Jump to content

Barbara Swan

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Citation bot (talk | contribs) at 07:57, 13 November 2020 (Alter: url. URLs might have been internationalized/anonymized. Add: doi. | You can use this bot yourself. Report bugs here. | Suggested by Abductive | Category:Wellesley College alumni‎ | via #UCB_Category 291/565). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Barbara Swan
Sanary, 1951 (self-portrait of Swan)
Born1922
Died2003
Known forPainting
Illustration
Lithography
SpouseAlan Fink

Barbara Swan (1922–2003), also known by her married name, Barbara Swan Fink, was an American painter, illustrator, and lithographer. Her early work is associated with the Boston Expressionist school; later she became known for her still-life paintings in which light is refracted through glass and water, and for her portraits. She is also known for her collaboration with the poets Anne Sexton and Maxine Kumin, and for her archived correspondence with various artists and writers.

Life and career

Barbara Swan was born in Newton, Massachusetts, in 1922. She graduated from Wellesley College in 1943 with a B.A. in art history, then studied painting at the School of the Museum of Fine Arts until 1948. In her last year at the museum school she was Karl Zerbe's teaching assistant.[1] She spent two years living and working in France on a fellowship from the Museum of Fine Arts, at a time when two-year traveling fellowships were rarely awarded to women.[2] There she met her husband, Alan Fink, whom she married in 1952.[3] Fink later founded the Alpha Gallery on Newbury Street in Boston.[4]

Swan achieved local fame as an artist in the 1950s. Her paintings from this period are loosely associated with the Boston Expressionist school, although her themes tended to be gentler than those of Jack Levine and others working in that style. In a 1957 review of her show at the Boris Mirski Gallery, critic Edgar Driscoll marveled at her ability to render tranquil domestic scenes, featuring sleeping children or nursing infants, in a creative way: "It is a tender, touching showing...Yet the artist, through strong color and off-beat compositions, carefully avoids over-sentimentalizing or slipping into the banal."[5] One of her best known paintings from this period, "Baby", shows her infant son Aaron held up by a man's hand, presumably her husband's.[6]

At various times in the 1940s through the 1960s, Swan taught art classes at Boston University, Wellesley College, and the museum school.[1]

Collaboration with Anne Sexton and Maxine Kumin

In 1961 Swan was one of the first women to receive a grant from the Radcliffe Institute for Independent Study. Through the grant program she met other creative women, including the poets Anne Sexton and Maxine Kumin. Swan provided pen and ink illustrations for several of Sexton's books, including Transformations, The Death Notebooks, and Live or Die, the last of which won the Pulitzer Prize for Poetry.[7] She also illustrated Kumin's Pulitzer-winning Up Country.[3][8]

Swan's essay on Sexton, "A Reminiscence", is included in Anne Sexton: Telling the Tale, a collection of essays published in 1988. In the essay Swan recalls, among other things, how her lithograph, The Musicians, inspired Sexton's poem, "To Lose the Earth", and her drawing, Man Carrying a Man, inspired Sexton's "Jesus Walking".[9]

Critic Vernon Young, reviewing Transformations in 1972, wrote, "The drawings of Barbara Swan incisively complement the poems. Their designs are what they should be: importunate and macabre; Gothic and placental."[10]

At least one critic found Swan's illustrations distastefully female. John N. Morris, reviewing Up Country in 1974, called them "prettifications" and complained that "they draw too much attention to the slightly ladylike quality of a few of these poems, the air they have of essays in the female georgic."[11]

Portraiture

Swan drew and painted portraits of Sexton, concert pianist Luise Vosgerchian,[6] writer Tillie Olsen, historian James F. O'Gorman, composer Arthur Berger, and artists Sigmund Abeles, Gregory Gillespie, Harold Tovish, and Esther Geller, among others.[3] According to her husband, she always started her portraits with the eyes.[2]

Later years

Swan continued painting and exhibiting into her seventies. In 1995 her work was included in Boston's Honored Artists: Still Working, a tribute to senior artists at the Danforth Art Museum. A reviewer called her still lifes "intense".[12] In many of her later paintings, images are distorted as light is refracted through glass and water.[6]

She died on June 2, 2003, at the Kindred Hospital in Brighton, Massachusetts.[3] She was survived by her husband, her daughter Joanna, and her son Aaron. Her son, Aaron Fink, is also a painter whose work has been exhibited widely.[13] Her husband Alan later died on March 21, 2017.[14]

Swan's work is included in the permanent collections of museums and galleries throughout the U.S.[4] Her archived correspondence includes letters from, and photographs of, many notable artists and writers, including Bernard Chaet, Ellsworth Kelly, Maxine Kumin, Tillie Olsen, Anne Sexton, Andrew Stevovich, and Elbert Weinberg.[15]

Grants and awards

  • Alumnae Achievement Award, Wellesley College, 1996
  • George Roth Prize, Philadelphia Print Club, 1965
  • Institute for Independent Study, Radcliffe College, Associate Scholar, 1962, 1961
  • Pintner Award, Cambridge Art Association, 1960, 1958, 1957
  • Albert Whitin Traveling Fellowship, Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, 1948

Selected solo exhibitions

Selected group exhibitions

Selected collections

References

  1. ^ a b Roscio, Jessica (2013). Barbara Swan: Reflected Self. Danforth Museum.
  2. ^ a b Roscio (2013), p. 8.
  3. ^ a b c d Stickgold, Emma (7 June 2003). "Barbara Swan Fink at 80; Artist Known for Still-Lifes". The Boston Globe.[permanent dead link]
  4. ^ a b "Alumnae Achievement Awards 1996". Wellesley College.
  5. ^ Driscoll, Edgar J. (10 November 1957). "Barbara Swan's Exhibit Humanistic Shot in the Arm". The Boston Globe.
  6. ^ a b c McQuaid, Cate (24 December 2013). "Barbara Swan exhibit is well worth a reflection". The Boston Globe.
  7. ^ Sexton, Anne; Sexton, Linda Gray (2004). Anne Sexton: A Self-Portrait in Letters. Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. pp. 374, 436. ISBN 9780618492428.
  8. ^ "Maxine W. Kumin". The Poetry Foundation.
  9. ^ Colburn, Stephen E., editor (1988). Anne Sexton: Telling the Tale. University of Michigan Press. pp. 39–53. ISBN 9780472063796. {{cite book}}: |first1= has generic name (help)CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  10. ^ Young, Vernon (1972). "Lines Written in Rouen". The Hudson Review. 24 (1): 684. JSTOR 3849145.
  11. ^ Morris, John N. (1974). "Making More Sense than Omaha". The Hudson Review. 27 (1): 113–114. doi:10.2307/3850411. JSTOR 3850411.
  12. ^ Temin, Christine (27 September 1995). "Nothing retiring about Hub's senior artists". The Boston Globe.
  13. ^ "Aaron Fink". Alpha Gallery.
  14. ^ "Alan Fink". The Boston Globe. March 26, 2017 – via Legacy.com.
  15. ^ "Barbara Swan papers, 1927-1992". Archives of American Art.

Further reading