Kei Viti
Malanesian Images
Jena Charlot
Cantú Y de Teresa Collection
Jean Charlot was born in France in the 1880’s. He had Aztec
ancestors and moved with his mother to Mexico after studying at the Ecole de
Beaux arts in Paris and serving as an artillery officer at the end of WWI. He
quickly established himself in the art community of Mexico City in the very
early 1920’s and befriended Diego Rivera and David Alfaro Siqueiros and Jose
Orozco, main figures in the Mexican Mural movement of the early twenties that
quickly spread to the USA.
Charlot and the others visited the USA and taught – mostly in New
York City – the true fresco technique, which Charlot taught to the other
Mexican muralists. In 1947, Jean Charlot moved his family to Colorado Springs,
Colorado to take over as head of the Colorado Springs Fine Arts Center Art
School from which Boardman Robinson had just retired. He also taught at the
private school for boys in Colorado Springs, The Fountain Valley School.
Qaravi Yaqona: Kava ceremony
Charlot resigned over a dispute involving tenure and other
differences of opinion with the administration of the Art Center. He moved to
Hawaii to teach at the University and remained there for about thirty years
until his death in 1979. He won many awards for his work.
He has written many scholarly essays and books and lectured and
taught at a host of schools. He is the person who singlehandedly resurrected
the work of Jose Guadalupe Posada, the great Mexican engraver of popular art –
especially the “Day of the Dead” skeleton figures that are so well known today.
Also living in Paris was Jean Charlot's great-uncle,
Eugène Goupil, a collector of Mexican works of art. Jean, who began to draw
around age two, grew up surrounded by pre-Hispanic antiquities. Years later
(1926-28) he would be commissioned as staff artist for the Carnegie Institution
expedition to Chichén Itzá, Yucatán, and would publish books and articles on
Mexican art and produce paintings, graphics and murals with Mexican themes.
Charlot was educated at the Lyeé Condorcet (where he
won the French national scholastic boxing championship in the medium weight
division in 1912) and studied informally at the école des Beaux-Arts in Paris.
Soon after the onset of World War I and the failure of Henri Charlot's import-export
firm, which did business primarily with Germany, the family, in much reduced
financial circumstances, moved to the village of St. Mandé. Henri died shortly
thereafter.
In the French countryside near his home and during
travels in Brittany, the teenage Charlot painted small landscapes in oil on
paper and pursued what was to become a lifelong interest in folk imagery.
Drafted into the army near the end of the war, he became an artillery
lieutenant. An officer in the Senegalese Troops, Charlot was given the command
when his predecessors had been killed in battle. He was young and considered
expendable. While encamped at Sézanne, he began drawings for the fifteen print
woodcut series Chemin de Croix, Way
of the Cross. Charlot entered Germany with the French army on Christmas Day
1918. During the French occupation of the Rhineland Charlot, bivouacked between
Mannheim and Cologne, had the opportunity to view paintings by 16th century
German masters, especially Stephan Lochner and Mathias Grünewald which ".
. .were a big influence, but," he remarked, "I always go back to folk
art" (In Morse 1976:viii).
The Chemin de Croix was
cut in Landau, Bavaria, in 1920. "The stations were large woodcuts on
pearwood, cut in part with hammer and chisel, and closer in technique to
carving than to engraving" (Charlot 1972, vol. I:228). The portfolio was
printed in an edition of fifteen at Chaumontel, France, after Charlot was
discharged from the army. In 1920 Chemin de Croix was
shown at an exhibition of liturgical arts held at the Louvre, along with three
designs for liturgical textiles and two friezes in watercolor (1/10th scale)
for decoration of a new church in a Paris suburb that Charlot claimed was his
"first serious attempt at mural painting" ([1963] 1967:178).
In his teens, Charlot had become one of a Catholic
group that called itself Gilde Notre-Dame ("Parisian adolescents (who)
used to gather in a crypt") made up of sculptors, stained glass makers,
embroiderers and decorators (1972, vol. I:285). The resumption after the war of
what Charlot calls his "career as a French liturgical artist" was cut
short by the cancellation of the commission for the church mural just after he
had completed the scale drawings. This "first heartbreak at the
realization that a born mural painter is helpless without a wall. . ."
([1963] 1967:178) was one of the factors that precipitated a journey to Mexico
in 1920.
Charlot comments, "On this first trip to Mexico
I did nothing at all. I was stuck aesthetically in 18th century France."
Later he wrote: "My life in France was on the whole rational, national,
obeying this often heard dictum that a Frenchman is a man who ignores
geography. There were though, simultaneously, un-French elements at work.
Russian, sephardim, Aztec ancestors, warmed my blood to
adventure. In art, I accepted as part of my patrimony, the monstrous chubby
forms of Indian idols, the squatty masked heroes of Mexican cosmogony, without
letting go a whit of those other models, Poussin's Eliezer and
Rebecca, and Ingres' Apotheosis of Homer" (Charlot, 1954:103). After a
brief return to Paris where he exhibited paintings, including L'Amitié,
in the 1921 Salon d'Automne, Charlot was again off to Mexico, "for
good," this time with his mother.
In the article, "Mexico of the Poor,"
written in 1922 in French and translated by Diego Rivera into Spanish
(published in a slightly different version in English in Mexican Life,
March 1926), Charlot records some of his early impressions of Mexico: "At
six o'clock in the morning, I was in the streets. Automobiles and ladies were
still asleep, and the true features of the town emerged. Beautiful beings
people the street like Ladies of Guadalupe innumerable. They move noiselessly,
feet flat to the ground, antique beauty come to life. The wealthier quarters
are as empty and soiled as a music hall at noon, buy everywhere else, among
those low-lying houses, cubic and freshly daubed, processions are staged. At
first glance the crowd is the color of dust. Flesh and cloth, both worn out
with use, melt into this grey which is the very livery of humbleness. Eye and
mind soon learn to focus, and this race, its confidence won, attests to its
beauty through fabrics, its straw, its flesh" (Charlot 1972, vol. II:99).
In the Mexico City suburb, Coyoacán, Charlot
sometimes painted at the open-air school, an annex of the Academy of San
Carlos. He shared a studio with Fernando Leal, one of the founders (with
Rivera, Siqueiros and Guerrero) of the Syndicate of Revolutionary Painters,
Sculptors and Engravers of Mexico, dedicated, according to their Resolutions,
to "do work useful to Mexico's popular classes in their struggle,
meanwhile producing an art aesthetically and technically great" ([1963]
1967:243).
Charlot produced a series of small woodcuts and
oils, primarily portraits. Many of his contemporaries in Mexico -- David Alfaro
Siqueiros, Manuel Martinez Pintao, José Clemente Orozco, Diego Rivera, Xavier
Guerrero, Nacho Asúnsolo, Henrietta Shore, Sergei Eisenstein, Anita Brenner,
Edward Weston and Tina Modotti --are represented in portraits by Charlot.
For two years Charlot concentrated on mural
paintings in fresco. He had become an assistant to Diego Rivera, the leading
figure of the Mexican socio-political school of painting, who in 1922 was
working at the Escuela Preparatoria (the National Preparatory School in Mexico
City) on an encaustic titled Creation. A month after beginning at the Preparatoria
Charlot started work on a mural of his own. In The Mexican
Mural Renaissance, Charlot wrote that in Paris he had fallen in
love with the texture, transparency, and lack of "cuisine" (lack of
clichés or technical trickery) of the portable frescoes of Marcel Lenoir and
had decided from the first to do his Mexican mural in true fresco. "I
borrowed from Diego the French treatise of Paul Baudoin, founder of the
Fontainebleau fresco school, and at the same time cultivated and probed the
ways of Mexican masons and Mexican mortars, an easy feat in the Preparatoria
building where a wing was still in the process of construction" ([1963]
1967:181). Charlot's The Massacre in the Main Temple, 14' x 26', is the
first work of the twentieth century Mexican mural movement completed in true
fresco. [1]
Diego Rivera and his assistants, nicknamed
"Dieguitos" (little Diegos), were next commissioned to paint the
walls of the Ministry of Education in Mexico City, an enormous building with
two courts. Charlot trained masons in the preparation of walls for fresco and
instructed the other artists in technique. Rivera began in the ground floor
"Court of Labor," and the second floor "Court of the
Fiestas" was consigned to Xavier Guerrero, Amado de la Cueva and Charlot
to decorate; in Charlot's words ". . .a first try at communal
painting" (1972, vol. I:391). Rivera eventually took over this court too,
and all but three frescoes are his. Charlot painted nine decorative shields and
three murals (each 16 1/3' x 7 2/3') of Mexican folk scenes: Cargadores (Burden Bearers), Lavanderas (Washerwomen), and Danza de los
Listones (Dance of
the Ribbons). The latter was destroyed by Rivera in 1924 to make space for his
triple panel composition Market Place.
The following year Charlot completed a mural, Shield of
the National University of Mexico, with Eagle and Condor, at the
Pan American Library. In 1923 he published his first article on Mexican art, on
the work of the sculptor Manuel Martínez Pintao (El
Democrata, August 5, 1923), and participated in an independent
group exhibition in New York, his first in the United States.
In what is sometimes called his "dark
period," Charlot produced more than four dozen small easel paintings (c.
10" x 14") in oil on canvas of Mexican subjects. Several of these
subdued works were studies of a Mexican Indian woman, Luciana (Luz) Jiménez, a
friend and favorite model. Luz instructed him in the Aztec language, Náhuatl,
and furthered his interest and knowledge of Mexican folk culture. He created
woodcuts for publication in periodicals such as Irradiador (Enlightener), and to illustrate the
poems of German-born Mexican List Arzubide, Esquina: Poemas (Mexico
City: D. F. Libreria, 1923), and Manuel Maples Arce, Urbe:
Super-poema bolchevique en 5 cantos (Mexico City: Andres Botas & Hijo,
1924). The latter author was a good friend and leader of the Estridentismo (lit. "strident") group of
avant-garde writers and poets. Charlot became secretary of this organization.
He also introduced some symbolist French poetry into Mexico. From 1924-26
Charlot was art editor of the influential periodical, Mexican
Folk-ways, publishing such articles as "Aesthetics of Indian
Dance."
In 1925, Charlot in the company of Frances Toor,
Anita Brenner and Luz Jiménez' family, made a pilgrimage to Chalma, a Catholic
shrine at a pre-Hispanic cave-site sacred to the Indian God of the Caves,
". . .a very long trek --three days more or less from Milpa Alta, with two
nights on the way" (In Morse 1976:157). Charlot drew profound personal and
artistic inspiration from the folk-religious activities he observed on this
pilgrimage. Works from the mid-1920s include several paintings and graphics on
Chalma and other Indian themes. He illustrated several books by Anita Brenner,
a native of Mexico and the author of socio-cultural histories of the country.
Charlot "discovered" the popular artist José Guadalupe Posada
(1852-1913), and produced the study, "A Precursor of the Modern Art
Movement, the Printmaker Posada," which was published in Revista de
Revistas, August 30, 1925. Also in 1925 Charlot exhibited in the
Mexican section at the Pan American Union in Los Angeles. The following year,
there was an exhibition of his paintings at the Art Center in New York.
An opportunity to broaden his knowledge of Mayan history,
culture and customs came about when Charlot served as staff artist of the
Carnegie Institution expedition to the archeological site Chichén Itzá,
Yucatán, by Earl Morris, Jean Charlot and Anne Axtell Morris (Washington, D.C.:
Carnegie Institution Publication 406) was published May 21, 1931. Charlot later
noted it was "perhaps the last such archeological publication to be
illustrated mainly with drawings instead of photographs" (In Morse
1976:46). Two years later, he completed a series of lithographs with the
printer George Miller, the most ambitious of which, Great
Builders I and Great
Builders II, are an imaginative reconstruction of the building of
the temples at Chichén Itzá. Charlot's archeological renderings and
descriptions were also included in A Preliminary Study of the Ruins of Coba, Quintana Roo, Mexico, by J. Eric Thompson, Harry E.D.
Pollock and Jean Charlot (Washington, D.C.: Carnegie Institution, Publication
no. 242, March 1932).
After the completion of the
Yucatán project in 1928 Charlot and his mother moved to New York where he
rented a small apartment on the top floor of 42 Union Square from the artist
Morris Kantor. The apartment was unheated, which probably contributed to the
death of his mother from pneumonia in January, 1929. In New York Charlot's work
was shown in the Mexican government-sponsored group exhibition at the Art
Center in 1928, and in a retrospective at the Art Students League in 1930. He
also participated in Mexican group exhibitions at the Museum of Modern Art and
the Fogg Museum, and
illustrated The Book of Christopher Columbus (New Haven: Yale University Press,
1930) by the poet Paul Claudel, whom Charlot first knew in Washington while
Claudel was French ambassador to the United States from 1927-33.
On a brief trip to Mexico in 1931, Charlot met his
future wife, Dorothy Zohmah Day, who was visiting Ione Robinson, a fellow art
student on a Guggenheim scholarship in Mexico. Returning to New York, Charlot
taught at the Art Students League in 1931-32 and painted portraits and Mexican
and religious scenes. Illustrations of his work in various media from 1924-31
appeared in Jean Charlot, Peintres Nouveaux, August 1932, with an
introduction by Paul Claudel. Edward Weston, by Merle Armitage and Jean Charlot (New
York: E Weyhe) was published in 1932.
Charlot's greatest legacy may be his murals in
fresco. Among these are:
Hopi Snake Dance and Preparing
Anti-Venom Serum (25'
x 25'), Administration Building, Arizona State University, Tempe (1951); Fresco Class
in Action (11' x 25'),
and Mestrovic's
Studio (9' x 25') in
the Student Lounge, O'Shaughnessy Building, University of Notre Dame (1955 and
1956). Also, at St. Mary's College, Notre Dame, Charlot executed fourteen
panels symbolizing the Fine Arts (each 3' x 3') for O'Laughlin Auditorium
(1955) and The Fire of Creation (5'
x 6') in Moreau Hall (1956). Psalm of the Good Shepherd (c. 16' x 24'), was painted for the
Church of the Good Shepherd, Lincoln Park, Michigan (1955); Inspiration
of the Artist (14' x
16'), for the Des Moines, Iowa, Art Center (1956) and Calvary (34' x 32') for St. Leonard Center,
Centerville, Ohio (1958). Fresco murals for St. Benedict's Abbey, Atchison,
Kansas (1959), are: Trinity and Episodes of
Benedictine Life (21'
x 29'), Monastic Chapel; St. Joseph's Workshop (4 1/2' x 6 1/2'), Brother's Chapel;
and Our
Lady of Guadalupe and
the Four
Apparitions (9 3/4' x
12') for the Abbey Crypt. Also in 1959 Christ as the Vine, with Saints (11' x 15') was painted for the
Oratory of St. Philip Neri, Rock Hill, South Carolina. Village
Fiesta (9' x 45'),
for the Shaw Dormitory at Syracuse University was accompanied by a related film
(1960). On the ceiling and apsidal wall of the Church of Our Lady of Sorrows,
Farmington, Michigan, Charlot painted the frescoes Our Lady of
Sorrows and The
Ascension of Our Lord (c.
1300 sq. ft.) in 1961. In 1963 Charlot made a trip to Fiji and painted Black Christ
and Worshipers (10' x
30') over the main altar of St. Francis Xavier Church at Naiserelagi, and the
side panels St. Joseph's Workshop and The Annunciation (each
10' x 12').
Residents of Hawai'i enjoy viewing many of Charlot's
fresco murals in locations throughout the State. Early
Contacts of Hawai'i with the Outer World (11' x 67') was painted in 1951-52 at
the Waikiki branch of Bishop Bank. (This later became First National and then
First Hawaiian Bank.) In 1966, when the building was destroyed, this mural was
divided into smaller panels. Charlot executed Commencement (10'
x 36'), on the second floor of Bachman Hall, University of Hawai'i (1953); Chief's
Canoe (8' x 20'),
Catamaran Cafe, Hilton Hawaiian Village Hotel, Honolulu (painted in 1956; since
removed from the wall); Compassionate Christ (10'
x 7'), St. Catherine's Church, Kapa'a, Kaua'i (1958); Inspiration,
Study, Creation (15'
x16'), Jefferson Hall, East-West Center, Honolulu (1967); Battle of
the Malinches (4' x
8'), Maryknoll Elementary School, Honolulu (1967); Angels in
Adoration (10' x
19'), Grace Episcopal Church, Ho'olehua, Moloka'i (1967). In 1974, Charlot
painted the fresco mural The Relation of Man and Nature in Old Hawai'i (23' x 104') at Leeward Community
College, O'ahu and, in 1978 another fresco for Maryknoll Elementary School, Christ and
the Samaritan Woman at the Well (5'
x 4').
Lynton Richards Kistler
Printer. Born in Los Angeles, CA on Aug. 30, 1897.
Kistler's studio was born from his
father's lithotype studio of 30 years. In the late 1920s he began exploring lithography as an art medium. With artist Jean Charlot, he began producing color lithography in the early 1930s. For the next 40 years he collaborated with Feitelson, Shoppe, Sheets, Landacre and other artists in printing the finest quality color lithography. Kistler died in Orange County, CA on Nov. 9, 1993.
Exh: Stendahl Gallery (LA), 1933; Moss Gallery (LA), 1997.
Source: Edan Hughes, "Artists in California, 1786-1940"
City Directory; Journal of the Print World, Fall 1997.
father's lithotype studio of 30 years. In the late 1920s he began exploring lithography as an art medium. With artist Jean Charlot, he began producing color lithography in the early 1930s. For the next 40 years he collaborated with Feitelson, Shoppe, Sheets, Landacre and other artists in printing the finest quality color lithography. Kistler died in Orange County, CA on Nov. 9, 1993.
Exh: Stendahl Gallery (LA), 1933; Moss Gallery (LA), 1997.
Source: Edan Hughes, "Artists in California, 1786-1940"
City Directory; Journal of the Print World, Fall 1997.
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