be able to move it. So now I'm thinking. I ' ve had all these photographs made and everything. T'm wondering whether I shouldn ' t make it a size T can have cast. I can ' t handle that size I'm afraid. PC Well, it wouldn't be that heavy if it's hollow. TA Wouldn ' t it? PC Probably the thing would weigh a couple hundred pounds in the round; not solid though . IA No, no, you don't make things solid. But 1 mean - I don ' t know. Look at that! Isn't that terrific! When it gets just about dusk or a little darker it looks as if the eyes open . It sends thrills up and down your spine I tell you. Isn't that a great head! PC That's fantastic. IA Isn't that great! PC The head? Yes. T'm going to make this my next job after this. -45- IA I've gotten that stand made - I haven't had a chance - we 've been away. I'll work on this and when I get tired of this I'm going to work on that . These are my two things. PC Speaking of being away, do you do much work when you travel? TA We go to China in three weeks. I'll get a little tablet and about two dozen colored crayons, that's about all I can do. On a tour what can you do? There's always someone peeking over your shoulder. When I was in Georgia for three weeks I made a head like I showed you. And I made that corn thing. And I made some other ones. He re's another one I made in Georgia. (sound of turning pages) Here's that lifesize figure. I have one other one here. Where is that damn thing? Here it is - The Swamp. There you are. Now here ' s The Swamp in the same size; see, cypress. If you look at it in color it brings this out more. Do you know the cypress tree? PC I know what they are. IA You know they have a thing called "knees" like shoots coming up that high. These things - where are they? That's a knee, that's a knee, that ' s a knee . I made the reflection for the thing and the thing for the reflection. I t's thoroughly confusing; I confuse myself. I had a diagram fo r this. See, these would come here, these knees are reflection or no t reflection. I do some of those things there. 'T'hat was that. Here ' s a thing I made out in Wyoming and I walked all around the whole damn area, PC Do you still go out to Wyoming? IA Not too much. PC How did you come to go there in the first place? IA My wife went there first. (turning pages) This is another one. T have a diagram of almost all of these. There wasn't any of The Fat Man. This one here, that's a son of a gun. PC What 's the name of that one? TA T don't know - I forget what I call it. I didn ' t have that in my one-man show. This is a watercolor about that big, a gouache. You haven't seen that I don't think. I had it at Carnegie one time. I painted that ba ckground. Look at that wire. I put blue spots, say, five or seven, on a big area, and then T put yellow dots and still I couldn't tell where I was looking. How can you? And then I'd have vermilion dots and green and white. I wouldn't know. How would you? This is deep blue and so forth. · I have a number of positions on this, too. And T wove that leather rope. This is pale blue here and this is deep blue. Vou'd like that; that's a very handsome -- PC Tt has spurs in it, too. IA nh, yes. I haven't been out there in a couple of years. And about everything I had in there belonged to some gangster. -46- PC nh, really? IA I ' ve got Butch Cassidy ' s gun in one of these darn things. PC Is that a Western one? IA No - yes. They found his gun out there. even find him. PC He's there. IA Oh, yes. I ' m going to hang it right here for the party. Don ' t you think it would be good? I can use two of these spotlights on it, don't you see . And I ' ll push all this stuff out. I mean the couch is all right but I'll take off these blankets and just have it where they can sit. I ' ll shove this stuff in corners wherever I can. I don ' t want to show them this thing; they wouldn ' t know anything about that, for r.od's sake; they never heard of Christ. PC That ' s going to be fantastic though. IA I ' m glad you like it. Where is it? - where is he? Okay. I can't I think it ' ll be good too because I ' ll try to make it pr. They found it -- I'm going to have to turn this tape over. END nF TAPE II - Side 1 -47- TAPE II - Side 2 PC This is Tape 2, Side 2. IA That ' s a pocketb ook my dad had when he went out in 1882: look, stamped. This is all he had, He had a hard pencil and a soft pencil. He was a farm boy from Iowa and had ten cents to buy them. He left home at eighteen. Through a magazine he sent to New Vork for a mole stick. It cost about a nickel. He got it and sawed it in three pieces. He had an uncle Hugh out there who had two or three farms, His dad didn ' t have a nickel. ~e said, "There goes Adam out to make a living in Chicago." And this was his little sewing kit. He had this thing too. He had this and that and two pencils and nothing else , T have this little tintype of my mother . I thought of putting that up there. This is a little family - ~ (I don ' t do this very often). PC Family painting. IA Family tradition. The weal thy Al brights. Lo.ok at them! Tsn' t that something! My mother was a Carpenter. You see I improvise. I get things like this that I got at some junk place. Tf I had room or if it would help any I'd take a thing like that - I don ' t like this, it's too damn light - but T might rip that off and find something - and I might put it in this oval; anything which develops -- PC. Jt's interesting that you always use real objects. TA Well, T don't want to - it ' s so easy to use -- what do you think of that? - that 's a milk jar that came from Ethiopia. Here are my notebooks along there for the poetry. I've got this little thing here. tf t have a little time going down to Georgia I might take a few o f these things along - I don't know. pr. Where do you go in r..eorgia ? IA My wife's sister had a place down there right on the St. Mary's River near the Florida border about thirty-five miles north of Jacksonville. Look, I found this little thing. Isn't that beautiful. Look at this. Well, okay, it doesn't matter what the thing is as long as it has sentiment one way or another. This little shoe you wonder whether the little kid who kicked it off was a boy or a girl. It doesn ' t make any difference. I think everything should be done to this extent with the possibility of not having a final answer. Like in The Window, I used a little jewelry, see, and made sure I hid half of it so they couldn ' t tell how much more there is. The minute they have a definite answer they're through. In everything don't give a full answer. PC Just an indication, IA Yes. This little jug here or whatever the object is -- If I were painting this stuff here I wouldn ' t ever show the whole thing; I'd hide some so they'll want to know: how much more is there? Don't you think that's true? PC So there's always a question then. Yes. Yes. -48- IA Yes. And then if you make an answer ••. If I put in anything here I would want to have an illusion of more. If I open this up and show something they want to see more. Here's a pipe stem; it doesn ' t mean anything. I'll get this sleeve and turn it around and gradually I'll get what I want. Well, that's enough talking. The different shape of the head more. PC How did you come to do the Portrait of Mrs. Block? IA She came to me, rather came to my wife and wanted me to paint her. T thought it over and decided T didn ' t want to, But between them they finally talked me into it . Mary Block was a very good model. She posed five times a week. She came to my studio which was then on ngden Avenue up in the near North Side of Chicago about two bl ocks from the Lake. Her chauffeur drove her over in the afternoons . She sat very good. Once she told me that she didn ' t like to pose too well. T said, "Well, T don ' t like to paint you, I'd rather dig a cesspool." She said, "'T'hat ' s not much of a c ompliment." I said, "I didn ' t intend it for one." She posed for two years. And then Leigh Block - he ' s now president of the Chicago Art Institute - said, "Ivan, what we want: we want your portrait and we want to know Mary Block." You know the picture, don ' t you? PC Yes. IA So I put in the background lace. I said, from rags to riches or riches to rags. I mean I put that for the background. She made a very excellent model. And not only that, she didn't criticize. Let me show you what I have over here ( sound of rustling papers) and I can tell you more about it. On this still-life next - don ' t you like white roses? I put them in anywhere I can. This is on a little monk mount stool. That cigarette case - you can't see it here - with twenty diamonds. And T put that on, it's just a little watch I got when I was there. And I made this like that, you see . I use movement on that part. Now this lace here ••• that's the back of The Wind~; I just pulled my brick wall, turned i t around and put it back ofher, you see. So that gave me the background. I don ' t know what the connection is; T don't know that there has to be a connection. Although I think the old lace and stuff probably makes it look richer and more glamorous than if I added some silly rich drapery back there. It ' s a foil anyhow. And this necklace, this diamond - I said to Leigh "How about insuring it?" He said, "Oh, it ' s worth fifteen thousand." But I made a little piece of wood construction and put black velvet on it like they do in jewelry stores I guess - I don ' t know - and hung that on it so that I could work when Mrs. Block was not there. When she first came she wore - oh, I don ' t know enough about clothes - but she wore some fluffy thing like the ladies wore in Gainsborough paintings, you know, tulle that fluffs around, waves around like a veil kind of thing. I said, "Cut that out. I ' m not painting that stuff. I want something so that in fifty years you ' ll sti l l be dressed in style." The bare arms and this part never will go out of style. So she wore a creation in red and black velvet that she got in Paris. She will never hear this, will she? PC I doubt it. IA You doubt it? -49 - IA You doubt i t ? PC She'd have to have permission to. IA Well , okay, then. But she couldn't get this dress on She lived two blocks away on Astor Street - she couldn't get it on but once or twice. I took this outfit, this dress, out to Wyoming. Then I thought, my God, how will I fix it so the mice don't eat it. I had a little studio there. There were a lot of mice - we'd catch about five a day for a while; winter drives them indoors. I made a platform, arrange d it with pulleys so I could pull the dress up in the air. And as I ' ve mentioned before, when I ' m painting, say, old clothes I put a spot of white, maybe a triangle of white or any color, to identify the direction I ' m looking at the position I'm looking where I want to paint. Then I put the same mark on the canvas the identical spot as near as I can guess. But in this case I didn ' t want to put white paint or anything on her dress. So I used a lot of pins. The fabric of her dress was the best ventilated thing you ever saw. She didn ' t know this. I worked two years on her portrait. And when I got through - have you ever seen her collection? PC No, but I know of it. IA 0 It ' s fabulous ! Just fabulous! She has it in a big room with white curtains, the whole second floor of her - not the second floor - I mean her apartment. She h as two or three Van Goghs: the man with the ear cut off, and that one with the laundry out in front of the house. She's got Gauguins, hundreds of Cezannes. And Picassoso And all French; no Americans, not one American. So I thought: I can't let these Frenchmen beat me. I worked hard to paint this . In this big room where her collection is there ' s a door here and a door there. And from the place of honor where there was a Van Gogh or something hanging she took that down and hung my portrait there. When she was out in Arizona staying at the Camelback Leigh Block came over. He told me that she had a birthday coming up and he wanted to get a fr ame for the portrait. I said, "What's the most expensive frame you have?" He said it ' s one on a Van Gogh. I said, "Get a better one to put on thiso" So he called up Loewy 1 s in New York and got a frame that cost $1500. I said, "That's all right. I ' m not going to have a cheaper frame than Van Gogh has. If I ' m going to hang with your crowd I ' ve got to have at least as good or better." This doesn't help much about that Then she threw a big party and had us there in honor of this portrait. I met some psychiatrist I think from Hart Schaffner and Marx - I forget his name now - He said he ' d known her all his life. He said, "You know more about Mary Block than I do." I acted smart - I asked her to bring me her nail polish and I copied that on my palette. I thought: I ' m not going to stand there and try to copy that each time; I'd be a fo©l, an idiot. So I smeared some of the polish on my palette and mixed up the identical stuff. You can tell what brand it is by my copy. Also I asked her for her lipstick. She wore a kind of cerise purp~ e blue "' ' I Cion ~t know. I did the same thing with that. Then all I had to do was put white with it or in a shadow a little ultramarine blue and I had her lipstick And the same with her face powder; I copied it identically. It was rather ghastly in a way; it looks so close that it's kind of scary. One day she said, "Ivan, do you think I have too much jewelry on?" I said, "Not for you, dear." I don ' t know whether she got the point. It was all 0 -50- right; she wears that much. And it didn't look as if she wore too much. She's a big woman, you know. This portrait belongs to the Chicago Art Institute now. And it's non-loanable. Even she can ' t borrow it. Katharine Kuh told me that. I mean even the Blocks can't borrow it. And The_ Door is non-loanable. A couple of years ago there was a show of all the Block Collection in Boston. And I was hurt because they didn't even have this one in it. Do you know why? - because I ' m not French. I wouldn't mind being a transplpnted Frenchman. So that's Mary Block. That was the end of that. Oh, I made one poor artist mad in connection with doing this portrait. Francis Chapin, the artist, was a good friend of mine. He was a nice chap, six feet four and a half inches. He ' s dead now. He came out of the Institute a little earlier. He was ten years younger than I was . He was always a type that liked to stand out. He had a big easel. He ' d just as soon have a whole crowd watching him paint; the more people that watched him the better he could paint. Without a crowd he couldn't paint. He had a studio within a block and a half from me. He used to say, "Ivan, what are you doing?" I ' d say, "Oh, I ' m sweeping out the studio." Or I ' d say, "Oh, I'm just loafing." Or "I'm getting a cup of coffee." This went on for two years. Then when the portrait was done and they had a reception downtown he heard Peter Pollack and Fred Sweet coming around and saying, "Oh, Ivan, that's a magnificent portrait that you just did of Mary Block." Well, Chapin was so mad at me he almost passed out. I was supposed to have been loafing for two years . But all of a sudden he found out that T wasn't loafing. PC Have you done many other portraits like that? IA No. That was the only one of that type I ' ve ever made; probably the only one. She wanted it. She didn't criticize. Tf you painted the ordinary woman that knew nothing about art you'd have something for the book. Look who painted the Queen of England lately which I saw in some magazine - some little guy named Xane or Colcain or something. In this country he does the candy box cover. If you painted her the way she looks they conldn't take it, you see. Vou ' d have a fat, puffy, thin face with eyes too close together and so on. Look at what Goy a did when he painted the royal family. He made them all look right but here ' s what he did : he made them like pigeontoed, you see. Like, say, a bluejay or a crow - we used to have a pet crow that would come up and pull the cat's tail and then look out as if he didn ' t know anything about it. Well, you know, Goya did that sort of thing very cleverly: he'd do it every time. Or if he made the family straight on he ' d make them look so dumb that everybody in the world would know it except this family. I think Mary Block has a heck of a lot of personality which is shown, too. She ' s a strong woman and it shows. Oh, I painted my father-inlaw (Captain Joseph Medill Patterson) . That was painted from a photograph. I only saw him once. Have you ever seen that? PC The painting? IA (Showing some things and talking inaudibly.) PC Is that the only other time you ' ve used a photograph? TA The only time I used a photograph. I don't think so. Since he was dead I had to use a photo- -51- graph. But I don ' t work from photographs on anything. I know that a lot of artists do but I don't. I don't like it. That's hanging in the Institute. I saw my father-in-law once; and I had what few photographs the Tribune had; but they didn't have much. He never posed much. All they had was this one here . I knew his size. I got a white shirt and this coat about like what he wore. That couch was painted from Wyoming. It belonged to his si s ter so I thought it would have some relationship. He looks pretty well sp n tted . PC Do you feel that there are symboli c meanings in the objects that go into your paintings? IA No. PC You just use them -- ? IA No. I know when I painted ~he Door I had it in Hollywood and Sidney Janis came along and said, "You've got a whole lot of symbolism in it." "What do you mean? I never tried to put any symbolism into anything." Maybe you're bound to get some but I don ' t look for it and I don ' t try to put any in. I think there's enough symbolism in making things move around without my trying to put a few clever little symbolisms in it. I don't think it's necessary. What I'd like to get is some feeling in his face. Some ~ feeling outside of flesh. PC How do you mean outside? - why? IA Well, I ' m talking about getting the life int o a person. Let's say T painted you and let's take it from two viewpoints: Say, first, sitting there you ' re dead and your face would look like that; it would be cold and it would not have the feeling it has now. I want to get the difference between your being dead and your being alive. You can't put your finger on it, you can't say what it is. But it shows . l\low you ask what that is . You try to get it; and I don't mean a great big smile or this or that. It ' s unidentifiable. You ' ve got to give it a life outside of that. I don't mean a likeness - to hell with a likeness. You see what T' m trying to say? If I were dead and you were looking at me, and you look at me here alive, there is a difference and that ' s the difference between just a head -- I like to get that. Now I don't need any symbolism in that, for the love of Mike. You aren't full of little tricky symbolisms. I don't need it. I wouldn't want it. I ' m not trying to make a picture. I don ' t know what I ' m doing. Just wasting my time, my friend. PC One of the things I find interesting is that you ' ve never, you know, had an endless series of exhibitions. Every now and then there ' d be one . IA Actually I ' ve had only one one-man show. That was at the Chicago Art Institute. nnce I had one somewhere else but it didn ' t amount to anyth i ng. I wasn't trying to have any. ~he Art Institute was the only one. And they dragged me into it. I didn't want to do it. You know it's a lot of work. J mean I just didn't want to do it. All these artists have to show. I have exhibited - but T've about stopped doing that - all over the world. I think I was in more Carnegie Internationals than anybody else in the -52- world, Again and again and again I was in all the shows and in Europe and all around. And now I ' ve gotten tired of that, Well, for one thing, there ' s vandalism. The art now I think has more or less changed . It goes around in cycles. You almost have to have a publicity agent; you have to be a stunt man. What is new today might not be new by tomorrow evening. Like Robert Indiana and so forth. You have to keep moving along with it. And you judge any man - even if it ' s Picasso - if he makes realistic things how good would he be? You'll find that all these chaps - Picasso's early work stinks, it's terrible. Even Cezanne, Matisse, Courbet who came along about 1911 were prominent because they we re the outcasts, they weren't good enough to get in any show . So they found out by making abstractions they started a vogue, They didn't think it was going to hit even; they were more amazed than anybody, you see. But design or pattern or whatever novelty you have is not enough. A hundred years from now what will they care about a novelty of today? Today we have long h air and it ' s all right. Tomorrow it will be a totally different thing. People will be different and will want to live a different way; maybe half of them will be living on the moon eating dust - I don't know. But it's a different thing. They don ' t think about making their work good; they think about making something which gets attention. That isn't satisfying. You might as well be an actor or a singer or something else. Well, why not? They don't want to give it that much attention. They just won't. Why would they? PC When you're in Chicago or Mew York do you see exhibitions or go to museums? TA nh, yes. I follow art and all its trends all the time. If there ' s something I cut out of a magazine -- you know there's got to be trip~e talk lately and I can make as much triple talk as anybody. And t don ' t have to read someone else's triple talk to understand what's going on, I take a look at their ability. You see, when they get enough modern art so that they're competing against each other it will be all right. Am I boring you with all this? PC nh, no, no. IA Don'~ you see that when they start competing with themselves then the poorer ones will drop out. Jackson Pollock will kill de Koening and Motherwell and so forth. A lot of those chaps - who was it? - Gottlieb, who -- was a fourth-rate, conservative guy who showed at Carnegie would be nothing; but he gets in this thing with six other guys and he gets known a little bit, you see. But, say, look at their work a hundred years from now, what in hell have they got. Are they that strong or that good? No. We have great chaps making abstractions, most of the old masters, why hell they could walk around these guys making abstractions, could beat the pants off them. We haven't got any better than that and we've had lots of chances. You see, the Italians were apprentices, they started out at fourteen or fifteen. They knew all about color, they knew about pattern, they knew about the figure. They had lots of models. So they had to make figures, up to a certain extent; I mean good ones. The ones now there's hardly anyone who can draw even. They ' ve cut it out. That's the way I feel - I don't know. One thing I do know is that every artist when he gets to be about sixty-five thinks the hell with the new art. Rut it doesn't bother me any. Let them go . I don ' t know what they're doing. They smash a car like John Chamberlain or do this or that. Maybe they~re happy doing it. I don't know. It doesn't -53make any difference. Maybe they have a point, maybe they have got something. So many of them have so little to show . I love r.iacometti's stuff. We went up to Canada to the World ' s Fair - Expo 67 - was that two or three years ago? Then t go into a room and I see these beautiful ancient Etruscan figures that long. And T thought: Oh, r.od ! Giacometti, you had to copy, too. Picasso has always been copying. r.iacometti did these elongated figures. Did you go to that show? PC No. IA They had two Etruscan figures this long. That kind of let me down on Giacometti. I love his drawings and stuff anyhow. But, you see, why imitate? Why don't artists think for themselves? If we know they ' re bad why try to pretend they ' re good? PC Well , they ' re all afraid. IA Yes. And I ' ll tell you another thing: they probably all have dealers. And the dealer says: do this, do that, it will sell. And a dealer can wreck anyone faster than anybody. 'T'hey may really be painting for the dealer for sales. PC You've been fairly independent o f dealers? IA Yes . I wouldn't touch them. I haven ' t use d them in the past and why should I us e them now. They crash in after you don ' t need them . And all they do is try to -- you see, they ' ve almost cut out the big exhibitions in the world. PC Well, it's so expensive. IA Yes, that's true. 'T'he last International of any size that I was in was Lord Reaverbrook - Lady Dunne. When was that? - about six, seven or eight years ago I guess. PC It was 1963 . IA You know she wanted to buy The Window. I said No. Do you know what T did? It was shown at Fredericton. I got the encyclopedia and looked it up. 'T'he population is about 8,000. I said : my God, I worked twenty years on it. It shouldn't go to a town of 8,000; that's a thousand a year. Oh, yes, I had one other compliment, one crazy letter after I painted The~Window. I think it was shown in a book by Eliot, that Life chap . PC Oh, yes. IA I got a letter from T.ondon from - guess who? - Huntington Hartford ! I don't know him fr om a row of beans. He wrote, "I like your picture very much and I'd like to buy it" or something to that effect. I cabled back to him, "I like it, too." Also I gave him a price of like about half a million. He flipped. He said you know T can get all kinds - Dali and others for that. You know he's been pushing Dali a lot. Well, do you know what he's paid for Dali's? - three or four thousand. And he puts out that he pays like eighty thousand. That's bunk. I said, "You're in the c anned goods business. Keep on buying them . " He's such a .•• that ended Huntington Hartford. God, he ' s something! They get involved . -54PC You've had some collectors who've bought quite a few things from you over the years , haven't you? IA Not too many . Senator Benton bought quite a few. He bought that fo rnfi~_l.E, thing. I think he bought about ten altogether. I don't know why he did . PC ~hat's IA Maybe that ' s one reason he never met me . PC Oh , r ea lly ? IA Way back at the time o f the Encyclopedia Brittanic a show - oh, God, I think it was about 1940 - he had that Encyclopedia Brittanica show. Do you remember that? PC Oh, yes, the Encyclopedia Brittanica exhibition. IA They had about everybody in it. They had a Grant Wood. They finally wrote to me and wanted a small one of mine - The Man with the Mallet. I said: I won't sell it unless .. . I asked , "What's the highest price you've paid for a picture?" Well, it was for a Grant Wood. I said, "Unless I can get more than you paid for the Grant Wood I won ' t let you have i t." So they came across with more than Grant Wood got I said okay theno Then later on they went around and sold the damn collection - I don ' t know two or three years later - (I didn ' t get in the book there ) - he sold them all except mine. Then he gave it to some place in Connecticut ~ the Wadsworth Atheneum I guess. For a while it was hanging in the office of Rihicoff, the governor of Connecticut. Ribicoff said, "I ' m going to keep that picture." I' ve never even met Ribicoff. Isn't that funny? The Man with a Mallet is a picture of my brother . And he hated it. I said~ell, I don ' t want to paint your hair . " So I got an old stocking and put it over his head . I called it Man with a Mallet. When it was shown in Chicago someone asked, "Is that a Chinaman?"-I said, "Certainly." Which made my brother mado Why not? an awful lot from one collector. I disapp e ared. That ' s f anta st i co 0 PC You met Dubuffet when he was in Chicago , didn't you? IA Yes . Where do you get all this information! You must have been rehearsing for this interview . Wait a minute - you know more about me than ••• You poor guy, you must have stayed up for at least three hours looking up all this junk. Yes, Dubuffet came to Chicago to the Arts Club, I forget the ye ar now . Have you got the year down? You probably have . PC 1951. IA 1951 - was it that early? Okay. He came to Chicago to the Arts Club at the Institute. He told someone there that there was one person in Chicago who he wanted to meet. Guess who it was! Me ! Well, I don't know any French but my wife speaks it excellently. A meeting with us was arranged . We took him over to the Racquet Club which we belonged to . Matisse was alive then . I asked him outside of Matisse and Picasso who is the most important artist. He said, "Mai. Moi." Don ' t you love it ! Oh, yes, he - 55- was nice. And do you know why he liked my stuff? like mine. He thought his work was PC Oh, really? IA Yes. He has the se paintings as big as this wall. I gave him a whole set of photographs of my work which he wanted . He wrote the frontispiece for the catalogue. You ' ve seen that? PC Yes. IA You ' ve seen everything . PC Me. IA Only you? PC I try. IA What girls have I gone out with? But Dubuffet has go tten real famous . Katharine Kuh has two or three of his early paintings. The last time we were in France we had intended to see him but he was away or something. PC He ' s a fascinating man. IA You've met him, have you? PC Yes. IA Didn ' t his wife die? PC I don ' t know. IA I think she was very ill with cancer or something way back . PC Yes, in 1953 or 1954 I think. IA Yes. PC Does it!! IA Doesn't it though! too fast. PC Yes. IA We seem to be traveling now once in a while. I like to pick up a few little antiques and stuff; art mostly. We like to travel. I try to play golf but I ' m rotten at that. I can ' t get the ball - either the water hole is in the way or my ball doesn ' t know how to pick up its wings and fly. I took up outdoor skiing, country skiing a week ago and T flopped on my back and knocked my head out for a second. That's not for me. I go home and I dream. When I ' m driving a car I ' ll be thinking about all kinds of things. When I ' m Who puts you through the works now on this? You ' re pretty thorough, aren't you? I keep trying. She was very ill. Time flies. My Lord, I was young yesterday and here I am. It goes Do you have any other interests or activities or hobbies? - 56- playing golf T think I ' ll send that way down by the green and T watch and the thing goes ten feet or T hit my shin or something. No, no. It ' s ridiculous. Oh, I play ping - pong. PC TA Do you think that your travel influences you in any way? No. T don ' t think that travel influences me in any way except t hat I get to see the art of the country. And you get to realize ••• Like we went to Angkor Vat I think it was about t hree years ago. We saw it about two years before they marched in. We stayed a double dose; as a rule we stay there about five days but this time we stayed ten days. All around Angkor Vat there are about thirty or forty other buildings and so forth. I liked the architecture. My brief study of arch itecture stood me in good stead . When I look at, say, a painting of a chap making a window or a door I can see whether he knows about this thing or that thing; I know when he leaves out things. You don ' t put a nail in a board as if you were hitting it with a saw. If you want to saw you use a saw; if you want to drive in a nail you hit it with a hammer. There are too many chaps making things. Of course if you want to be like Sheeler or Georgia O' Keeffe and leave everything out that's one thing. But I mean when they do go far enough like that or anything you make ••• if you make a table and want it to lean make it lean; if you want it to stand make it stand so strong that it can stand without a leg; if you want to. Rut be more or less knowledgeable about simple little things. We don't want to have much you can do with little stuff around. We ' ve got everything made by hand or machinery that stands on the floor and so forth and we're five feet or six feet tall and our vision is right down on the dust level - what do you want us to do? Now T' ve forgotten what you asked me. Oh, about traveling. Well, about five years ago we went to Russia. We were in Moscow. We spent about two and a half weeks in Russia. Tn Moscow I made a few watercolors. We had a view right on Red Square. I was painting a watercolor back of that thing, making one of those funny onion-shaped buildings. A policeman came along. Peop le were standing in back of me. I'm like my dad in that he never could paint or draw when people were standing in back of him . He used to go around and my mother would chase people away . My wife had a motion picture camera and when people would come up and lean over me she ' d just grind away taking pictures of them and they ' d move away . Wasn ' t that a good idea! Rut then this Russian cop started shoving me away. I thought he meant that the other s had cameras shooting. I told you, "You can blow . " He stood there for five or ten minutes trying to make me move on. I wasn ' t supposed to make a drawing of it . I stood up to him and he finally left. PC Did you meet Ru ssian artists when you were there? IA Yes . We knew the Cultural Relations chap from Soviet Russia . Senator Benton gave us a letter of introduction to him. Verensky, a friend of his that he met in this country when he was here . They have a guard twenty-five miles outside of Moscow. I think we had Lenin ' s room or some suite up there; it was terrific; just in front of Red Square. You see, you paid for the whole tour and you took whatever they gave you. You might get in a flophouse or in a pal~ce. Well, in Moscow we had this beautiful suite. They had a bright red telephone and an inkwell a yard long; there were two rooms with velvet -5 7- curtains and beautiful pictures hanging all over on the walls. Within about the first hour after our arrival we got a telephone call from this chap to come over to his club and talk about going out to the country. It was just about lunch time and my wife said: we'll go down and buy our lunch. I said, "Heck, we ' re going to eat a t the club Isn't that pretty nifty; here we are in Moscow only about an hour and right away they ' re asking us out." We went over to his club. It was a big palace they had taken over. Tt was empty here, empty there. Finally we found this chap. He talked to us and he said, "Tomorrow we'll go out to Verensky. You pay the cab." And then he went off. He didn ' t even buy us a drink. We thought : boy , that 's pretty sociable! We went back to our hotel. The next day we had lunch be fo re starting out just in case. We went out at twentyfive miles the police , you know, see you go on -- you go out twenty-five miles and you stop unless -The place was out forty miles. It was a little place about like here with birch and pine tre e s. They had about fourteen or sixteen people there. They were poets, sculptors, painters . There was a table about the length of this studio loaded with caviar, vodka, fruit, chocolate candy, appetizers, everything you could think of. It was great. No one there could speak a word of English except the interpreter. My wife was sitting next to a pretty good-looking guy of about fifty. He kept pointing at me. Oh, I made a toast; I don't know what I said; I said : "One should be more individual . " I said the wrong thing. Now a lot of these are Establishment artists. They're allowed a nice apartment in the city. They get $12,000 a year without any taxes . They ' re allowed a car and a country place. Which is pretty darn neat . No income tax or anything. And they're respected. Anyhow after we got back to the hotel this chap said, "You're posing tomorrow." I said, "What do you mean ! " He said, "The chap who sat across from you is a sculptor and he wants to make your head . " I said, "What does he want with my head?" Well, the next morning at a quarter of eight this sculptor arrived in a little jalopy car. I got in. I thought: well, here I get shanghaied; away I go. Since I ' d read all these detective stories, I thought: I ' ll do as they do, I 'll look here , I'll look there so I can kind of identify where they ' re taking me . Well , after forty-five minutes of this I thought : what the hell! I 'm shanghaied anyway. We went out to an old dilapidated four-story building - not too bad - on an avenue. I thought this must be it. We went in . He took off his shirt and put on a kind of an Apache red and white striped smock with big figures all over it and a beret like the French wear . He put me on a high stool. He offered me a bottle of vodka. Well , it was too darn early for that. Af te r I'd sat there for two hours his wife came in. She had a tray filled with grapes and chocolate candies and so forth . She wanted to know if Jo was coming. She didn ' t know that Jo hadn't been invited. Again he offered me a drink o f vodka. T took it this time because I was getting tired in the fanny sitting there . He said, "This head will be shown in the United States . " He made it in clay in three hours - a head this big. So that was Mo scow. 0 PC Do you visit artists when you go to different places? IA Well, we had an introduction. This was writers, artists and poets. In Israel when I met this Lubin that night, Jo was tired , we hadn ' t had any sleep for thirty-six hours - she was on the phone trying to get us -- she was good at getting airplane tickets - used to be a flyer. We finally got in there. Though T hadn ' t had any sleep I went out with Lubin. I met -58- Israeli poets, writers and painters and everything. I was too tired to know what I was talking about. They had holidays then for seven days anyhow. Then we met some newspaper people. They had sandbags against the doors. I asked why. They had a little boy who was frightened because of the noises. Then we got a chauffeur and drove over Israel. It isn't a big country. Tn some places it's only eight miles wide. The chauffeur had been a sergeant in the Six Day War. He was amazing. He was in the artillery or tank corpso He took us around to secret places: "I'll show you what we capturedo We have a tank for every man in Israel with Russian insignia on them and everything else Imagine it! Fields of tanks and cars. Everyone in Israel could have a captured jeep. Loaded with them! Thousands and thousands of them! And they've got that place growing, you know; they've got thousands and thousands of trees. Out of a desert they've made a place that looks like California. Now you go ahead. I've talked too much. 0 " PC Okay. I'd like to go back for a second. You were talking about color and form. And in looking through the photographs, I mean looking at some of the paintings recently, I notice that the colors generally seem to be somewhat muted in a way. IA Are you trying to say "dirty" colors? PC No, no, no. IA Yes, I know; oh, I know. you mean --? PC I mean, you know, your ideas of using color. IA Well, listen - these afterimages. First, there's the object, whether it's a human being or a still-life or whatever; that's there. Then there's the light falling on it. Then there's local color. Now if you - what was I going to say? I don't know. PC I'm curious that the relationship between the colors of the real object -- IA Muted, They're clean colors but muted. Listen, I mean when you're talking about color, You're trying to --? Oh - what 1 was going to say was about these afterimages that I use: they're bodyless; they don't have any form; what T'm getting at is that they're more like spiritual colors; they're luminous like a gas flame that comes out a blue-green flame. Say you look at an object, an apple - say it's red or green, it doesn't matter - and you're looking at a thing which not only has color but also it has a function of having shadows on account of its shape. And also more or less with our eyes a perception of volume, a certain amount of volume. Also the solidity of it; it has that weight. Shadows and the light on it and the light only shows wherever it hits that one area of form. Now afterimage - I look at that and see the afterimage; it's bodyless; there's nothing but the opposite of the brightest part of the color. For example, if the apple is red the afterimage would be a kind of blue-green. It varies I suppose according to each person and according to the intensity of the light you put on the apple. 1f you lobk at a yellow cadmium disk, the first thing you'd get would be a strong pure magenta, the edge a dark blue. ~hen that would disappear. (This is when you close your eyes after you've looked at -59- the color . ) Then you would get a blue-green center and a dark (I ' m talking about the little round disks that I have ) , dusky magenta edge. Third , you ' d get a blue-green center and a magenta edge; blue-green gets dark, almost a blue-black . Fourth, a strong blue-green center, dusky red edge tinges to blue black. ~hey get fainter as they keep on changing. Now so far I ' ve only looked at one color at a time. If I were to follow this thing through further, which I will do, and , say, I look at two different distinct colors - say, vermillion and a yellow cadmium - then you ' d get a strange combinati on; I don ' t know what it would be but it woul d either have to combine the two or separate the two; but it would be rather amazing. Then you have two colors. Then, say, I take red, yellow and blue ( the strongest in a blue would possibly be cerulean b l ue cobalt would be too dark) - the closer you come to the medium •• • The color which shows the most variation , I mean afterimage, is white; white is the strongest by all means. And the darker you go the less effect you could have. This is a whole field in itself which will have to be studied. Psychiatrists or anybody studying this it will vary with each one . We have color blind people, don ' t we? And some people are more sensitive to certain colors than others. So naturally this won ' t ever be a set rule for everyone . PC This is all based on your own observation? TA Entirely on my own observation. Now here if T were painting that coat I ' d mix up a color as close to that as possible and put it in the sunlight which will make it false to a certain extent. If r don't put it in full sunlight I won ' t have the reaction to the thing. So I have to falsify, you see. If I kept it in, say, this top light I might have to sit there for an hour and a half. Which I'm not going to do. So to a certain extent all this stuff is false, you see . Yet they have enough truth so that it shows that there's an opposite force battling them. Now if you make the whole thing one color your eye is going to want t o see the o t her col or anyhow. So I relieve that tension and put the other in. Which will make the color I ' m painting look better and make the other color. It plays them both up. PC You ' ve never studied any of the color theorists ' writings, have you? IA Oh, yes - well - no, I haven ' t. They get everything mixed up. I mean they ramble on . You get double talk. That ' s why I take the object itself and find out for myself what little I can. I don't want their theories because you get all bawled up. Not only that, but they ' re probably inaccurate because they don't even know the colors. They wouldn't know these palette colors I have. You see, every color we have compared to nature is way out, is way false . You can ' t represent them accurately; we ' re just giving a vague imitation of what is in reality. We can't reach the yellow of anything; we can't reach the red. And these theorists know even less than the painter does because they won ' t know that angle . I'm just go i ng at it from the reaction I would get. PC What kind of colors do you use? IA I u s ed to make my own. I use Windsor Newton. But we used to make our own. My father used to get colors from Germany, from London, from all around the world. Reelenburg. We had a pure rose madder; rose madder is just the washings -60off a rug , you see . The strongest rose madder, the deep rose madder, is the first washings. The paler rose madder colors are the second, third and fourth washings. Like the afterimages they get paler . 'T'he early Italians used lapis lazuli and mixed a terric blue. J'd like to get some and grind it up. We used a granite slab and I used to grind paint by the hour. My God, all through the Chicago Art Institute I used my own paint. Way back in the 1930s my brother and I made charcoal. We were the first ones in America to make charcoal - the All American Art Char coal Company . We founded charcoal in this country. We were the first ones to make it . We were ahead of Windsor Newton or any of them . Then they tried to copy us . You might as well know it - I don ' t care : We went down near St. Louis and got swamp maple . Soft maple made the s oft charcoal and hard maple made the hard charcoal . You slice it and run it through machinery and so forth . Poor Devoe and Raynolds and those other people used to use coarse Mexican mahogany. Their charcoal wasn ' t any good . The best charcoal came from France . It was vine charcoal made from grape vines . They had these old women who never heard of a minimum wage col l ecting the vines for probably six cents a day while Harry Bridges wants $800 an hour . Grape vines make beautiful charcoal , the very best . You have to burn it enough to get all the brown out of it; but if y ou burn it a little bit more it will crack, crumble. Tf you don ' t burn it enough it will be brown and that ' s no good . But I was telling you about making paint . I went to the National Academy in New York to study. At that time I had my own colors, the same that my dad used; cadmiums and everything . Each cadmium varies according to the chemical plant it comes from. So I had these colors. A young Belgian chap named Verheyden had come to Chicago. He was a nice, likeable chap . He was hard up . My dad knew him and showed him how to make colors . So he took my dad ' s way of making colors with poppy oil and made Verheyden 9 s Oils . So at the National Academy Charles Hawthorne was using Verheyden's Oils . And I had the same stuff. Hawthorne used to say, "Oh, these are the finest colors. Get Verheyden ' s . " I didn't tell him that he was using my dad ' s oils. I had the real stuff and he was using Verheyden ' s Oils. Isn ' t that crazy! I made all the colors then . I used Blocks Colors for a while; I used it on Th~ D££E_. I ' ve used Winsor ~ewton, ab out three kinds of stuff. I knew Shiva . t knew Persley and everything: I didn't like his color too much. I think Wins or Newton is as good as anything. But all of these colors are bad for the simple reason that they put in them like a brown mucilage is half of it; commercially they fill it up with whatever you want to call this dope . Over in the barn next to us he re up in the attic I have big boxes of dry color, rose madder and everything, and I think I ' ll make some colors . I can make colors that are three times as strong as the commercial colors which I know . There again if I wasn't so lazy I'd be much better off . Yes, that ' s true. PC Do you read? Do you have an interest in music? IA I read because I can fall asleep immediatelyj My wife reads book after book and so forth. But I tell her stories. I can tell her stories in the middle of the night , two o'clock . She wakes up and says she can ' t sleep, and "tell me a story." She has a very logical, reasonable mind. So I'll start off and say: well, I ' ll tell you one. Up in the Arctic there was a goose and he covered five acres; and he was one of the small geese, you know. -61- They had lots of geese but they were over the Arctic a ways so you wouldn ' t see them. If you saw a goose big enough you might disturb them in some way. Then I'll tell you what they had: On the outside the goose had white feathers. You ' d open up one layer and you'd see yellow feathers. On the morning when the sun was red and everything the goose would bring out its red feathers and so forth . It would depend on how they felt . I'd go on for hour after hour . Yes, I read some . I read art books a lot. My wife says I never read them . I have this library here and there and on the third floor in the attic . I used to keep catalogues. I have catalogues of some of my dad' s shows from way back in 1892 and 1893 and 1901. I used to know all the American artists . I didn ' t like Gi lbert Stuart much. I studied under Leopold Seyffert . He ' s dead now. He went through the Pennsylvania Academy; then he was in Europe on a Cresson Scholarship and everything . Arthur Carles went there , too . Carles was very talented . PC Did you ever study with Arthur Carles? TA Well - no - he wasn't teaching much; yes, T think I did have Carles, too . And Breckenridge . But what the deuce was I talking about? Oh - that I didn ' t like Gilbert Stuart so much. They all look alike. Seyffert used to say, "Ivan , if you just look at one or two they aren 1 t so bad . They all look alike . " And I ' ve never forgotten that. If you look at one of them it isn ' t so bad. If you put them all together there are too many Gilbert Stuarts . He ' s not my favorite artist . But that ' s true of almost any one. One or two is pretty good but if you see too many it spoils it . That ' s true of art . PC Well, it's like anything. IA Oh, yes . I know but I mean • • • Ever since then if I see one I take a look at it anyhow. PC Did your father ever talk about Eakins? IA Well - yes, he ' d talk about Eakins. At that time the nude model wasn ' t in vogue too much. And they wore a mask over their eyes; you knew that? PC Right. TA T guess most of them were prostitutes. We don't know. Anyway, it doesn ' t make any difference. At that time Tommy Eakins was very poor; did you know that? He used to wear rubber hip boots. He had a dog named Harry. When they ' d have a show at the Pennsylvania Academy it would be a dress-up affair, black tie and so on. Eakins would come in his hip boots, ordinary clothes. They thought he was sort of queer or nutty or something. But he didn't have a nickel. His studio was in Philadelphia. We saw it one time. A little narrow room with a skylight about the size of a sheet of typewriting paper. He couldn't afford a model. He had three sisters. I always used to say to my dad, "I ' ll bet you that Tommy Eakins looked through the keyhole in the bathroom to make his studies of figures." My dad would say to me, "That isn't so, you damn fool." The classes at the Pennsylvania Academy were separated, the girls in one class and the boys in another. At that time they couldn ' t smoke. Later on the rules were changed and they could smoke , in the corridors. So Eakins had this girls' class - have you -62heard this? PC Yes, yes. IA You know about what happened in the class? PC Oh, right . IA When he got fired? There's a chap - I can ' t think of his name right now he ' s writing a book on Eakins right now. I gave him my dad's material. The book will be coming out soon There'll be something in it about my dad and the pictures I let him take . At that time all the artists made sketches . They were very fond of sketching. That's one reason why I didn't like to make sketches. They all made sketches there. I used to see these damned sketches. Yes. 0 PC You're just contrary. IA Of course it is. They were all drawing. Most of the artists I used to see, including Chapin, were all making sketche s. I just hated it. I never made sketches. Now I wish I had. And he had all these notebooks -- the whole bunch would have sketchbooks around j and were making drawings. I have upstairs that many drawings that my dad made in Philadelphia. (I gave some to the Pennsylvania Academy ) of streets that are torn down, like Ray Street, Martin Street, the Broad Stre e t section. Aren't you through? PC That's the end of this tape. END OF TAPE II - Side 2 -63- TAPE-RECORDED INTERVIEW WITH IVAN LE IN HIS STUDI0 I~ WOODSTOCK~ LORRAI~E ALBRIGHT - TAPE III VERMONT FEBRUARY 5 & 6, 1972 INTERVIEWER: PC Paul Cummings IA Ivan Albright PAUL CUMMINGS PC This is Side 5 . Yes, you were going to -- IA 1 want to go back to about the year 1902 or 1903 when I was about five or six years old; 1 was born in 1897 so this would be about 1903. We played chess. My dad bought a chessboard. That isn ' t too expensive a game for an artist; with that and a few pieces you have your game . Next door to us was a sculptor, Leonard Cornell, a Frenchman by birth. They ' d come over all the time and play chess . Finally my mother said, "you're wasting too much time playing ches s , you can't afford it . " But T learned to play chess early; so did my brother. So this chap Alfred Jurgens came out. He'd been in Munich with my father - an artist from Oak Park like Frank Lloyd Wright or Hemingway - came from the same town and was about the same type. Jurgens bragged a lot. He came from a family of fairly good means, he had money to a certain extent, not terribly rich, but not poor by any means . He loved to brag. He'd say, "Adam, you don't know this and this , let me show you what to do . " He played chess a little. One day my dad said with his tongue in his cheek, "Why don't you play one of these little kids here?" "Oh, Adam, ••• (muttering)." Of course we beat the pants off Jurgens. My dad had a long studio made next to the house out there in Edison Park which is now part of Chicago. Well, you could see this big blustering German walking away in a huff . It was a dirty trick but typical. My dad was president of the Chicago Society of Artists in about 1914-1915. They were having a dinner at the Art Institute. I forget now the name of the artist who was to make a speech. Anyhow my dad quizzed him about his speech and so forth and got all his stuff. My dad, obse rving the formalities of president, introduced this artist and told all about what this guy was going to talk about. So when the poor guy got up to talk all the wind had been taken out of his sails. A rather dirty trick but it was kind of fun maybe if you're not on the receiving side . Now ask me what you want to know. I may not know anyhow . I have very find brushes, the smallest Wind s or Newton makes, number 30. When I was in Hollywood they had number Olf which is the smallest they made. But hardly anyone used them so they stopped making them. I should have bought hundreds of them. But I can still get number 30 . Once I put a stroke on a canvas (if you can call it a stroke ) I leave it. I mean when I work on a thing I don ' t go over it. PC You don't overpaint over things? IA No, never; not on this stuff. To start a new painting, first I think of what I want to make. That may take a number of weeks. When I painted Ida I had her there for three weeks before I started to paint on her. I have -64- her do everything; when I say "pose" I don't look at her; when I say "rest" I look at her. I'd say, "Sweep the floor" or something When she 1 s resting I ' d look at her. When she's posing I never look at her. I never hire a professional model; I've never had one yeto The models I use are all amateurs and they can't take these five dollars an hour or fifteen dollars an hour poses. They don't know themo They ' re not glamour girls or Valentines . They take natural poses. You can make them sleepy and tired and they'll slump in a certain position that you know is more or less natural. If you want to wait until they get tired the hands will drop down in a certain way. Then I study the light on them here and there. I don't make a sketch and try to have them fit the sketch. I work with the model and with light. Generally in the studios I 've had before this one i t's been so that I could pull every curtain up or down and control the light. Then when I find something I lmke I mark the position on the floor with Scotch tape, the hour of day, how the clouds were, and about where the sun was. So I have that information . Then I monkey around and if I find a better light I'll mark down the time, the clouds, and everything. Naturally, I know that it's just the law of averages if I get that lighting Then I make a note of the clothes and so forth, so much open and so much closed and this and that . And I write down the poses . I don't try to make sketches at all, cute little sketcheso They don't amount to anything because I'm going to make a picture. And that will be my sketch. You asked about symbolism, I don ' t mean allegory. I figure what am I going to have him be or do - heavy? old? will the background be a foil for the figure? and so on. In Vermont here they all wear a crazy dusty green shirt and pants . In Wyoming they were a totally different outfit - blue jeans and short coats. I ' ve had a studio in Wyoming and painted there some. Once' I 1 ived in Warrenville . Some of the old people there said to me, "You aren't a native." And after twenty years I found out that I was a native and all the people who said I wasn't were dead and gone. So I decided I wouldn't get caught that way again. So I went to Wyoming. 0 0 The first day a cowboy came up I said, "Listen, brother, I ' m not riding your horse and you ' re not using my palette o If you want to paint, fine. If I want to ride, fine. And, by the way, I'm just as much a native as you are as soon as I hang my hat on this nail. I'm a hotheaded Huno I ' m a native." That ' s the tendency here, see . When they say to me, "You're here recently," I say, "Oh, no. My wife ' s ancestors were buried in Vermont two hundred years ago . How soon did you come over here?" It's trueo The Carpenters have been buried for about two hundred years up in - what's that town near Burlington? - Huntington, I thinko I said, "We left this place. Only the lazy ones who couldn ' t move, didn ' t have legs or brains stayed here." You see, the whole coast was infested with pirates or things of a certain type . Which is fine; pirates at least are an aggressive group like our present-day dictators and pre sidents. The good pirates moved out. They were looking for gold or corn or Indians or squaws or something. But the poor weak pirates stayed here. But we moved away from Rhode Island to Massachusetts to New Hampshire to Vermont to Ohio, some went to Pennsylvania, then to Illinois, Kansas, Missouri. And then a branch of our family went to California to the gold rush . I had an uncle who did that. He was a good-looking guy . His mother said to him, "James, you ' d better go to college." He said, "Oh, I don ' t have to." He came back from the gold rush and said, "I should have taken up geology. I didn ' t find anyth i ng." Which is true . -65PC How do you like living here as opposed to Chicago? TA Let's say it 's different. We have so many transp l ants around here that we get a cross section almost of New York, Chicago, Boston and what have you. We have every typeo You see, we're right near Dartmouth College, it 's fourteen miles from here. So we have that whole crowd. We have tycoons, we have lawyers, we have doctors, we have professionals and writers; we ' ve got undertakers . We ' re short on stores and restaurants . Actually they ' re thinking of getting an etching plant in there . Weinsock is chairman there. T'm going over there, he 's going to give me a little studio down below. T may have to teach to make it ethical. Then I ' ll make my first etching. Years ago, in about the 1920's, when Robert Harshey was director of the Chicago Art Institute he used to say, "Ivan never makes an etching." Now I may be making one . PC You've never t au ght either, have you? IA I taught once at the Chicago Art Institute . I wanted to see what it would be like. It was a summer classo I had sixty students ranging in age from sixteen to sixty . I remember I had two modelso I said to the class, "Whose work do you like?" They said, "El r.reco, Cezanne and Vela zquez." I went up to the library and got colored prints of each. I came down and delivered them to the classo I said, "Each one of you take the artist you like . " They thought that was nice. I said, "Now you paint like that . " Well, you should have seen the results . One poor thing picked out El Greco . And T had one nun in the class. T remember telling her; "You 1 d better pray harder. You need more - you'll have more faith." And she said, "You sound like a parable." I said, "Yes, I do." Then I had an old woman of about sixty - two from Kentucky. She said, "I can't paint without a breeze." I said, "It ' s easy to fix that in a minute." I told the monitor to go out and get that fan, get the biggest one there is out there if you want some good heavy mountain breezes. I had him hook it up, put it in back of her. I said, "Is that blowing hard enough for you? Paint well They wanted me to continue teaching. The student in the class who had most talent was my monitor, a young Jewish man of about nineteen. And there was a girl who was very talented; s he was part French. Out of the class of sixty those two were good possibilities. At this time they were just starting to grade art. Imagine! Pujalus was another teacher there; he was teaching still-life drawing or something and was very good at it. He ' s Greek. He was very serious; don ' t tell them this and this and this. I said, "I'm not going to grade these kids . " He said very seriously, "You've got to grade them." When the time came to grade I said, "I'm going to give you kids a break. I'm not going to grade you. Take the grade you want, any grade you want." A lot of the girls wanted to go to normal school. So they all took A' s except the nun who took an A minus and the monitor took a C. They said, "Gee, this will help us in our course." 0 " PC They were there for credit. IA Now what do you think of that! That taught me a lesson. It taught me more than it taught them. Everybody good or bad thinks they ' re good. The nun took an A minus because she didn't want to be quite that good. But all the rest except the monitor took A' s. Isn't that amazing! Some weren ' t teaching -66- and didn't need it. That's remarkable. It gives you a lesson, you see. I had si x ty in the class. I had two models. And, Lord, they were painting; maybe they should have been drawing or something. I found that I lost my voice. Talking is hard work. I didn't make anything . I spent more going down there. But anyhow it gave me a clue to what teaching is like. PC Do you have any artists who are particular friends of yours ? IA No. PC Were there some? IA My brother and I knew William s. Schwartz in Chicago and Chapin and there used to be a whole bunch of them. At one time I was president of the Chicago Art Society. I knew all the artists in Chicago. I gave four artists ' balls. I was chairman of two of them. They were held at the Drake Hotel. There would be three or four thousand people present. I found out what people like at a ball; when people are having drinks they like to move around. So I set up three bars at different locations. Even if they only walked ten feet. What people don ' t like is to stand still any place even at a bar. I'm talking about motion in pictures. There ' s such a thing as motion and it's good for them, too; they relax more and so forth; or amusement. Forcing one in one little spot without a change is never good. I mean I can stay working with a painting year after year but I mean people as a class like to have entertainment. Now the party I ' m having for Dorian Gray in the front living room I'll have this here, we'll set up a bar here, we ' ll have one out there for drinks, we'll have the food somewhere else. And all those people don't know each other and you can ' t introduce them to each other. They'll have fun moving from one place to the other . Am T wrong? PC It'll work, yes. IA That works. You give them a better time. After all, what they want is a good time . They ' ll meet different people under different conditions. They come down here and say, "ooh! ooh! ooh ! " PC What did you think of the retrospective you had in Chicago a few years ago? What was it like to go in and kind of see all your work? IA You didn't see it, did you? PC No, I didn't see it. IA Well, I had all the pictures. They did a mighty good job of putting up partitions around and so forth. I had a setup of The Window; I had a brick wall they moved down and a whole room, they made a ro-o maround it. I had the electrician put in a light - I worked with him on it - so that first one light would go here and then one light there; alternative - we timed it I don't know - at eight or ten seconds. First the light would go on on this side to create the illusion of space and li ght; then this would be light; then that without going to dark; and then that would go off. And I had my Door brought to Chicago and that was there all fi xed with the ori ginal doo r , to~ Which added a certain amount of reality to the e xhibition. It Not any. They're all gone about. -67was one of the biggest crowds they ever had there. PC But what was your own reaction walking in and seeing all the paintings? IA I was glad to see them together . Actually I had never seen them all together. I didn ' t know that I had painted that much My reaction? - well, the comments on it. That ' s about it. I had shown two or three in different places all over but I had never seen a bunch of them together. About all of them were there. Well, I didn't want to do it. Then the exhibition came to the Whitney. That wasn't so good because it was the last year before they moved out to their new quarters. That wasn ' t half as good. Did you see that exhibition? 0 PC Yes. IA It wasn't a tenth as good. In Chicago they had potted plants and they really gave me the grand works. The Whitney was no better than a warehouse. PC It was so dark there. IA That was a very poor representation. the best, PC I saw a show at the Whitney once and a couple of months later I saw it at another museum. I couldn ' t believe it was the same exhibition. The lights and everything. IA In Chicago they made different stalls all along and everything and it was beautifully hung. The Whitney was just like that warehouse where we used to judge pictures in New York wherever that was. ~o, I wasn ' t proud of that display. But I didn ' t give a damn personally. PC Have you served on many juries? IA Not too many . Enough to be on juries. I wasn't too interested . The deal used to be from Burchfield to Speicher, that crowd; you know they used to pass around "you give me a prize and I ' ll give you a prize." Well, I used to cheat myself out of quite a few prizes but by being a fool. I had this Lemon job, you know, with the apples early. Louis Ritman was going to be on the jury. He's a Frenchman really, I mean he lived in France for twenty or thirty years and he likes the stock French frame . I made a frame with mirrors all inside of it and then I put the corners in the middle of the frame, I was up for one of the big prizes; they said that if it had the frame off it would get the prize. Another time I sent The Fisherman to the Americans show. The frame needed a little fixing but thB°"t-afternoon instead of working on the frame I played ping-pong all afternoon with some gals or somebody. If it weren't for that frame I would have gotten the Potter Palmer gold medal. Instead Alexander Rrook got the prize. These are incidents I know about. Then in Philadelphia early I had the Lineman in a show, Paul Trebilcock was on the jury. He came back and said,~"Ivan, you were up for the Peck gold medal," That was for a figure piece I think. I said, "What happened?" He said, "Crowell said: why give it to a young man?" I was thirty-two then. I had Ida up at the Institute. My brother was on the The Chicago Art Institute was by far -68- Sculptors' Jury at that time. They had a jury from Boston Do you know WoodWoodbury? - an old artist like 'T'wachtman - people who went way back bury from Boston, I thinko And some more people like that on the jury. Well, Ida was up for consideration and Woodbury said, "T 1 m not going home until I make sure that that doesn't get a prize In Chicago they had a guy named Ruffolo I think it was - that may be the wrong name - anyhow he said, "Well, that has guts. 1'hat should get the prize." But the other guy stayed and I didn't get the prize. Finally I did get an honorable mention on another work, that Fleeting l_i~ that now belongs to the Metropolitan. Some weeks later I was going through the Chicago Art Institute. Now there was an old gray-haired goat, a trustee of the Institute, named Graham Aldus. I guess my dad in his younger days or at some time had told this guy that "your beard looks like a hairbrush" or some such thing (I'm not sure what he said). My dad had a pretty sharp tongue like Whistler had. Did you ever hear the story about Whistler? When he was introduced to people he would say "Oh, but it must have been another Whistler you met; it wasn't I. It must have been another Mr. Whistler." Well, anyhow, I was ·· going through the Institute with someone and this old billy goat happened alongo He came up to my picture and said, "Oh! I didn't know that you were the son of Adam Emory Albright. I'll see that you never get another prize." Now he was a trustee. Do you get that! I had never met the guy beforeo Imagine! This is kind of shocking, isn't ito And so on down the line. 0 0 0 " I've mentioned this chap Chapin. I liked him socially and eve r ythingo But he was an enemy of mine. He tried to see that I would never get anything . For the fun of it I painted a landscape in New Harbor It was after I had painted the Door. It was in 1939 and I was tired of painting; it was the first time I had g~away. So I used a palette knife on the damn thing and took another name, James Fleming I sent it to the Pennsylvania Academyo It got in and was up for the prize. And then Chapin spotted the frame and said, "I think Ivan must have made that." And he stopped me there. And so fortho Oh, I could go on and on with this junk regarding other prizes. I got plenty anyhow; I got more than I should have had. That's the way it goes. I was up for the gold medal of the National Institute of Arts and Letters no, the American Academy I think. I belong to that. And so Ted Rowan said, "Oh, Ivan, you're up for the gold medal." I said, "Great! Who else is up?" "Oh, Georgia O'Keeffe." I said "Great stuff!" Well, she got it. I think de Koening and Rattner and myself were up for that, and otherso You know writers and everybody can vote on thato The National Academy, I mean the National Institute of Arts and Letters have 250 members. The core is fiftyo They have five of each. So now I have a chairo I don't know what the chair is for. I haven't seen it yet. 0 0 PC You haven't been up there? nice chairs there. All those nice chairs they have. IA No, I don't mean that. They call it a chair; you're given Chair 13 or 19 or something. Do they actually have chairs there? PC Oh, yes; they've got your name on it. IA Are you kidding! PC It's up in Audubon Terrace off Broadway. Where are they located? They have very -69IA I didn't know that . I've never seen my chair . I must go to see it when I'm in New York. I was on a jury once in Chicago with Buckminster Fuller. PC What was that for? IA Well, okay, I'll tell you in a minute. Oh, God, I don't know what year it was, it was after 1946 , I think it was 1948 or 1950 along in there . It was at the Drake Hotel and we were judging automobiles. I never knew until the other day when I got a book on the stuff that he made automobiles. I don ' t know the front of a car from the back. I can't even open a door. t'll tell you about my auto driving. Would you like to hear that? PC Yes. IA PC You know, people in this town don't know that I'm an artist. One day about two years ago I took the jeep uptown to the Post Office. The town is filled up pretty solid there. There are four places to park in front of the Post Office. Three were filled and the one directly in front wasn ' t. There's a little alley where you come off the driveway. I pulled up just as a great big oil truck about two blocks long went by . I th ought: gee, I ' m too close there; so I pulled up in front and then was going to back out, I mean back in there close to the sidewalk. Well, I must have been dreaming. I got my foot on the accelerator and zoom! The car took off with some speed . I knocked down the antique cast-iron lamppost which was about thirty feet high, then pl owed through the post of the mailbox which was about three feet high; T went through a trash can about three feet high, and I almost went through the side of an old plumbing supply building. And T almost took down a flagpole about forty feet high. Finally the car s topped. I wasn't frightened. T just thought: My God, what's happened! I didn't have a Vermont driver's license . T just have a Georgia license because after a certain age you have to take a test and what test could I take, although I've been driving since I was twenty years old. The cops came up. They didn't holler at all. And did I have a crowd around me! The next day I'm in here painting and I have this little radio on . (It doesn ' t work now.) J heard on the air that: "an elderly gentleman (or man) almost went through the Post Office yesterday. He took down an antique lamppost." T wondered what the insurance would amount to. You know, they were a year fighting; it was an antique. T didn't know it was an antique in cast iron. 'rhey had to get it in sections. The bottom part is curved, the other part is ••• and all this stuff . And every half hour when I wanted to hear some music I'd turn the radio on and my face would turn red because I heard all this stuff on the radio. I got known at the liquor store . The guy at the Post Office was very nice. He was looking out the window and saw the lamppost go down, And do you know what the damage was? - $600. And later I found out that the lamppost had live wires that I cut through. It went so fast luckily it fell away from me. It's a wonder but I didn ' t get hurt at all. It scorched the windshield; the whole windshield was almost ruined, So if I had gone out I would have been dead. I went into the Post Office and asked them to call up my wife and tell her that I had a slight accident and that I didn't want to walk home and would she please come and pick me up. Well, you can cut that out. Anyway, I think -(Tnterview is resumed the following day, February 6.) -70- Resumed February 6, 1972 PC This is February 6. The _ Win~~ - right? I think you wanted t o continue talking then about IA Yes, I want to continue talking about The Window and try to make more of a concentrated viewpoint. In the first place the setup covered an area of about fifteen by twenty feet in back of the window. Then I stood in front of the window to a certain extent. Now I have possibly about fifteen major movements in the picture swing this way and then foil against it, and then minor things like the lamp, like a flask, like a bowl with flowers, like the chair with the three movements; possibly forty to fifty minor movements controlled by the major movements. PC What's a major movement? IA A major movement would be swinging a big area i n one direction, say, like a big arc; say, the whole window frame would swing one way. And then to counteract it on the other side I might have part of it swing one way and then swing back to have a force there. I make forces and then try to stabilize them and put them so they won't be too violent. For instance, I have three beer bottle s in one area. Each one, although fighting each other, is made from three different viewpoints so they're contained. But also in this case of motion I'm trying to have it so you feel that you're walking back of it and all through it, not just looking at it. I'm trying to put the observer in the picture and not outside of it. Although he is outside of it, I make him wander around through that room. Like the picture frame on the wall I put my canvas right next to it and look back of it so that he's not looking at a picture on the wall but he ' s looking sideways almost flat against the rear wall thirty feet away. Which means I ' m entering him into the room; he ' s walking around the room and seeing the things as if he were in there from their different positions. They take on different poses. I'm composing with motion instead of with area, although naturally it becomes area on flat paint. Which gives it a life of its own, a different kind of a life. PC What started this looking at things from different points of view? IA It was a gradual thing. The first pictures had a little of it. As I ' ve told you, I had one, Flesh - it was just a glass bowl with water and the flowers upside down. ~ould go either way. We ' re taught that this is hollow. J figured out: well, who can tell which way it's hollow. It can be convex or concave. And late r with The Door, which is eight feet tall, I made the flowers from different heights because I had to get them higher and from different angles. I found it had more volume and more space that way. Instead of trying to pretend there's space I used the exact realism from a different direction and I made one flower from one direction and the other from the other direction. You see, before you looked just one way and you only had one view. I looked two ways in that picture. But I had to make them so that no one could tell that there was a change of pace because that would ruin it. PC But did that start by chance or by coincidence? -71IA Well, no - as I told you, when I studied at the Chicago Art Institute their color was mixed up with their form, and color was mixed up with light. I struggled through this school. The teachers didn't know what I meant. Hawthorne was always just color and he didn't understand when I said I wanted form. I was probably one of the first ones to go for form. From the form I was trying to get more space than form. So that's how it started. I was trying to get around the object and trying to get to model it more than what you see. I'd walk from one position to another. That led on - like if you had a person standing - I painted the ~ineman at the old church at Warrenville, it was fifty feet long - well, I moved away back. That was one thing. That gives it more movement. Then I walked from one side to the other to try to reach around it to make it more sculpturesque as it were. From the sculpturesque it turned into more motion. I'd walk further around and I found that it gave more of an extending of the figure out towards you. So now after all these years in ~e Vermonter, which I'm working on, I'm trying to have his hat move around or an arm lift up. If I want to make the arm lift up I work from underneath it with a motion and then have another motion forcing it down and up. And you can swing the hand back and forth. I'm not trying to use distortion. I'm not distorting anything. If anything, I'm making the object more realistic by walking around it. In other words, an object has a million different viewpoints and I'm taking a certain one. Now, for instance, say I'm going to paint a banana or a grapefruit or orange or apple on a table. That object doesn't have any size; it has all sizes. If you stand off fifteen feet it's smaller. If you stand off far enough it'll disappear. As it's disappearing the color will become more and more neutral until finally you'll just have a black spot. So what I do: say, for any object I'll walk about the same distance around it so it will keep relatively the one shape; say the object is three inches high; It'll keep that roughly. But I'll be painting the back of it and the front of it and trying to relate the two but not too violently because it won't work. But I am getting around the object. Well then, the object will have a tendency to try to get out of that shape. There's where the action happens when the observer looks at it. A lot of these objects I paint are trying to get back to their original shape and that's where the force lies. And the job of the artist is to compose with these shapes and do what he wants with them. Naturally, that's where the artistic effort would be displayed. PC Yes, because as you look at these things from different points of view in theory it should open up the form or change it in a way. IA I painted a chain, an old automobile chain they had on tires. It had little loops and holes in it. Let's say it had about eight loops. I hung it up. I painted one in a normal position like anybody else would paint it. Then I got back of it and painted the next one - no, I turned the canvas upside down and painted the next link; and then painted the next one in a normal position. Well, you might say the chain had a tendency to be horribly angry so it tried to twist around. Then when you hold the real chain up against the painting it looks silly and as if it doesn't have any life of its own . A lot of these things are angry. You can make them peaceful by having it static. The normal part (I call it static) will emphasize the things you want. So you're composing with spots of emotion like it had a volcanic feel like in Yellowstone Park where there are all these pots, there are some boiling here, some are quiet here, some boiling there, and some are bigger - 72- than others, and so forth. You're designing with different controlled motions, you see. Well then, what happens is that the observer looking at the painting it won't register except it will be disturbing. Possibly I make mine more disturbing than I should because I ' m still experimenting. But if you wanted to you could use the same thing to make a thing more beautiful. Constable or Poussin could make it very melodious and graceful. or what you could do: if you were to paint a figure piece outside, I mean small figures like they have in a lot of pictures, you could get back of a man and make him actually walk about , you could move him forward. And then you could have one nearer walk towards you, you could make him walk up a hill and around. Now in that picture of the Cornfield which I painted for Senator Benton I walked around an area of two acres in a cornfield and tied each stalk I was going to paint with a piece of colored cloth in white, red, blue and so on, so I could identify it. And I walked around in a certain pattern and movement. PC What did the different colors of cloth mean? IA So I could tell what I was painting, to identify wha t T was painting. If I had eight pieces of white cloth in one area I wouldn ' t know which one I was looking at. If the cloth was red then on my canvas I ' d make red spots in the section where these cornstalks would be. The next blue, the next yellow, the next green, or black and white, and so forth. The result is that when you ' re looking at the painting I have you walking around in that field. You aren't looking at that field; you're in it. Then I try to keep you in there so that you don't walk out. Because if you walk out you ' ll get a George Inness. And I don~t want you to walk out. I want to keep you in as much as T want to; or if I want you to talk out I can make you walk out and then walk back in again. And that's what this should lead you to do; and I think it will. Now let's see what else we have. I'll change to talking about a piece of sculpture which I will work on after I get through with this Vermonter, which I've been working on for about seven years; I expect to w-;-r·k ~it for about two more years. Or when I get tired of painting I'll work on this sculpture. I have an iron stand made with a crank on it from a truck. It will lift two thousand pounds. The head eventually will be about thirty inches high or a little more, about twice life-size in height; that would be about four times in volume. I'm working from photographs of the shroud that Christ was wrapped in after the Crucifixion. This shroud is now in Milan, Italy. According to books on the subject this shroud is a fine piece of linen. The shroud is fourteen feet long. After the Crucifixion it disappeared. It was supposed to have been found in Constantinople. Later on the Crusaders brought it to France and from there it landed in Milan. Once in a while it is displayed to the public. In about 1896 or 1898 along in there about the time photography came into existence an Italian chap connected with the Church was allowed to photograph the shroud. Of course when he shot the photograph he had a positive. The measurement of the height of Christ according to this shroud is five feet eleven which means He was a very tall man for those days. He has hair coming down here on the side down to His shoulders, there's sort of a pigtail in back, the blood shows up white. A doctor who examined the shroud estimates there are either fifty or a hundred and fifty wounds. Naturally only the wounds which showed on the skin are -73- vi s ible , Also His nose was broken, The Roman soldiers who sc ourged Him used clubs something like a policeman ' s club with two or three leather things, say, eight or ten inches long at the end of which were attached things like lead pellets . So I ' m going to make this sculpture. So the feeling I want to get across is a feeling of awe, of strength, of majesty. In contrast to this there ' s this head I ' m painting of Atwood, a man seventysix years old; I ' ve worked for two years on his face and hands. By comparison he looks like ten pounds of suet, no more no less. No matter how you try to dignify him he remains flesh and a man, Now this photograph of Christ which I have had enl arged , I ' ve taken two or three photographs of the back and the front - although the characteristics of being human are there, there ' s this feeling of awe , strength and majesty. It ' s totally different. Now how will I get that feeling into my sculpture? First, I will have to make a head - using calipers - more accurate than anything I have eve r made. First will have to come the structure of that head more definite , as true a s I c an possibly make it . In addition I will have t o project a greater feeling of love, sympathy , kindness , humility than I ' ve ever done before . Whether or not I can do it I don't know. The head 1 make wil l have to awe the person who sees it , If it doesn't make them cry, if it doesn ' t make them feel guilty, if it doesn't make them want to be better, if it doesn ' t do everything that Christ represents, it won ' t be any good. And how far I can go in accomplishing that - for instance, I ' m looking at Mr. Cummings here; I ' m comparing him with a piece of fruit, say, an apple on the table . He has life that shows . Now it isn't a change of form. The apple stays the same but the life doesn ' t come out too much; it ' s be tter than a piece o f pottery but that ' s all I can say . But this other head. Now what is that difference? It is there . Because , after all , my seeing thi s gentleman is that these rays of light from His face coming here make this form there ' s something in that which carries beyond form. And it ' s that feeling the difference between these rays of light and darkness which emanate from the figure and this man T' m l ooking at have to carry something outside of just the physical shape of it , or I'm wrong . That is the quality that will have to come in this figure but to a far greater extent. Tha t' s more or less the way I have to define it . In other words , I ' m l ooking for the spirit, I guess you ' d call it . But I don't want to look for the spirit by calling it feeling. It ' s not feeling . It will have to come through knowledge. And the knowledge will be that in between me and what I ' m looking at there ' s that feeling in the air, in the atmosphere, which I have to get . In other words, I will be modeling t he atmosphere . And I don ' t mean to make i t misty like a Rodin and cloud things. But more accurate . But it ' s going to have to create such dignity and majesty that it ' s almost impossible to understand . When I'm trying to make this sculpture we ' ll find out what happens , In modeling, for instance, the piece will have to be so sensitive and it will have to be accurate; construction will have to be there, I ' m taking that for granted . Otherwise it won't be any good , But in addition to that I ' m going to hav e to - well, I gue ss the best way to do i t will be to model it and then put it in a kind of dark sp o t and look at it every day and see what happens. I guess it means that I ' m going to have to cut out drinking and a few other things. PC I'm very curious about the light which we've talked about, t he quality of light. -74- IA Oh - the quality of the light. I don't work from sketches. I work from moving a model around for, say, three weeks or moving a still-life around in a hundred positions . I ' m using the skylight, top light. Then I ' m getting one light. And then I like to concentrate; the more you make it smaller and smaller you'll have a sharper light and more shadows and it brings out more form. Now here in Vermont the light is fairly good . But it's better in Canada. I ' ve gone to Canada a few times, to Stratford for the plays. I find that the farther north I go the stronger and the whiter is the light. I ' ve painted in California a few times and that is simply ghastly. It gets kind of an orange glow . It ' s impossible. I don ' t like it. In 1926 to 1930 every artist down there would have his studio right near a stopsign so people would come and buy these paintings . They painted wisteria and so forth. I like a cold light, what some people might call a cruel light, the kind of light that no actress would want. I like a powerful white light on the head; this is the light that shows the form the most. A steady light with white clouds reflecting down I think is the best light you can have . Long ago da Vinci said that; a small courtyard with a white cloud above it. But Italy is too far s outh. If you go north, as far north as you can, you'll have a white light. Then you ' ve got to figure that -- PC The thing I ' m curious about, for instance, in The osity of his hands and his face. IA Personally I can't see that. But when I went to Chicago and looked at my pictures I thought there was a little luminosity. I think that may be caused by getting close values. In painting a hand (and incidentally most artists paint terrible hands, including Rembrandt, horrible ) you should make the fingers so they can move. PC Rut do you look at the hands the same way you do an object? IA Yes. It doesn ' t matter whether it's the head or the hand or a button or a piece of wood or the background, or a brick or whatever. I mean I look at the head that way. I try to make it more feeling . On the painting of the Fat Man I painted years ago with the derby on I tried to put force in his eyes . ~And I had almost to put it in myself because people generally have kind of a look of receding their eyes or they ' re hiding all their emotions back of it and trying to be secretive. You have to pull the emotions out of them. Now actually this chap wasn't a spiritual type. He was a little politician, he was in the house here, he came from Bridgewater, he had two or three hundred acres. PC A Vermonter, right. IA Yes, a Vermonter. He had two or three hundred acres. He made maple syrup, not that there's anything wrong with maple syrup. He thought he was a second Will Rogers. He would spend his time telling me in a slow voice offcolor jokes and so forth. He had been road commissioner. He's a Phi Beta Kappa. He was the first man I painted who - I never had a professional model, I won't have them because they think they're the actor and I'd rather be the actor myself. He was just a typical ordinary man getting old. His wife died . He ' s now living at The Homestead here. Some woman left a million Vermo~ter, is the lumin- -75- dollars for 't:'he Homestead and it looks as good as the Ritz in New York or any other place. You have to have good references to get into this place. There were twenty-three old ladies and only three men. He was seventy-six years old and these old ladies c alled him "boy" because he was the youngest one in it. He came over to pose . He said, "T ' m awfully glad, Mr. Albright , to get away because here I can take off my tie , and there are so many women there . " (In the West people called me Ivan but here T' m Mr. Albright . ) But to get back to this sculpture I ' m going to do, I'll have to ge t spiritually into this. Tt ' s something outside of t he modeling of the head . You h ave to put extreme love into it. The more love or sympathy or humanity, you might say . (Although I'm not a human person; I'm a fool in so many ways.) In this case it has to have the ultimate of your feeling of love , sympathy, compassion , everything good to make it or you won ' t have it . In painting or anything you cannot have hate. Tf you have hate you destroy the picture and yourself. Tt doesn't work . You can have hunger, you can have thirst, you can have great feeling for texture, you can be sensitive to touch, you can be sensitive to color, but for the head you've got to be sensitive to love. Otherwise it will not work. And I think that ' s the only thing. Now that love won't change the shape of it but it will add something to it. And you won ' t get that through feeling . You're going to have to just look and see the difference because it's extended out . Because, after all , when I'm painting you I ' m not touching you; I'm off a ways. And here this radiates out from a person. So it's in the air between myself and the object I ' m looking at. So in there whether you call them cosmic rays •• • Buckminster Fuller would know exactly what it is. T haven't had a chance to talk to him. PC Could you explain how you use the magnifying glass that you have? IA Well, you see, I have this corduroy coat which happens to be a very cheap corduroy , the ribs are about an e ighth of an inch apart. It should have wide ribs. A wide wale corduroy would have been easier to paint; I don ' t know why I picked this one; I guess I didn ' t think too much about it, the color was good, and he had it on. In Vermont they were all green mostly . They should be Robin Hood or something. So I use the magnifying glass when I want to bear down on one section. PC (inaudible) IA Oh the setup I have, I have this dummy all dressed up with his clothes. On the dummy let's say I ' m painting a certain section of the sleeve. I brush underneath the magnifying glass. So instead of the area being, say, two inches square, I've got an area of four square inches; I can see more. That corduroy takes on a rather wonderful texture about like a raspberry, you know, those little sections of a raspberry; it's that color and when the light hits it it's rounded, it ' s soft, it's mostly deep rose madder, and it turns around and it ' s almost like hair and it almost purrs like a kitten. Well, you've got to put things into it, you've got to love that cloth or what are you going to have? If you think the wrinkles are too sharp you ' ve got to change it to make them more gentle. I ' ve cut out patches in the back of the coat because places where it got the sun turned a kind of tawny yellow and got bleached out. So I ' ve cut out patches. I have a stick I put over my pictures to rest my hand on. I take the most interesting parts of the coat and cut pieces out and tack a piece to the stick and pin them - 76- around there. And so the wrinkles won ' t change I ' ve got a jar of spray starch that I spray on, say, the sleeves s o that the folds s tay more permanent while I ' m working on that area. I have the whole picture flexible, I then tie it up with definite things so T can take an area of , say, half a foot square and I put safety pins all through that to hold it in shape until T get through. Then when I get through I don ' t care about it , PC But you don ' t use the magnifying glass on the canvas when you ' re painting, do you? IA Well, I use it - yes , I paint under it . I have a thing like this. Here. (demonstrating his method) I have it like that, you see . And then I could do this . Tf I were doing that I ' d take a bigger one - where is it? - oh, here it is. You see, I won ' t be holdi ng this box here. I can see it , you see . This brush is too big . (I ' m using a Number 3 .) And then paint it , My wife likes sunny days, as most people do ; which is fine . But I like a cloudy day (I ' m selfish ). Then the light is strongest on this figure. Also when there ' s s now on the ground the effect is of a powerful magnifying glass on the object , I ' m a realist in the point that I want td paint it that way . I ' m an abstractionist in that I ' m trying to have motion. But if T' m going to make a thing move I ' m not going to make a dist ortion. I don ' t want to move a distortion. I'm no t intere sted in distortion . T mean that ' s fun to play with but that ' s just like a dream . PC What is di s tortion? TA T mean if I wanted to di s tort that I could make that coat this big or the sleeve here . Like a Dali , I'm not trying to make a fantasy or a dream. PC So you try to follow -- ? IA Yes, I follow construction , When T make this thing I ' ll make it so it will work . I ' m not trying to make a wonde rful pattern like surrealism. Which you could do . That ' s another field , PC But it ' s more real than real in a way? What would dist ortion be? TA Yes. Well , the reality is more than what a man can dream up. A man who makes a fantasy of surrealism is thinking that he can beat nature. And he can ' t. Because he ' s part o f nature , and he ' s a small part and when he ' s tying himself up -- I ' m just trying to follow nature and let nature come out . Which is a whole lot stronger I think. I'm just the instrument of making it , ln other words, T' m not an arti s t. No , it ' s true . PC You 9 re an observer . IA I ' m an observer, yes, to look . PC But still you don ' t u se trompe l ' oeil and all kinds of things like that? IA No. That would be - well, that would be like Bosch or something . That would be fun, too, But I would much rather do this and see how far I can But I ' m making them observe it the way I want them - 77- go with it. I really think that one could make figures - you see, these things are terribly distorted here. If there are too many I'll paint one ou t. PC I see. '!'here are too many objects on the canvas. IA I have one there, one there, one there, and one there. Now what T want to do is get this log, this beam here, turning definite enough to hold those. As a base of these things I may have to adapt the mean so it will take care of that. I don't want the porch to shove in. I want it to shove out here. And if I want to have a feeling of walking around there I'll force a bunch of things so you can get around there, so you can put your arm around there. I don't want to make just a blank thing that is solid here. You know, you can walk around there and I'm going to make certain areas so you'll feel that . And I can do it through motion. And, of course, color comes in too. Which I think would be interesting. PC But your color really tries to follow the color of the object, doesn't it? IA Yes, the color of the object; that's right. I wish I had a better example. Well, you see, there's ridicule here to some e xtent. This is his sleeve. Here's a husky old chap with his coat on and I pull this down more than it would be. And then you put on this underwear which looks like lace that they might have had in France a hundred years ago . It's frivolous but the frivolousness makes a foil for the rugged old clodhopper or whatever he was. It's a foil against it. And I think it should have a foil. Now here's this man and I don't know whether he thought much about Christ or not; I don't know. Here's the cross I got from Ethiopia. I'll make that stronger. And then this happens to be open and exposes the chain and what he did think about Christ. But it isn't a thing that other people knew about; it's just that his shirt happened to be open and you saw it. This is to tie it up not only as a picture but with philosophy and f~ith and so on. PC But do you think then of this as having religious connotations because of that? IA Well, I think that people might grab their own shirt and see whether they have something. If they have, it means something to them. If they don't have, they ' ll wonder what, you see. But I think anything outside of the picture that you can give significance to is important. Because, after all, what is a picture? I mean I could paint eighteen men. Well, what good would that be? They're all men. For what? I mean I think a painting should have a sort of religious connotation. The_]_~ has. I think if a picture is important it should possibly be tied up with religion maybe, or with faith, or with the universe, or something. I mean just painting that one Fisherman thing I did mean I ' m not trying to appeal to the ones who kill-fish or-the ones who kill deer. PC What about this one with the hole in the wall gang kind of thing? IA That was just being typically Western. I had that material. Everybody in it had been a gangster. One guy that made the spurs had been in jail. I opened up Butch Cassidy's revolver, or six-shooter rather, and saw that he had misspelled his own name. He had "B. Cassidy . " He had carved the name -78- inside . That lariat came from something . Just about everybody had been in jail or something. Except our cowboy manager, George Conwell. I had his boots . I used to say, "My gosh , that 1 s the only one who hasn't been in jail ! " Later I heard that he had been in a reform school. So that made it perfect . And, by the way, that picture is in the Phoenix Museum now. PC Okay. I ' ll just flip the tape over. END OF TAPE TII - Side 1 -79- TAPE III - Side 2 PC This is Side 6. IA You mean you want that on the tape? PC Yes. IA I've made about five lithographs: one of Ida, one of The Fisherman, one of the Showcase D~l, one of myself, and I forget what the other one -was. Then I ' ve made about half a dozen silver points, Of course the silver point has been out of style for a time. Rut anyway I made them. As everybody knows, you use a coated paper. PC How did you happen to do the lithographs? did they come about? IA No, they weren ' t commissioned at all. I made one of Fleeting Time, the one that's at the Metropolitan . I used my own pictures because I didn ' t want to spend the time of getting a model and putting all that much time into it. Although I did spend about six months on the last one - the Showcase Dol l . PC Do you find that your ideas change from making the lithographs from the paintings? IA No . It doesn't make any difference. Hold on a minute; I'll get one to show you, This was made about a year and a half ago. Laurance Rockefeller bought this property and had this building torn down . And this, you see, is starting to turn yellow and green , I don ' t know how it will work out. It will turn all kinds of colors as it gets older. I use silver, gold and platinum, T' m the only person who's ever used platinum or gold. T used platinum more or less as a joke because Technically it makes the color bluer than silver does and it doesn ' t change color, Tt stays forever. T got about half an inch of it made up and the bill was fifty dollars. However, that really isn't as expensive as it seems. You can make many silver points with that length if you don't lose them . But I did lose a whole set of them; they're so small that they disappeared. See here they are. I have a glass with about thirty gold, brass, silver, and platinum things in it. T put them in these things here. That's gold. Then T can twist it around into any curve like a modeling tool so T can make a wide flat line half an inch, an inch, or anything I want, I made one - not this one here - up near Garda where my wife went to college a year or two ago just to get a degree . I took a piece of flat copper about an inch long and I thought - well, grass grows, you can buy a square foot of sod and there are so many blades of grass in it. So I took this and filed it like a comb, then I scratched it and I can make like two dozen blades of grass in one stroke. Well, why not? When you're cutting grass if you had to cut it blade by blade it would take quite a while, and if you were to draw it blade by blade it would take just as long. You can figure out a lot of shortcuts, scratch around like an old hen, and so forth. Again I used a number of viewpoints. Were they commissioned? How PC What kind of building is that in the drawing? IA At one time I think it was a church, Then it was abandoned and I think became the Frost Lumber Company. And then Laurance Rockefeller bought it and had it torn down . So probably eventually it will be the Rocky Apartments - I don't know. This part was a beautiful old brown. I took a view here, -80- see. You can see there are different angles more or less . Well, everybody traveling on a train or driving in an automobile through the country has noticed old buildings and how they turn aroundo Now if every place you went every building stayed just the one view you saw it in you ' d be rather bored. The fact that that turns around and the whole landscape turns with it is one of the charms of moving. Tn this case here I have some drawings I made in which I tried to get - I made a number of drawings from automobiles in different countries driving along where the things will keep turning around. I try to give that effect. I don ' t want to make a formal landscape. When I ' m sitting driving I ' m moving, you might say . As I ' m moving the whole thing sweeps around or disappears . On the left side it swings around to the left; on the right that way; you have two circles like two wheels moving around. And that ' s what I want to get when I ' m moving . Now if I ' m looking at one side and the clouds keep swinging around you have to get that . You don ' t get it by just standing still. You have to draw in motiono PC When you did this building did you move from place to place? IA Oh, yes . Here you can see that it would be impossible to see down here from that way . I kept shifting around. I had a young artist, Bruce Penney, who liked to make pictures to sell more or less . I used to tell him, "You just draw . " But the temptation to sell was too great. He had to make a sketch and the n make a painting of it. He used to watch me . I ' d keep moving around here and there and you see the lumber he re and there. So although it has a distorted feeling about it, each angle is correct . Now again if you look out the train window and you see these hills coming around that's what ' s fascinating . And that ' s what the artist will have to get in his pictures from now on: to have it be fascinating if you use realism. I ' m tired of the one-position painter, which is what we ' ve had up to now. One-position painter they call them . If t h ey don't like the name they can change. Anyhow I have changed. My dad was a one-position painter. I have one of a bridge here. Come over to the light here. This is the bridge right out there, you see. PC Oh , yes . IA This is silver point , on it. PC Platinum and silver . IA This was made about six years ago when we first came here . The willows are here now and so forth . Look, this blue here - I made the water and the shadows in silver and platinum, the blue is part and the shade is platinum. The blue is platinum and silver . And the bank is gold , copper and brass. Look, this is turning green there . They said in earlier times that in about fifty years they turn green a lot. That thing is going to be all green . But the blue won't turn green . This is the river here and so forth . PC The platinum doesn't oxidize so much. IA The platinum doesn ' t at all they say, not . And this is done with what again? - silver This was made in - I don ' t think I ' ve got the year I don't know whether that's true or -81- PC IA Do you make many drawings as complete as this? I made four silver points like this. I made one at Aspen like this. I changed all the buildings. Walter Paepke was out there; he made the town, you know. I made a picture of the old mining section, the little shacks, and I turned them all around. 1 had about eight views there, too. And he came around and said, "Ivan, why do you make this bad part of town? We have a nice hotel over here and a bunch of new buildings." But since that day - that was about twenty years ago I guess (the kids were young and they were out there skiing) - the old mining section has been all torn down. The beautiful old buildings that the artists always like the government calls slums. Whenever I hear of slum clearance I just cringe because that's the part I love. And they tear it down and then they put up ghastly buildings . In Chicago they tore down my studio, an old red brick building which wasn't quite a slum. They were going to make a mall of ngden Avenue. Andy Rebore, a friend and contemporary and collaborator with Frank Lloyd Wright, designed it and changed it. Of course it was well-kept all the time . They made a mall and they offered to move my studio building and give me a brass tag. T told them they could keep their brass tag, T' d get my own dog tag . And so they tore it down. And over my studio they buil t a Buddhist temple. So that ' s wonderful. So I was kicked out of Chicago in about 196 3 . So we moved here. My studio went so then we followed soon after . Which was probably a good thing . But, you see, it's yellow now like the other one I showed you. You probably know more about this than I do. See, the~e ' s a green spot, there are a few green spots and with age -- PC Well, the copper will IA It has nothing to do with the artist. Age will make it look better maybe. 'T'his is metal,_ it will probably last for ever . I mean certainly as much as a graphite pencil would last. So this is a different medium. I have about four or five of these. I make one once in a while. I started one of the old hotel here . Would you like to see it? PC Yes. IA I didn ' t get it quite finished before they tore it down. PC While you're looking for that, do you keep your palette like this? IA 'This was a set palette I was making for something. I hate mixing each color -- so I sat one whole afternoon -- In this I had four colors; okay, I have this red, that's supposed to be yellow, this is my blue, that's my green. T put some of each color in those four. And then in the reds only I put this red. In the yellow I only put the yellow; I didn ' t put the red. In the blue I put blue including cobalt . In the green I put in the green. So for a certain picture I have a certain set thing which will do certain things. Now if I try to mix them first it would get too bright. So if I want to emphasize something I can lower the other colors in a simple way. PC You keep it under water - right? TA Well, this is a good deal like what a chemist does. For instance, if the people who make aspirin were to mix up a quantity that was ten times stronger -82- each time you ' d say "What an idiot !! " Well, I would say of a chap who will try to paint a picture in tone by mixing each time "What an idiot!" So you can make a tone, you can make anything you want , you can run it all through the reds and people will say, "Isn ' t that a marvelous feeling ! " Well, it's simple to do . Well, you can run it through the whites. If you want to make it light (like Twachtman ) you can run white in all of those . Now I put a little of this color in here, that ' s yellow, this cools it . In the black I put all four colors. So no matter where I use it in all four there may be more in this. I can warm it or cool i t . PC How much of the red would you put into the red , say , in proportion? IA If I had a palette knife I ' d show you . ( demonstrating ) Fooling around with the thing I ' ll show you. Let me see, here ' s one that was painted from that setup . It's on a blue or a brown board . See, these boards, - that one was done on that brown . Here ' s a thing I'm making from that . This is going to be the afterimages of that only. The first one I ' ve tried. Now here I've got some notes on this . Okay. When I got The Vermonter ' s coat (sound of turning pages, and reading from notebook ): "alizarin the after-image comes fast vivid blue, green and so forth . Purp le sends off purp le reds afterimage pure acid green . " So I ' ve taken vermilion as somewhat the same. I ' ve just got up this far . Now I did that hair without that set palette . I was too lazy, I thought I could get along without it. This part is a set palette. That will become a little too strong. And this part here comes there. This is ju s t an apple core I had . The yellow and cerulean blue after orange cadmium (sort of whistling sound in machine ) - what's that noise? orange cadmium afterimage is cerulean blue . Now here ' s what I do . This is a set palette for that. I put some of all those colors on here and in water . If I put turpentine in first and then water it doesn't dry out so fast . Otherwise this stuff will dry out in three days and I'd have to do the whole thing over . It ' s a pain in the ear . Pardon me . This is what I did, I take PC Just a dab. IA About that much - not quite that much. Red is stronger. That much in all the reds . Which ties them together. This much here for the blues - no, a little more - about that much in all the blues . Now they have a definite relationship . And in all these four I have this in that , and this in that , so that although there ' s this color in that this is re lated to that in a minor way . And the whites the same . The thing is T' ll get it up to this. Then T1 ll use this to get more detail: It ' s kind of fascinating, isn ' t it? PC But this is all based on that color idea? IA Yes , this is based on the color principle. This is based on afterimages . If I see this - if I wanted to see the opposite I ' d see that maybe. Of course I'd have to check eventually - I'm talking about this throws out that color. PC What are you going to call these? IA Oh, I don't know. I see. -83- PC memorabilia . IA I don ' t know . Now look at the positions we've got here. 1t would drive me nuts if I didn ' t write these down; I couldn ' t possibly remember all these . For instance , suppose you l iked to hike and you walked around these woods at random for half a day. Could you sit down and draw exa c tly where you went? You ' d have a hard time doing that. Or, say, you walked around for three days. You ' d have to have a map to know accurately where you were. Now here I have this, you see. This first piece here. "Stand over here for picture." t stood way around here. Outside of the canvas is on the left side. So I try to get movement all through here so that no matter how you turn the thing it ' ll read . PC Have you ever done this before with two paintings of the same -- ? tA No, this is the first time I've ever tried it. I've never tried an afterimage before. Of course, what I'll do now is go into it further and really check on my own notes and make sure that these are right. Then what comes in is a whole study of the intensity of the light and all that. Don ' t you see you go on and on. PC But on that page you read from there it said - what? - 1945 or something . IA I started it when I did the Portrait of Dorian Gray. Then I left off on that for a long while . I did that because of t he k le ig lights. 'T'his is the first picture I ' ve put it in , I mean the first really serious one . t had this and I thought it would be fun to see what would happen. But there ' s too much of that blue; if I were doing it again I ' d take different colors. You see, I just copied this thing . If I wanted to make another one I ' d take objects like an orange, or an app l e - a red one and a green one, a banana, and so forth so I could have all the combinations. You see, I haven ' t tried putting a red and a blue and a green together over there, which would probably give me a neutralized muted thing in the center. '!'his is just a beginning experiment . I understand the motion now but this part I don ' t understand yet. I ' m going to get at it. Rut I ' m no t going by feeling, I ' m going by the reaction. PC That's a problem there to see -- IA Don ' t you think it will be kind of fun? PC Yes . IA No - well, you could go on three or four times . Some colors have more white has the most afterimages, is most powerful because white has all the colors in it. In one of hi s books Buckmins t er Fuller said something that I think is rather amazing. He said that if you were to take, say, an apple the red that is there is co l or that is rejected; that only the colors which are rejected are what you see, the colors that are not wanted in the apple . If the apple wanted the col ors it would have absorbed them . So, after all, that kind o f let me down; here . I ' m painting only things which are rejected. PC What about an orange? But won ' t you then get an afterimage of the afterimages? -84- IA Yes, anything is the same way. Anyone painting anything is painting the rejected colors, or they wouldn't be there. So you can run into philosophy, too . PC It ' s an interesting idea. IA Well, it is . I think it ' s fascinating. Tt makes you think twice, too. Rut don ' t you think it will be rather amusing to do this? Vou see this yellow will go to magenta. '!'hen you'll have some violet inside there. These colors come in pure without any form. So with form you have value. T' ll play around with it and see what T get. Tt'll be more luminous. '!'his looks, may I say, earthly? - this other one. The things that we see will be more drab and look like a Rembrandt or something solid and so forth. These others look more as if neon lights were about them. PC You haven't tried any acrylic paints or any of those modern --? IA ~o, PC You're not interested in -- ? IA I haven ' t. I have enough trouble with these. I don't have that much -- I think this one here - what I want to make from this: This is orange but T use a composition for the fold, then I'll use that to finish it up and change and modify it; I'll probably put this thing here around trying to make it a little better. Maybe I'll shove in at the end just a piece of a trinket or something. I think I may put it next to an apple core (which would be devoured) against a piece of jewelry (which is not devoured); they don't fit together at all; they're just opposites. Why would you have jewelry next to an apple core? Then if you want to give it the element of time -PC You have endless theories of these juxtapositions. IA Yes, I know. If you want to give the element of time you just show the apple core as being old, make it half rotten, then subconsciously people know that the apple wasn't eaten half an hour ago. The only way we have of knowing is by the relative experience of a thing. What else have you got! I can't write down that this apple is ten days old; you have to show it. Then if you wanted to have another contrast let ' s say we'll have two apple cores, one fresh and one old. Therefore, the person is not tidy. It also means that he ate an apple last week and he ate one today. Therefore you're showing a week of time. Little things like that add. Any bit of philosophy you can tie in with showing, say, decay or time, etc., can be important. Or if you had two water glasses, one whole and one broken, it would show that the person is careless. It has no significance in painting but you can use it for design as well as anything else. The person is careless; he ' s broken one glass, so they'll think: when is he going to break the other one. PC One of the things I find interesting is that you have kind of so little interest in having other - the work of other painters around. IA Oh, we have a houseful of paintings. PC I mean other artists you know. I mean -- what do you mean? -85- IA We have the rooms all full of the work of other artists PC I mean contemporaries. IA Well , not American contemporaries because there wouldn't be any end to it. You might as well have a store then if you bought each artist . Heck! PC But I mean there are the Rembrandt etchings -- IA I have some back here. You see, we keep changing them We have a Degas. We have a whole bunch of other art , charcoal drawings, different ones. And upstairs T' ve got two Picasso plates, one glazed and one in the clay And there's a whole bunch of things upstairs which we haven't had a chance to put together yet because we've been remodeling and so fortho We'll put up about half or more of them and then after a year or two change them I'll get Byron Thomas to come overo He loves to come over and put things here and there . He ' s niceo He's sweeto These notebooks here cover all the different periodso I don ' t know what ' s in this one hereo We might as well take a look . The Vermonter is in about seven years' books; there may not be anything on it for all I know. (reading from notebook :) "You get planes like the archaic Greek and limb ( I ' m talking about the arm here or something ) not realistic but simple large planes." (Leafing through notebooks and reading brief snatches from here and there: ) "Nail piece of linen to top, both sides to balance picture •• • lower flap of pocket and lower part of pocket o'' Tf T' m taking a new area I start thinking first and then writing down noteso I don ' t want to just paint, I ' m not just going to copy that thing. The first thing I do is try to think: What value of significance does it have in relation to the rest of the thing; which way do I want it to goo Like with these diagrams I got tired of making these diagrams so T generally put them in notebooks now. But I have all these positions, you see. This is just one - under where shirt collar and each position on the doggone thing . 0 0 0 0 PC Well, you go from kind of the general to the more specific and more specific and more specific, don ' t you? IA Well, yes, I'll have a few big movements if I want to and see this part of the coat I painted in back of him; you see, I wanted it to come this way. Now the shirt this part I paint this way to open it up; the sleeve I'll paint this way to shove it here. I'll paint underneath this arm to make it lift; this other one I may paint down to lower it. That is just an outline. What I want is: He's sitting here this way; I think I want to turn him that way to make him rounder and bring out this; I ' ll turn this this way; but then so that will turn I ' ll have three turning that way and then I ' ll come up and turn one this way, that will make that turn more. If I turn the whole thing you can't - you don ' t work that way. If I turn it this way then if I want to I ' ll turn the wood that way and continue even out in space And then to make the action better - see these little arrows. I intended to make a little circle, a motion up there. You see I turn this this way, I turn that the opposite way and that ' s like little dust things in the air . Tt ' s kind of hard to explain all this stuff, isn ' t it? It ' s a new theory. Now you see this thing that's drawn here . I think that's fascinating. I want that for direction anyhow. Tn composing in a big way 0 -86- I haven't got this placed yet. I don ' t want to put it too close to that; I don't want it too high up. This thing is flexible. I don't want to crowd on his head; I want to give him room to breathe and to move and so forth. And the same here. I may raise that up a little bit to give him enough area to stretch out if he stood up. And the same way the force is down here. When I get to this I'll study it and make notes first and everything on what I want to do. I know I want this to swing out. I'll have to get him to pose with those pants first to get the general shadow of the stuff and then I'll use the dummy. Eventually I ' d like to have this part come around like this so you can put your hands around it. PC How about things even like the hair here which is --? IA This thing is not painted well here, PC His hair and eyebrows? IA What's wrong with that? - I mean - PC I mean do you look at those from different points of view, too? TA T can't - T made this blue here to get some space in between there. Then they give some - very little . This is too strong here yet. I don't want to make it too evident so people will see it; I want them to feel it most of the time. I want them to feel it but I don't want them to see it. There's a distinction there, isn't there? PC Yes. IA T think everything should be more or less felt and not seen, When you see it that's ridiculous because you want to see it. T mean I look at you the space I sense it, see. ! want to turn that down more. '!'here ' s too much light on that. T1 ll have to turn that down more. So I'll get at it some day when I feel there's a good light on it and I'll turn that around so that (sort of whistling sound in the machine) -- The machine is tired of me. I don't blame it. (evidently some conversation off the tape) PC Oh, yes, that would be good. IA I should get a writer. in hell they are. PC Well, some of them are in the Chicago catalogue. TA Oh, yes, there are other ones. T don ' t know whether that would take too long, I mean five minutes or what. Don't you think it would be important for me to write, say, for whoever saw these pictures? PC Right, IA Yes, Senator Benton has about eight or ten. But I could give roughly let's see, let me get the catalogue. Let me see. (Machine turned off) Right. If I should die tomorrow nobody would know where But there are other ones. Like The Cornfield which Senator Benton has -- END OF TAPE TII - Side 2 END OF TNTERVIEW End Ivan Le Lorraine Albright Interview