Arnold Comes of Age (originally Portrait of Arnold Pyle) is a 1930 oil painting by the American regionalist painter Grant Wood, created as a birthday gift for his studio assistant, Arnold Pyle. Wood took Pyle on as his protégé and was deeply affectionate towards him. The painting depicts a figure looking ahead in a rural landscape, as two nude men bathe in a river. It is reminiscent of Italian Renaissance artist Piero della Francesca's work, in particular The Resurrection, and it is interpreted as homoerotic from its detailing.

Arnold Comes of Age
ArtistGrant Wood
Year1930
MediumOil on pressed board
Dimensions26.75 in × 23 in (679 mm × 580 mm)
LocationSheldon Museum of Art, Lincoln, Nebraska

Background and painting

edit

Grant Wood was a regionalist painter from Iowa. During the Great Depression, he became one of the more prominent regionalists of the country.[1] Arnold Comes of Age was completed in 1930 in celebration of the twenty-first birthday of his studio assistant, Arnold Pyle.[2] Pyle, a painter himself and protégé of Wood, won blue ribbons at the Iowa State Fair for his art depicting the Midwest in 1933, and the grand prize in 1936.[3] He was heterosexual, and despite the affection that Wood showed him, did not romantically reciprocate—as Wood had done with many of his assistants, he disguised his outward affection as paternal love.[4]

The painting was originally entitled Portrait of Arnold Pyle.[5] It depicts an awkward young man looking at the viewer as a butterfly lands on his shirt, set in a countryside while two men bathe in a nearby river.[6] It is made of oil and is displayed on pressed board.[2] Its dimensions are 26.75 inches (67.9 cm) tall by 23 inches (58 cm) across.[2]

Interpretation

edit
 
The Resurrection by Piero della Francesca

The art critic Luciano Cheles says that many of Wood's paintings—including his famous American Gothic—were inspired by works produced during the Italian Renaissance, especially those of the fifteenth-century artist Piero della Francesca.[1] Arnold Comes of Age may have been inspired by his painting The Resurrection, as the paintings share several similarities.[7] In both paintings, the central profile is "neatly" set apart from the background, looking at the viewer with a serious gaze; a figure with a distant look was a typical element of della Francesca's art.[7] The paintings also have two trees framing them: in Wood, one young and one mature, and in della Francesca, one bare and one full of leaves.[8] For Cheles, these contrasting trees represent life and death, as well as a general transition between two states.[9] Della Francesca also painted The Baptism of Christ, and Cheles argues that the nude bathers in Wood's painting are similar to that work.[9] These bathers may symbolize baptism, and consequently, one coming of age.[9]

Ulysses Grant Dietz, a former curator of The Newark Museum of Art, said that the painting indicates an "obvious love" for Arnold.[10] Details such as recurrent couplings (of trees, bushes, and stacks of hay) may demonstrate a love for Pyle, and the two nude swimmers in the back could represent the Christian figures Adam and Eve in the Garden of Eden.[4] Wood chose to sign his name beside Pyle's beltbuckle—adorned with AP, for Arnold Pyle—perhaps so the two men could have their names forever linked.[4] Arnold Comes of Age also depicts a butterfly—which was understood at the time as a gay symbol—landing on Arnold's shirt.[11] The painting is thought to be homoerotic,[12] although critic Faye Hirsch says this interpretation allows researchers to make claims about Wood's life with only minimal evidence.[13]

History

edit

After Arnold Comes of Age was completed, Wood entered it into the 1930, Iowa State Fair Art Salon.[5] Wood was well-established at the time and had earlier exhibited at galleries in Paris.[5] However, as a regionalist committed to promoting the artistic movement, he decided to show Arnold Comes of Age and other paintings in Iowa instead.[5] Arnold Comes of Age won the grand prize, and his painting Stone City, Iowa won the landscape category.[5]

Arnold Comes of Age was displayed in a 1940 Nebraskan show alongside Stone City, Iowa and John B. Turner, Pioneer,[14] a portrait of the father of his patron David Turner that Wood completed in 1929–30.[15] These were all offered for sale, each at a price of between $300 and $400.[14] The board of trustees for the Nebraska Art Association paid $300 for Arnold Comes of Age, while the Joslyn Art Museum of Omaha acquired Stone City, Iowa.[14] It has since become one of the most valuable pieces within the Association's permanent collection,[14] and resides at the Sheldon Museum of Art in Lincoln, Nebraska.[16] The Sheldon Museum of Art holds the artwork of the association, the University of Nebraska–Lincoln, and other collections.[17]

For years, it was not shown publicly due to its significant deterioration: discoloration, extensive craquelure, and varnish disappearance plagued the painting.[18] The bathing figures were, according to Donald Bartlett Doe of the Sheldon, "nearly obliterated".[18] These problems began some ten years after its completion, but by 1985, they were addressed through restoration.[18]

References

edit

Citations

edit
  1. ^ a b Cheles 2016, p. 106.
  2. ^ a b c Cheles 2016, p. 112.
  3. ^ Rasmussen 1995, pp. 18, 20, 28.
  4. ^ a b c Darnaude 2021, p. 20.
  5. ^ a b c d e Rasmussen 1995, p. 17.
  6. ^ Kinloch 2014, pp. 162–163.
  7. ^ a b Cheles 2016, pp. 112–114.
  8. ^ Cheles 2016, pp. 112–113.
  9. ^ a b c Cheles 2016, p. 113.
  10. ^ Dietz 2018, pp. 165, 167.
  11. ^ Ventura 2018.
  12. ^ Doss 2018, p. 40.
  13. ^ Hirsch 2011, p. 79.
  14. ^ a b c d Wells 1972, p. 21.
  15. ^ Corn 1983, p. 68.
  16. ^ Sheldon.
  17. ^ Wells 1972, p. 39.
  18. ^ a b c Doe 1985.

Bibliography

edit
  • Cheles, Luciano (Spring 2016). "The Italian Renaissance in American Gothic: Grant Wood and Piero della Francesca". American Art. 30 (1): 106–124. doi:10.1086/686551. S2CID 190856739.
  • Corn, Wanda M. (1983). Grant Wood: The Regionalist Vision. Minneapolis Institute of Art; Yale University Press. ISBN 0-300-03103-3. OCLC 9324205.
  • Darnaude, Ignacio (1 November 2021). "Grant Wood left tipoffs all over". The Gay & Lesbian Review Worldwide (November–December 2021). Gale A680295004.
  • Dietz, Ulysses Grant (4 May 2018). "Grant Wood: American Gothic and Other Fables". The Journal of Modern Craft. 11 (2): 165–167. doi:10.1080/17496772.2018.1493789. S2CID 218838538.
  • Doe, Donald Bartlett (1985). "Before and after". Resource/Reservoir. 1 (3). Sheldon Memorial Art Gallery. Retrieved 16 November 2021.
  • Doss, Erika (March 2018). "Grant Wood's queer parody: American humor during the Great Depression". Winterthur Portfolio. 52 (1): 3–45. doi:10.1086/697497. S2CID 166213182.
  • Hirsch, Faye (1 February 2011). "Seeing queerly". Art in America. 99 (2).
  • Kinloch, David (4 May 2014). "Hide and seek: Mimesis and narrative in ekphrasis as translation". New Writing. 11 (2): 155–166. doi:10.1080/14790726.2014.882959. S2CID 143847309.
  • Rasmussen, Chris (1995). "Agricultural lag: The Iowa State Fair Art Salon, 1854-1941". American Studies. 36 (1): 5–29. ISSN 0026-3079. JSTOR 40643728.
  • Ventura, Anya (10 June 2018). "Sultry night: Grand Wood's queer Midwest". Grant Wood Art Colony. Retrieved 15 November 2021.
  • Wells, Fred N. (1972). The Nebraska Art Association: A history 1888–1971. OCLC 10328820. Retrieved 15 November 2021.
  • "Wood, Arnold". Sheldon Museum of Art. Retrieved 15 November 2021.