Jump to content

Janet Sobel: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
m Reverted edits by 2603:7000:AA44:2000:B805:6616:B531:1E1D (talk) to last version by Lute88
Aidanbh (talk | contribs)
m Small additional reference
Line 21: Line 21:
}}
}}


'''Janet Sobel''' (May 31, 1893 – November 11, 1968) was a Russian Empire-born American Abstract Expressionist painter whose career started mid-life, at age forty-five<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.dailyartmagazine.com/janet-sobel-forgotten-female-artist/|title=Janet Sobel: the Forgotten Female Artist Who Influenced Jackson Pollock|date=April 27, 2021}}</ref> in 1938. Sobel pioneered the [[drip painting]] technique that directly influenced [[Jackson Pollock]].<ref>{{Cite web |last=Grovier |first=Kelly |title=Janet Sobel: The woman written out of history |url=https://www.bbc.com/culture/article/20220307-janet-sobel-the-woman-written-out-of-history |access-date=2022-03-10 |website=BBC |date=March 8, 2022 |language=en}}</ref> She was credited as exhibiting the first instance of [[all-over painting]] seen by [[Clement Greenberg]], a notable art critic.
'''Janet Sobel''' (May 31, 1893 – November 11, 1968), born '''Jennie Olechovsky''' (occ. Lechovsky<ref>{{Cite web |url=https://www.bbc.com/culture/article/20220307-janet-sobel-the-woman-written-out-of-history?ocid=fbcul |title=Janet Sobel: The woman written out of history |date=March 8, 2022}}</ref>), was a Russian Empire-born American Abstract Expressionist painter whose career started mid-life, at age forty-five<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.dailyartmagazine.com/janet-sobel-forgotten-female-artist/|title=Janet Sobel: the Forgotten Female Artist Who Influenced Jackson Pollock|date=April 27, 2021}}</ref> in 1938. Sobel pioneered the [[drip painting]] technique that directly influenced [[Jackson Pollock]].<ref>{{Cite web |last=Grovier |first=Kelly |title=Janet Sobel: The woman written out of history |url=https://www.bbc.com/culture/article/20220307-janet-sobel-the-woman-written-out-of-history |access-date=2022-03-10 |website=BBC |date=March 8, 2022 |language=en}}</ref> She was credited as exhibiting the first instance of [[all-over painting]] seen by [[Clement Greenberg]], a notable art critic.


==Early life==
==Early life==

Revision as of 07:35, 22 June 2022

Janet Sobel
Born
Jennie Olechovsky

(1893-05-31)May 31, 1893
Katerynoslav, Russian Empire (now Dnipro, Ukraine)
DiedNovember 11, 1968(1968-11-11) (aged 75)
NationalityUkrainian, American
EducationNone
Known forDrip painting, all-over painting
Notable workPro and Contra (1941), Through the Glass (1944), Milky Way (1945)
MovementAbstract Expressionism
SpouseMax Sobel

Janet Sobel (May 31, 1893 – November 11, 1968), born Jennie Olechovsky (occ. Lechovsky[1]), was a Russian Empire-born American Abstract Expressionist painter whose career started mid-life, at age forty-five[2] in 1938. Sobel pioneered the drip painting technique that directly influenced Jackson Pollock.[3] She was credited as exhibiting the first instance of all-over painting seen by Clement Greenberg, a notable art critic.

Early life

Janet Sobel was born as Jennie Olechovsky in 1893 in Katerynoslav, Russian Empire (now Dnipro, Ukraine). Her father, Baruch Olechovsky,[4] was killed in a Russian pogrom. Sobel along with her mother, Fannie Kinchuk, a midwife,[5] and siblings moved to Ellis Island in New York City in 1908.[4] At sixteen years of age, she married Max Sobel,[6] with whom she had five children.[5]

She was the mother of five children when she began painting in 1937. She produced both non-objective abstractions and figurative artwork.[7] Upon recognizing Sobel's talent, her son helped her artistic development and shared her work with émigré surrealists, Max Ernst, André Breton, as well as John Dewey and Sidney Janis.[8]

Career

Effect of inspiration

Her belief in the ethics of self-realization in a democracy led to Sobel's encounter with philosopher John Dewey. Dewey championed Sobel by writing about her in a catalogue statement at the Puma Gallery in New York in 1944. In this catalogue he states:

Her work is extraordinarily free from inventiveness and from self-consciousness and pretense. One can believe that to an unusual degree her forms and colors well up from a subconsciousness that is richly stored with sensitive impressions received directly from contact with nature, impressions which have been reorganized in figures in which color and form are happily wed.[7]

Sobel used music for inspiration and stimulation of her feelings into her canvas. Sobel's works exemplify the tendency to fill up every empty space, sometimes interpreted as horror vacui. She often depicted her feelings through past experiences. Her depiction of soldiers with cannons and imperial armies, as well as traditional Jewish families, reflected the experiences of her childhood. Her figures often demonstrated the time of the Holocaust, where she relived the trauma of her youth. Overcoming those youthful traumas, Sobel found a safe realm for her imagination through art.[8]

Effect of art critics

An art authority during Sobel's time, Clement Greenberg, wrote on avant-garde painting. Although he had not addressed her during the three years her professional works circulated in New York galleries, he eventually positioned "Sobel as a forerunner of Abstract Expressionism". Generally, he only framed Sobel's work relative to Abstract Expressionism or to Pollock, and especially in relation to Pollock's career. He consistently described Sobel's work as inferior to that of Pollock by characterizing it as "'primitive'" and that of a "'housewife'".[9] In certain circles, the effect of his influence was a failure of recognition of her work during her career.

Nonetheless, Peggy Guggenheim included Sobel's work in her The Art of This Century Gallery in 1946, and the influence of her work has been recognized by the artists who were touted highly in critiques by Greenberg.

As described, some of her work is related to the so-called "drip paintings" of Jackson Pollock, who "'admitted that these pictures had made an impression on him'".[9][10] By the time Sobel's work was seen in 1946 by Pollock and Greenberg, Pollock had already produced several works using the pouring technique.[11][12] In his essay "'American-Type' Painting", first published in 1955,[13] the critic cited Sobel's works as the first instance of all-over painting he had seen, but attributed the style to appropriated female nature rather than to artistic creativity. Greenberg went on to say that her art evolved from recognizable figures to a more abstract style of paint dripping.[14]

Returning to Pollock: one might see how, in his tacit assumption of the position of the woman—the decentered and the voiceless, the one who flows uncontrollably, the one who figures the void and the unconscious—he remained on some level, a man using his masculine authority to appropriate a feminine space. In fact, one woman had tried to articulate that space before Pollock did, in a similar way—not Krasner but Janet Sobel, who made poured, all-over compositions that unmistakably made an impact on Pollock. Greenberg recalls, Pollock (and I myself) admired [Sobel's] pictures rather furtively" at the Art of This Century gallery in 1946; "The effect—and it was the first really 'all-over' one that I had ever seen... —was strangely pleasing. Later on, Pollock admitted that these pictures had made an impression on him. When Sobel is mentioned at all in accounts of Pollock's development, however, she is generally described and so discredited as a "housewife" or amateur, a stratagem that preserves Pollock's status as the unique progenitor, both mother and father of his art, a figure overflowing not only with semen but with amniotic fluid.[15]

Sobel's paintings were characterized as belonging to "the realms of surrealism and primitivism."[6] "Sobel was part folk artist, Surrealist, and Abstract Expressionist, but critics found it easiest to call her a 'primitive'." As Zalman summarizes, her title of "primitive" was "a category that enabled her acceptance by the art world, but restricted her artistic development". Grouping Sobel as a 'primitive' painter was part of a greater movement to try to form a unique American form of art, distinct from European art, while still trying to maintain a hierarchy of 'us and them'. Sobel was grouped as inferior due to being a housewife, while other painters could have been dismissed as being mentally inferior in some way.[9] In a way, Sobel also serves as a representative of this conflict. Due to the attitudes of some of the critics of her day, Sobel became known as a suburban housewife who, working professionally as an artist, inspired the feminist conversation around domestic roles of women.

Notable works

Sobel's initial works show a flair for a primitivist figuration reminiscent of early Chagall and serves to herald early Dubuffet. The abundant floral motifs recall Ukrainian peasant art. In addition, the need to exploit media of all sorts is very evident (including sand). If her drip paintings weren't vivid enough, she would opt to outline them in ink in order to compensate. Aiding in inventing Abstract Expressionism did not conclude her imagistic work. Her main goal was visual intensity, which she attained with impressive regularity.[citation needed]

Milky Way, created in 1945, is currently displayed in the Museum of Modern Art.[16]

Death

Solbel died at her home in Plainfield, New Jersey in 1968.[17] In 2021, The New York Times published a belated obituary for her.[18]

References

  1. ^ "Janet Sobel: The woman written out of history". March 8, 2022.
  2. ^ "Janet Sobel: the Forgotten Female Artist Who Influenced Jackson Pollock". April 27, 2021.
  3. ^ Grovier, Kelly (March 8, 2022). "Janet Sobel: The woman written out of history". BBC. Retrieved 2022-03-10.
  4. ^ a b "Will the Real Janet Sobel Please Stand Up?". www.janetsobel.com. Retrieved 2018-04-12.
  5. ^ a b Blackstone, Maya (August 2, 2021). "Janet Sobel". The New York Times. Retrieved 5 August 2021.
  6. ^ a b "Services Held for Mrs. Sobel". The Courier-News. Bridgewater, NJ. November 12, 1968. p. 9. Retrieved June 8, 2022 – via Newspapers.com. Open access icon
  7. ^ a b John Dewey, Janet Sobel, Puma gallery, leaflet catalogue, New York, April 24 to May 14, 1944.
  8. ^ a b Levin, Gail (2003). Inside Out: Selected Works by Janet Sobel. New York: Gary Snyder Fine Art. pp. 5 and 6.
  9. ^ a b c Zalman, Sandra (2015). "Janet Sobel: Primitive Modern and the Origins of Abstract Expressionism". Woman's Art Journal. 36 (2): 20–29. ISSN 0270-7993. JSTOR 26430653.
  10. ^ "Janet Sobel (1894-1968)". Hollis Taggart Galleries. 2008. Archived from the original on 12 July 2011. Retrieved 2011-03-15.
  11. ^ "9780300021097: Jackson Pollock: A Catalogue Raisonne of Paintings, Drawings and Other Works - AbeBooks - Pollock, Jackson: 0300021097".
  12. ^ Duggan, Bob (9 February 2010). "Mother of Invention". Big Think. Archived from the original on 5 March 2012.
  13. ^ https://resources.saylor.org/wwwresources/archived/site/wp-content/uploads/2012/02/The-Art-Story_-Clement-Greenberg-vs-Harold-Rosenberg.pdf [bare URL PDF]
  14. ^ Pollock, Jackson (1999). Jackson Pollock. ISBN 9780870700378.
  15. ^ Pollock, Jackson (1999). Jackson Pollock. ISBN 9780870700378.
  16. ^ "Janet Sobel. Milky Way. 1945 | MoMA". The Museum of Modern Art. Retrieved 2018-03-29.
  17. ^ "Mrs. Janet Sobel, Artist from Plainfield". The Courier-News. Bridgewater, NJ. November 11, 1968. p. 24. Retrieved June 9, 2022 – via Newspapers.com. Open access icon
  18. ^ Blackstone, Maya (July 30, 2021). "Overlooked No More: Janet Sobel, Whose Art Influenced Jackson Pollock". The New York Times.

Further reading

External links