HEADS AND CUTS AT BOTTOM OF RELEASE
HEADS AND CUTS AT BOTTOM OF RELEASE
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Replacing Art Awe With Creative Insight.
Red Grooms At The Hudson River Museum.
In The Studio With Red Grooms
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By Regina Kolbe
YONKERS, N.Y. â Few museums have had a calling card as effective as the Hudson River Museumâs. âThe Bookstore,â a Westchester landmark, was a mid-1970s collaboration between Richard Koshalek, the museumâs director, Red Grooms, the artist, and John Holmes, director of exhibition installation. Designed at a time when New York City faced bankruptcy and there was precious little funding for cultural institutions, it was hoped that a saucy Grooms environment would stimulate interest and attendance.
Planned as a site-specific work within the museumâs gift shop, the sculpto-pictorama was realized as a riotous mixed-media fantasy that invited museumgoers to cross a portal and enter a world that was part Morgan Library, part second-hand bookshop. With walls of colorful books as a backdrop for the souvenirs and idiosyncratic vinyl characters staring back at the people staring at them, âThe Bookstoreâ had a âgiddy sense of reality.â
Thirty years later, in a different financial climate, with the appetite and appreciation of museums having swung 180 degrees, âThe Bookstoreâ was reconsidered by the museum and it was ultimately decided that it no longer needed to function in dual roles. Permanent space was allocated and an exhibition was built around it.
Enter once again the artist, who, invited by Bartholomew Bland, current curator of exhibitions, to revisit the work, sized up the wear and tear sustained and said, with as much humor as truth, âIâm surprised it lasted as long as it did.â
To turn the art-as-commerce venture into pure art, Grooms again entered into collaboration, this time with Bland and artist Tom Burkhardt. Grooms made drawings repositioning the doors for better traffic flow in âThe Bookstoreâsâ new, dedicated space. The retail counter was replaced with an arty one. The carpeting was removed and replaced by a newly designed painted version. A maquette showed the changes in scale. There were budget considerations and time constraints. Burckhardt, under Groomsâ creative direction, executed the changes. He also supervised the reinstallation.
The process, one that was second nature to the artists, would be new and enticing to art lovers, concluded Bland.
He saw an opportunity to mount a Grooms exhibit that would allow viewers to step into the studio and see how Groomsâ ideas take shape through drawings and paintings, foam core figures and carved and painted Styrofoam models.
As Grooms tells it, âBartholomew Bland proposed that I do this show based on the kind of things in the studio, the maquettes, stuff that is preliminary to the pieces. I showed him things in the state of where I got [with them] before [the commission] got cancelledâ¦I was sort of challenged to complete them.â
Consequently, âIn The Studio,â the exhibition that runs until May 25, bursts with new art and new information about familiar pieces. It tracks Groomsâ major periods from 1961 to the present and, for the first time in the artistâs career, highlights important collaborations.
Having been trained from an early age in the techniques of watercolor, Groomsâ oeuvre began evolving while he was studying at the Art Institute of Chicago. Combing the lakeshore, he was inspired by driftwood to make his first sculpture. âAfter that,â he said, âI got into working with found objects.â Later this became a more sophisticated process, with Grooms taking advantage of the industrial supplies marketed in the area south of SoHo where he still has his studio.
âWe had plastic stores and rubber stores, metal stores and we had a lot of fabric stores,â he said. âThey really influenced my work and led to working in all sorts of materials.â From 1984â85, âThe Alley,â a piece that was reconfigured for the show, is a good example. The shown portion is a 12-foot-tall backdrop of painted foam rubber on which Groom depicts Cortland Alley as it existed 20 years ago. Garbage cans, fire escapes and silent figures make for a shadowy and chaotic scene.
Originally created as a cavelike installation for an exhibition at the Marlborough Gallery, the walk-in environment contained a large truck and figures. Foam, however convenient, came with conservation issues; accordingly, Grooms never returned to the medium. Interestingly, the painted foam rubber panels on which Grooms worked out the scene can also be seen.
Historically, Grooms has eluded being âlabeledâ by the art community. Often referred to as a Pop artist, he was outside the main thrust of the movement. Ironically, as he tells it, the roots of Pop had taken hold in America during a year and a half period when he was in Europe.
Returning in 1961, he spent the next year working with Rudy Burckhardt on a film. Shoot the Moon was a black and white movie set in the Nineteenth Century. âIt was just the opposite of the hot, sexy underground film thing that was going on,â Grooms recounted. âI had to pay the price for that,â he said, as though implying that anticipating what the art-buying public wants is part of the artistâs job description.
Whether it is or not, playing to the audience is something Grooms understands well. Since childhood he has been passionate about the workings of the theater, exploring at every turn ways to make the magic real.
As an artist exploring the possibilities of different media, Grooms created âHappenings.â These were short performance pieces acted out in complex sets that the artist thought of as âliving collages.â Perhaps his most famous was âBurning Building,â 1959. In Groomsâ viewâ this was a âcryptic romantic tale with dream figures.â The highly improvisational piece was recreated in the 1990s, and the diorama for it is among the objects in the exhibition.
A pivotal moment in Groomsâ career came in 1967, when the Alan Frumkin Gallery of Chicago commissioned an instillation. Grooms recreated the Windy City in a sculpto-pictorama that filled the gallery. To ready âCity of Chicago,â which used carpentry and mechanical apparatus, Grooms took on his first assistant, Rusty Morgan. The sculpto-pictorama attracted the publicâs attention, landed Grooms on the cover of influential magazines, and it went on to the Venice Biennale before being shown in the United States. It was purchased and donated to the Art Institute of Chicago.
The most obvious of the works demanding collaborations are the sculpto-pictoramas. They are also the most ephemeral. Usually mounted in pubic places and made of inexpensive, degradable materials, they tend to have limited life spans.
âRuckus Manhattan,â a 1975 sculpto-pictorama that depicts the vibrant and disorderly commotion of Manhattan, all the way from Wall Street to 42nd Street, was made with Mimi Gross, Groomsâ first wife, and a team of 24 assistants. Filling the entire lobby floor of a building on Wall Street, âRuckus Manhattanâ was made spontaneously, without benefit of detailed plans or maquettes.
âRuckus Taxi,â 1982, was Groomsâ first three-dimensional lithograph. This assemblage was also the basis for an enduring collaboration with master printer Bud Shark. For the assemblages, Grooms creates individual handmade pieces. Shark optimizes their placement on a sheet that he then reproduces on clear Mylar, eliminating the need to work in reverse to transfer an image to the litho plate.
Although âone-day wondersâ happen, Grooms readily admits that âinspiration can take years.â
âRocky Mountain Highâ was conceived in the early 1980s as a three-dimensional litho and abandoned before completion. When Bland and Grooms recently uncovered some of its parts, Groomsâ inspiration was rekindled.
âI had the hiker,â he explained, âsome indication of mountains, some clouds and things like that.â It seemed the project could be pulled together in time for the show. âAll the time I worked on it,â he said, âI was thinking, âIâm making my own myth. Iâm in my own myth.â I couldnât really remember where Iâd started or why. It became an interesting way to work. I still had enough drive to go ahead and do it, but it wasnât necessary to think about its origins anymore.â Now a completed assemblage, âRocky Mountain Highâ was, essentially, 26 years in the making.
Working large has never been a problem, but sometimes the imagination can get out of hand, such as with the unrealized Divine Sarah, a musical commissioned by the Wheeler Opera House in Aspen, Colo. Six months into development of script and sets, with Groomsâ wife Lysiane Luong Grooms not only designing the costumes, but cast as the famous actress, the idea had to be relegated to the bin of âbeautiful failures.â It was simply too complicated to bring to life. The painted cardboard and paper maquette itself is more than 5 feet wide.
A smaller and more personal collaboration with Lysiane resulted in âMummy Garment Bag,â 1985. Painted on both sides and fabricated at Manhattanâs Fabric Workshop, the bag was used during the coupleâs grand tour of Egypt. On return, the Groomses began work on a model for the Tutâs Fever Movie Palace, a portable movie theater that seats 40 at the Museum of the Moving Image. The caryatids for the project were none other than Marilyn Monroe and Orson Wells, the mixed-media maquettes of which open the exhibition.
Although Grooms portrays his subjects with affection, many patrons who might ordinarily commission portraits have difficulty standing up to the full force of Groomsian distortion. Two acrylic on board studies for âMarried 63 Years,â 1979, shows why. Planned as part of a larger family group commission that would have been executed in three-dimensional vinyl, the artist suggested living with the family for a short while to gain a âCheever momentâ that would, supposedly, have delivered insight into the family dynamic. The family, however, was not sympathetic and the resulting portraits look, as one critic said, like âcitizens of âRuckus Manhattanâ who had managed to escape to Florida.â
Grooms had more success with âDali Salad,â although this, too, was open to revision. A pop-up homage to Salvador Dali, inspired by both the cult of personality and the Hollywood presentation of produce, the first incarnation did not please its publisher, Brooke Alexander, though it had met with popular acclaim. Grooms took comments into consideration and revised it. Today, there are two versions and both have their collectors.
To understand the artist in retrospect brings continuity to a body of work. But to see what the artist is currently working on is to see the immediacy of the act. âPeaceable Kingdom,â another piece at the vortex of art as commerce, is a 5-foot-high maquette of painted foam core that Grooms is creating as the entrance to a theme park.
The largest maquette Grooms ever made is of a project close to his heart. âTennessee Carouselâ was made for a public space in his hometown of Nashville. In it, Grooms reproduced characters from history, some well known, others obscure, and set them spinning in time.
With clients waiting and projects in the works, one questions whether Grooms has time to create art for artâs sake. âOh definitely,â he emphasizes, âI couldnât make it otherwise.â
âIn The Studioâ is on view at the Hudson River Museum, 511 Warburton Avenue, through May 25. For information, 914-963-4550 or www.hrm.org.
âIn The Studioâ:
Red Grooms At The Hudson River Museum
Red Grooms: âIn The Studioâ
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Boo2
In âThe Bookstore,â it can be seen how Mendozaâs Bookstore, a second-hand book shop that Grooms frequented â and which was one of the first to succumb to the mega-bookstore chains â was used as a counterpoint to the classic architecture of the Morgan Library.
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This maquette for âThe Bookstoreâ reflects the changes that were made in consideration of the workâs new dedicated space. The doors have been repositioned and the red carpeting taken up and replaced by a painted version.
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This maquette for âFlamenco Dancers,â 2006â2007, shows Groomsâ continuing interest in dance and movement. As maquettes, these are finished pieces in their own right, but serve as preliminary studies for an as yet unrealized 12-foot sculpture.
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A younger Grooms with one of the reverse painted vinyl figures from âThe Bookstore,â circa 1978. Photo courtesy Red Grooms.
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âSnake Charmer,â 2005, is painted aluminum fabricated by Huey Gaddy. It is one of the sinuous pieces that relates to Groomsâ ongoing series that focuses on the circus. Collection of the artist.
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âTaxi to the Terminal,â 1993, lithograph, is related to a large sculpture piece of Grand Central Station. Grooms took enormous liberties getting the iconic buildings âsmooshed up togetherâ in order to capture the bustle of 42nd Street. Collection of the artist.
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Maquette for âHot Dog Vendor,â circa 1998. Grooms first produced a three-dimensional litho of the classic corner vendor in 1994, but returned to this signature image on a number of occasions. This cardboard maquette was one step in a series that culminated in a 12-foot-tall outdoor sculpture of fabricated aluminum. Collection of the artist.
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This original âRuckus Taxiâ poster, 1982, is ink on paper, a design that was realized with Bud Shark, master printer. It was Groomsâ first fully three-dimensional print. Collection of the artist.
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In 1993â94, Grooms created a large-scale carousel commemorating Tennesseeâs colorful history for a public space in Nashville. This ink on paper is an effort to capture a highly detailed project. Collection of the artist.
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On this maquette of painted foam core for âVenice Muscle Beach,â 1989, Grooms was assisted by Tom Burckhardt. Collection of the artist.
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Grooms developed this witty concept of William Strickland, designer of Greek Revival-style buildings in Philadelphia, as well as the Tennessee State Capitol building. Grooms shows the stylized face under construction by a swarm of tiny builders. This proposal for an outdoor commission, circa 1993, was unrealized. Mixed media. Collection of the artist.
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This 1975 color litho, cutout, glued and mounted in a Plexiglas box, is the first of Groomsâ âpop upâ lithos, a format perfected to capture lively characterization. Collection of the artist.
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As can be seen in this photo, âThe Bookstoreâ was an art installation with a function. It was used in the Hudson River Museumâs gift shop for decades.
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In 1993â94, Grooms created âTennessee Foxtrot Carouselâ for an outdoor space in his hometown of Nashville. Davy Crockett was a natural figure for inclusion. Grooms depicts him in ferocious combat with a bear, making this one of the strongest designs among the 36 that make up the sculpture. Collection of the artist.
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âRuckus Tugboat,â 2006, is a three-dimensional lithograph that captures the frenzied activity on the rivers surrounding New York City. Collection of the artist.