Press Releases
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: March 2007
Williams College Museum of Art Presents Major
ExhibitionExploring the Cultural Influence of two Jazz-Age Legends
Williamstown, MA — Sara and Gerald Murphy are best remembered as the
captivating American ‘expats’ who inspired F. Scott Fitzgerald’s Tender
Is the Night. Now, for the first time, a major museum exhibition
considers the two as forces in their own right who helped drive the modernist
movement of the 1920s.
The Williams College Museum of Art (WCMA) presents Making It New: The
Art and Style of Sara and Gerald Murphy from Sunday, July 8, through
November 11, 2007. Thereafter, the exhibition travels to the Yale University
Art Gallery and Dallas Museum of Art.
Making It New explores how the Murphys’ legendary style—modern
in its apparent simplicity and freedom from stifling social regimentation—was
a kind of manifesto, and touchstone, for the artists and writers of the Lost
Generation. The exhibition sees the Murphys' friends F. Scott Fitzgerald, Pablo
Picasso, Cole Porter, Ernest Hemingway, Serge Diaghilev, and Jean Cocteau as
among those who encoded the ethos of the Murphy’s lives into progressive
20th-century art, literature, music, and taste.
“The Murphys had that rare capacity to recognize the new and to encourage
it whole-heartedly and fearlessly,” says Lisa Corrin, Class of 1956 Director
of the Williams College Museum of Art. “Being in their company,
as the title of this exhibition suggests, meant being an active agent in making
the world anew, that is to say, fully inhabiting the idealism that was all
that came to be known as ‘the modern’.”
Making It New has been conceived and organized by Deborah Rothschild,
Senior Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art. Dr. Rothschild is the
editor of the comprehensive catalogue accompanying the exhibition, to which
she contributes an essay on the Murphys’ lives (University of California
Press, Berkeley, July 2007).
Besides serving as an inspiration to other artists, Gerald Murphy was himself
a painter, one who created extraordinarily original paintings of machines and
consumer products that were widely acclaimed by Parisian critics. The
Williams College Museum of Art has secured loans of all seven of these surviving
canvases. Unlike previous exhibitions at The Museum of Modern Art (1974) and
Dallas Museum of Art (1986), which were devoted exclusively to Murphy's oeuvre, Making
It New places his boldly colored and meticulously rendered oil paintings
alongside works by major artists of the day and a broad spectrum of never-before-exhibited
objects and archival materials reflecting the period. Loans have been
drawn from private and public collections, both here and abroad.
Major paintings by Pablo Picasso, Fernand Léger, Juan Gris, and Georges
Braque, including a number of works inspired by the Murphys, are featured,
as is a series of watercolors dedicated to Gerald and Sara by Léger;
drawings by Jean Cocteau, Francis Picabia, and others; and photographs of the
Murphy family and its circle by Man Ray.
Gerald Murphy’s awakening to modern painting led him and Sara to the
painter Natalia Goncharova, who had been designing costumes and scenery for
the Ballets Russes. Gerald went on to paint the stage set for Within the
Quota, a masterful parody of popular culture with a score by Cole Porter,
a friend from his days at Yale University. Set and costume designs, theater
programs, posters, and even a constructivist-style ticket to a ball held to
benefit exiled Russian artists will be exhibited to represent this period.
Personal letters, including a heartbreaking note of condolence from Fitzgerald
to Sara and Gerald, sent upon the death of their youngest son, will be displayed
alongside original manuscripts; film clips from home movies of Hemingway,
John Dos Passos, Archibald and Ada MacLeish and the Murphys; and a trove of
snapshots of Gerald and Sara and friends.
Gerald Murphy’s jazz-rhythmed painting entitled Razor (1924),
the six by six-foot Watch (1925), and the precisionist Cocktail (1927)
will be shown alongside the everyday objects that inspired them. Snapshots
of Sara Murphy and friends, posing like the three graces, will be exhibited
alongside Picasso’s sinuous line drawing of the scene. And several Picasso
portraits of women, debated as secret images of Sara Murphy, will be juxtaposed
with photographs that suggest she might have been one of several sources that
fed into his conception of ideal womanhood at the time.
Two short documentary films created for the exhibition will allow visitors
to experience the special magic of the Murphys’ way of life through audio
reminiscences by the Murphys, as told to Calvin Tomkins, as well as interviews
with Archibald MacLeish, Lillian Hellman, Marian Seldes, and others. These
short films will be enlivened by music which was a very large part of the Murphys'
lives. They championed Jazz as America’s classical music and were
among the first to study African American spirituals—often performing
them for their guests.
The Murphys
Sara (1883–1975) and Gerald (1888–1964) Murphy moved
to France in 1921 with their three young children to carve out a life free
from the strictures imposed by their wealthy New York families. They improvised
their own brand of unconventional modernism that fostered creativity and intellectual
freedom, epitomizing the modern American to both their countrymen and those
they encountered abroad. Calvin Tomkins in his 1971 book about the Murphys, Living
Well Is the Best Revenge, wrote: “Those closest to the Murphys found
it almost impossible to describe the special quality of their life, or the
charm it had for their friends…They were utterly captivating.”
“Self-invention became a way of life for Gerald Murphy—something
that he raised to an art form. The creation extended to the constructed perfection
of family, homes, dress, ways of entertaining, and being in the world,” says
Dr. Rothschild.
She continues, “The Murphys’ status as progressive moderns was
tied to the elegant simplicity with which they lived but also to their American-ness
and their role as transcontinental intermediaries, who moved back and forth
across the Atlantic bringing the latest ideas and products from one culture
to another. In one way, I hope this exhibition contributes to the understanding
of how the Euro-American dialogue helped spawn 20th-century modernism.”
The Murphys astonished many with an ultra-modern pared-down style. In
their Paris apartment, wood floors were painted black, walls stark white, and
the only “art” on view was an actual steel ball bearing—the
largest made—mounted to rotate on a black pedestal set atop an ebony
piano.
By settling down in Villa America, their home in the Cap d’Antibes,
a beachhead in the south of France, the Murphys invented the idea of year-round
living in the Riviera: before their arrival, there was no summer season, no
summer days at the beach. Gerald’s resort wear inspired Coco Chanel,
and Sara’s habit of sunbathing with pearls draped down her bare back
inspired imitators on both sides of the Atlantic.
Small and unpretentious, Villa America featured American innovations unheard
of in Europe at the time, like screen doors and stainless steel bathroom fixtures. Le
Corbusier praised the Murphys' imaginative renovation of the house, particularly
the new flat roof that served as a sun deck. The interior was decoratedwith
black floors, zebra rugs, lots of mirrors, and big glass bowls filled with
flowers. In 1930 Léger created a large double-sided screen for
the Villa that marked a change for him from geometric/mechanical to biomorphic/celestial
imagery. Entitled Large Comet Tails on Black Background, the
screen is featured in the exhibition.
“Making It New offers both a lesson in how sociability can
foster creativity and an antidote to the ongoing romantic narrative of the
isolated genius.” says Lisa Corrin. “As a museum that encourages
a multi-disciplinary approach to learning, WCMA is proud to make this timely
contribution to cultural studies.”
Sponsorship
Making It New has been made possible in part by the National
Endowment for the Humanities: great ideas brought to life; the Terra Foundation
for American Art; the Getty Foundation; and the Dedalus Foundation, Inc.
Any views, finding, conclusions, or recommendations expressed in this exhibition
do not necessarily represent those of the National Endowment for the Humanities.
National Tour
After its showing at the Williams College Museum of Art, Making
It New: The Art and Style of Sara and Gerald Murphy travels to the Yale
University Art Gallery (February 26–May 4, 2008) and the Dallas Museum
of Art (June 8–September 14, 2008).
Catalogue
Making It New: The Art and Style of Sara and Gerald Murphy, published
by University of California Press, Berkeley, contains a biographical essay
by Dr. Rothschild, essays by Murphy scholars Calvin Tomkins, Amanda Vaill,
Kenneth Silver, and Linda Patterson Miller; art historians Dorothy Kosinski
and Kenneth Wayne; artist/writer Trevor Winkfield; musicologist Olivia Mattis;
and poet and author William Jay Smith.
Williams College Museum of Art
The Williams College
Museum of Art is open Tuesday through Saturday, from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., and
on Sunday from 1 to 5 p.m. Admission is free and the museum is wheelchair accessible. Contact:
Suzanne A. Silitch, Director of Public Relations
and External Affairs, 413.597.3178.