The Art of Michael Izrael Galmer
Transcription
The Art of Michael Izrael Galmer
R E P O U S S É ST Y L E , T H E N A N D N O W: A C E L E B R AT I O N O F T H E A RT O F MICHAEL IZR AEL GALMER Housed in a former Gilded Age mansion surrounded by Italian–style gardens, Evergreen Museum & Library is at once an intimate collection of fine and decorative art, rare books, and manuscripts assembled by two generations of Baltimore’s philanthropic Garrett family, and a vibrant, inspirational venue for contemporary art. As a teaching museum of Johns Hopkins University, Evergreen contributes to the advancement of scholarship and museum practice by helping to train future art historians, historic preservationists, and museum professionals. For information about tours, hours, exhibitions, and special programs, please visit museums.jhu.edu. E V E R G R E E N M U S E U M & L I B R A R Y, J O H N S H O P K I N S U N I V E R S I T Y R E P O U S S É ST Y L E , T H E N A N D N O W: A C E L E B R AT I O N O F T H E A RT O F MICHAEL IZR AEL GALMER James Archer Abbott © 2014, Evergreen Museum & Library, Johns Hopkins University. 4545 N. Charles Street, Baltimore, MD 21210 museums.jhu.edu Published in conjunction with an exhibition organized by Evergreen Museum & Library, All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced without written permission from the publisher. ISBN-10: 0983803099 / ISBN-13: 978-0-9838030-9-6 Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD December 11, 2014–July 19, 2015 Design by B. Creative Group, Inc. Photography by [ZeO] Productions except for pages 6, 31, and 32 by Julia Pearson. Wine Coaster with Horses, 1999 Cover: Wild Iris Cuf f Bracelet, 2012 FOR E WOR D The Evergreen Museum & Library Advisory Council I The Maryland State Arts Council contemporary silversmith. By its subject, this exhibition brings new R EPOUSSÉ ST Y LE , THEN A ND NOW: A CELEBR ATION OF THE A RT OF MICH A EL IZR A EL GA LMER is made possible by The Evergreen House Foundation am pleased to welcome you to Johns Hopkins University’s Evergreen Museum & Library for Repoussé Style, Then and Now: A Celebration of the Art of Michael Izrael Galmer, an exhibition that celebrates the vision of this accomplished and well recognized attention to the vast decorative arts holdings of Evergreen—a largely untapped treasure trove of furniture and applied arts just now gaining GENEROUS SUPPORT IS PROV IDED BY due attention through the research of students and scholars, alike. But John and Mary Ann Beckley this exhibition is not intended as an historical study, for Mr. Galmer’s Claudia Bismark and Wade Wilson work is of our time. His vision as an artist and artisan may reveal Elizabeth Drigotas historical cues, but his stunning works in silver reflect a resurgence of Elizabeth and Jay H. Elliott interest in the art of silver design and manufacture. Sarah H. B. Foster Fanny and Sholim Ginsburg Repoussé Style, Then and Now: A Celebration of the Art of Michael Svetlana Grinblat Izrael Galmer continues a tradition of intimate exhibitions begun by Fredye and Adam Gross Evergreen’s last resident, Alice Warder Garrett. It fulfills Mrs. Garrett’s Mrs. Thomas Roland Hobbs desire that her husband’s family home continue to serve as a venue Mr. and Mrs. Charles Johnson Lillian and Haig Kazazian Ann Koch for the study and appreciation of all art. We welcome you, inviting you to enjoy this celebration of contemporary design. Zina Kroner Olive and John B. Long Edith and Stephen Nichols Carolyn and Kevin O’Keefe Susie and Bill Rienhoff Shlomit Rind Mrs. Carl Robert Scheir Susan D. Turner and Robert Ciaverelli Winston Tabb Sylvia Wehr and Richard Johnson Sheridan Dean of University Libraries and Museums Susan Adams Weiss and Jeffrey Arnstein Johns Hopkins University Prime Home Therapy, LLP 3 Repoussé Style, Then and Now: A Celebration of the Art of MICHAEL IZR AEL GALMER by James Archer Abbott Director and Curator, Evergreen Museum & Library REPOUSSÉ : adjective \r -,pü-’sā\ shaped or ornamented with patterns in relief made by hammering or pressing on the reverse side–used especially of metal I n appreciating the creativity of artist Michael Izrael Galmer, one is immediately struck by his thoughtful homage to the style of the metal technique known as repoussé. Not a literal emulation of the ancient art of reverse hammering of patterns on sheets of silver and other fine metals, Galmer’s very modern partnering of advanced casting techniques with traditional hand–work such as chasing all the same affords a new appreciation for the rich relief patterning characteristic of actual repoussé. Indeed, his creations have been credited with a contemporary revival of repoussé–inspired elegance–a lavish taste that was identified with Baltimore through much of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, largely due to the work of the prolific Kirk and Stieff companies, and which is well represented in Evergreen Museum & Library’s silver collection. It is in recognition of this unique dual influence as both a revivalist and contemporary artist that Evergreen celebrates Michael and his art. Bee Vase, 2001 5 Michael Izrael Galmer was born in the former Soviet Union in 1947, in the formative years of the Cold War. Though limited in many ways by the constrictions of communism, he was encouraged by his parents to pursue an advanced education. Michael attended Moscow University, where he studied chemistry and physics, as well as an evolving personal passion—art. While earning a doctorate in the field of physics, he continued to explore the realms of drawing, painting, and sculpture, with nature as his predominant muse. His favorite artist proved to be the seventeenth–century Dutch painter and printmaker Rembrandt van Rijn, largely because of “his decisive, precise delineations of forms,” as the artist recalled recently. But the student did not limit himself to fine art, and he often took time out to study examples of applied art around him, such as the most utilitarian of door pulls, hinges, and various examples of table equipage. He was already thinking about beauty in the most basic of applications, but he was redesigning such in his head, creating with luxurious metals–most notably, silver. Not long after meeting his wife, Galina, a computer science major at the same university, Michael began to dream about greater opportunities beyond those afforded by his native country. “My wife and I began to think about using our skills and talents in a free society,” he remembers. Eventually with their young daughter, Zina, they strategically traveled to Austria for two weeks, and then moved on to Italy for two months while awaiting permission to travel to New York. With no relatives or personal connections, the young family “started from scratch, from zero” in America. 7 At this time Michael began envisioning “a company in which he could combine his artistic passion for nature, silver and design with his technical expertise and ingenuity,” as a later press release described. He and his wife started Galmer Silversmiths in 1981, utilizing a new surname born of their combined first names. In its earliest home, a garage in Long Island City, New York, Galmer Silversmiths began more as a scientist’s laboratory than anything else. Here, Michael experimented with new fabrication and casting techniques for silver and other metals. But very soon after, that garage became as much the designer’s domain as that of the scientist. The artist began to translate his years of envisioning stylish reinterpretations of both practical and ornamental wares to reality, and word of his skill became known. By 1983, America’s premier luxury retailer Tiffany & Company expressed interest in seeing examples of Michael’s talent. Arranging for the transport of some of his most ambitious works to date to the firm’s Fifth Avenue offices, the then exclusively Russian–speaking artist phonetically memorized a script written in English that highlighted his accomplishments and skills. Though Michael laughs about them now, these efforts were not wasted in the least. Within a month, Galmer Silversmiths was manufacturing small trophies for a yacht company’s presentation to special clients. Soon after, the commissions grew in size and importance. Wild Iris Cuf f Bracelet, 2012; Bamboo Bracelet, 2011; and Vineyard Cuf f Bracelet, 2013. 9 Afforded a rare, non–exclusive relationship with Tiffany, Michael was sought by other firms as well, including the New Jersey–based Lenox Company, which utilized his artistry in the development of sterling repoussé–inspired table wares and household gifts. He also was commissioned to design a number of pieces of Judaica for the Jewish Museum of New York. By the mid–1990s, Michael had fulfilled a series of unique commissions, such as the highly–praised recreation of a monumental silver punchbowl originally commissioned for the U.S.S. Oklahoma—the ship that became a tomb for its sailors at Pearl Harbor on December 7, 1941. Sought by the Oklahoma Historical Society in an attempt to preserve the original bowl that had long since been transferred to near continuous service in the state’s governor’s mansion, the Galmer Silversmiths’ replacement was heralded for its exactness to the original. It includes not only precise reproductions of the seal of Oklahoma, the then–territory’s 1889 land grant, and busts of influential settlement players Captain David Payne and the Cherokee silversmith Sequoyah, but also “tiny scratches found on the original.” In Baltimore, Michael is “known” (though anonymously) for his replications of the famous mid–nineteenth–century Woodlawn Vase, annually bestowed upon the owners of the winner of the Preakness Stakes horse race at the Monument City’s Pimlico Race Course. It is important to note that his talents were sought for this commission by the silver manufacturing Stieff family, an equally great honor in which Michael continues to take pride. Palm Beach Candlestick , 2007; Blossom Pitcher, 2001; Flask with Horse, 2000 11 Perhaps Michael’s most ambitious work to date is the five and a half feet tall sculpture, The Ten Commandments, included in this exhibition at Evergreen. Neither a commissioned work nor one intended to be identified with any specific religion or faith, this vast sculpture starts with the artist’s vision of the beginning of the world. The organic quality of the base derives from Michael’s life–long fascination with nature, with the root–inspired texturing representative of “a world, raw and without rules.” From this harsh beginning rises a civilized society of many, all of whom are partnered in embracing a new world order. Though this work has been sought out by prominent Judaica collectors, it remains with the artist—“un–owned.” Even motion picture director Steven Spielberg was unable to secure it for a fundraising auction to benefit the nuclear–devastated Russian city of Chernobyl. For Michael, the purpose of The Ten Commandments is to impact and educate the public at large, not to be cloistered for the appreciation of a very few. “The message,” he says, “belongs to the public rather than any single collector.” It is with this impassioned pronouncement that one gains the greatest understanding of Michael Izrael Galmer. His conviction as an artist is driven, first and foremost, by the passion for and love of creating beautiful things. The Ten Commandments, 2001-2011 13 “I tell artists just starting out: Design for family. Design with love. In describing my own art, I think I would have to begin with the pleasures of walking in the woods, seeing nature first hand. I seek to translate what I enjoy in nature to the silver and other metals I work with.” Jonquil Vase, 1996 15 Stone Blue Goblet, 2002; Goblet with Horses, 1999; Rose Bird Goblet, 1998; Traditional Goblet , 2005. The artist began to translate his years of envisioning stylish reinterpretations of both practical and ornamental wares to reality, and word of his skill became known. Lemon Set: Napk in R ing, Tumbler, Pitcher, Tray, 2006 18 A RT I ST Q& A In that it is always beneficial to “hear” from the artist, directly, Evergreen director and curator, James Archer Abbott, sat down with Michael Galmer to talk about the origins of his art, and a bit more. Moose Flask , 2000 21 JA MES A BBOT T: Michael, for the person who has never seen your creations, how would you describe your vision as an artist? MICH A EL GA LMER : The first thing I always try to advise young artists on is to never design for money. Yes, an artist wants to eat, but his talent should never be dictated or directed by profit. My art begins with a passion, not a need to make money. I tell artists just starting out: Design for family. Design with love. In describing my own art, I think I would have to begin with the pleasures of walking in the woods, seeing nature first hand. I seek to translate what I enjoy in nature to the silver and other metals I work with. I think I would have to bring in the idea of a beautiful woman when describing my art, as so many of the things I design are intended as complements of a delicate wrist or hand or neck. Perhaps I am the facilitator of a dialogue between nature and such a woman; my art is the conversation between the two. 22 Spider Napk in R ing, 2004; Spider Wine Coaster, 2003; Spider Goblet, 2003 JA MES A BBOT T: Repoussé silver is an inspiration for your art, and your style borrows much from these works. What was the first piece of repoussé silver that you remember seeing? MICH A EL GA LMER : I remember it very well. It was soon after I had arrived in the United States from the Soviet Union and I was visiting New York’s Metropolitan Museum of Art. I was in that great institution’s American Wing, and I came across wonderful mixed metal pieces from the late nineteenth century, made by Gorham and Tiffany. Though these pieces were Japanesque in style—something I don’t do—I was so excited with their complexity of design. Of an actual example of repoussé, that would have been this incredible ewer and tray made by the Providence, Rhode Island–based Gorham. It was pure sculpture. Yes, it was a usable object, presumably for wine, but it was truly a work of art, too. The body of the ewer is like the hour–glass figure of a woman of that time, curvaceous and sensual…and soft, though it is made of pure silver…and the handle is a stretched female figure growing out of a naturalistic leaf. I was so moved by this object. You have to read something, feel it, and this piece had me doing just that, and it and other pieces that I saw that special day long ago, gave me the inspiration for what I create today. Rose Cup, 1998 25 JA MES A BBOT T: Is there a motif that you find yourself revisiting again and again? If so, what is it and why does it fascinate you? MICH A EL GA LMER : Chrysanthemums. I enjoy nature and I include many different flowers in my work, but I regularly revisit the chrysanthemum. First, there is not just one but there are so many varieties of this flower, so you never really know it completely or fully. There is a perfectness to the chrysanthemum, a delicacy as well as a balance that fascinates me [and] has me sometimes drawing on a napkin over lunch, adapting it to a new object or form. Chrysanthemum Pitcher, 1997 26 JA MES A BBOT T: What is the benefit of an object being made of silver? MICH A EL GA LMER : I think silver is special because it is identified with both a sense of fineness and the idea of tradition. Of quality, there is no more beautiful material to see, touch, or feel. Silver is an amazing, fine material that can be crafted in so many unique ways. When one acquires an object made of silver, I see them thinking about not just the present, but also a future—perhaps a distant future. Silver is something that represents succeeding generations of a family, or it is something that is identified with permanence and longevity. Bear Cocktail Shaker, 2001 29 JA MES A BBOT T: Why do you think the repoussé style is entering a stage of resurgence? MICH A EL GA LMER : I really didn’t know it was, but now that you say this, I would guess that everything goes through a cycle of ups and downs. I guess such increasing popularity has to do with a rising appreciation for craftsmanship. We live in an amazing world where identical things can be made in seconds by machines. Though I can make “another” of something, each one of my works is chased and polished by my own hands. I think that may be part of this “resurgence” you speak of: quality, artistry. Of the style of repoussé, which can be very intricate, I think there is an audience that appreciates beauty. The illusion of depth that is incorporated in such pieces as a goblet or even a bracelet fascinates people. The effect changes with the light, the time of day. It is pure sculpture. I love watching a woman wear one of the silver cuffs that I make, seeing her move it in various directions, seeing her appreciate the intricacy of the flowers. Again, I come back to creating a dialogue between nature and the patron. I am a lucky man in being able to do this. Cabbage Porringer, 1995 31 E X HIBITION CHECK LIST CABBAGE PORRINGER, 1995 Sterling silver JONQUIL VASE, 1996 Sterling silver with selective burnishing CHRYSANTHEMUM PITCHER, 1997 Sterling silver with 24k gold–plated interior ROSE BIRD GOBLET, 1998 Sterling silver with selective burnishing and 24k gold–plated interior ROSE CUP, 1998 Sterling silver GOBLET WITH HORSES, 1999 Sterling silver with 24k gold–plated interior BEE VASE, 2002 Sterling silver, highly textured and ornamented, with 24k gold–plated interior SPIDER GOBLET, 2003 Sterling silver, amber stones and 24k gold–plated interior SPIDER WINE COASTER, 2003 Sterling silver, amber stones, and 24k gold–plated interior SPIDER NAPKIN RING, 2004 Sterling silver, amber stones, and 24k gold–plated interior TR ADITIONAL GOBLET, 2005 Sterling silver, satin finish, and oxidized detail, with 24k gold–plated interior WINE COASTER WITH HORSES, 1999 Sterling silver with 24k gold–plated interior LEMON SET: NAPKIN RING, TUMBLER, PITCHER, TR AY, 2006 Sterling silver in high shine, 24k gold–plated silver lemons, 24k gold–plated interiors FLASK WITH HORSE, 2000 Sterling silver, in matte, textured, and low–shine PALM BEACH CANDLESTICK, 2007 Sterling silver MOOSE FLASK, 2000 Sterling silver in matte, with texture and low–shine BAMBOO BR ACELET, 2011 Sterling silver, Sleeping Beauty turquoise, and 24k gold–plated backing. BEAR COCKTAIL SHAKER, 2001 Sterling silver with texture against spare background spaces WILD IRIS CUFF BR ACELET, 2012 Finest sterling silver and 24k gold–plated interior BLOSSOM PITCHER, 2001 Sterling silver with highest–shine and minimal texture VINEYARD CUFF BR ACELET, 2013 Sterling silver and 24k gold–plated interior STONE BLUE GOBLET, 2002 Sterling silver with texture and high shine with 24k gold–plated interior THE TEN COMMANDMENTS, 2001–2011 Sterling silver and bronze 32 “I think silver is special because it is identified with both a sense of fineness and the idea of tradition. Of quality, there is no more beautiful material to see, touch, or feel. Silver is an amazing, fine material that can be crafted in so many unique ways.”