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H. Wayne Morgan - Keepers of Culture: The Art-Thought of Kenyon Cox, Royal Cortissoz, and Frank Jewett Mather, Jr.

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Keepers of Culture: The Art-Thought of Kenyon Cox, Royal Cortissoz, and Frank Jewett Mather, Jr.: summary, description and annotation

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The conflict between modern and traditional art is one of the best known episodes in American cultural history. The modernists on the war in the sense that their styles and attitudes of mind dominated the discussion and production of new art. But the traditionalists remained strong in the arenas of public opinion and taste. It is a testament to the importance of the ideas involved that the basic issues are not yet settled in the larger cultural world. Kenyon Cox, a painter as well as critic, revealed a steadfast devotion to the ideals of a high art tradition, derived in his later years chiefly from admiration for the Italian Renaissance. He knew western art history, surveyed the current art scene in many reviews and analytical essays, and wrote with careful attention to the canons of scholarship. Royals Cartissoz, the art editor of the New York Tribune for over fifty years, was an appreciator and connoisseur. His belief in beauty in a well-done and recognizable form left him open to more innovation than was the case with Cox. He based his views on a self-confessed ideal of common sense that left the art experience open to any sensitive person. He was well suited to speak to and for the growing middle class in the Progressive era. This viewpoint was equally adaptable, if more debatable intellectually, when modernism triumphed. The fact that he remained a significant figure in art circles long after his tastes ceased to be dominant, testified to the nature of the audience for whom and to whom he spoke. Frank Jewett Mather, Jr., was the most realistic of these critics in estimating how art appealed in society. He knew a lot about many things and was concerned to see that the arts remained integrated in public esteem and thought. Mather took comfort from the history of art, which revealed to him that great works and their creators could survive time and criticism. This sense of historical process and his great need for the unifying power of art experience let Mather escape the bitterness that so affected Cox, and to a lesser extent Cortissoz, as tastes changed. The artists mission was to maintain and extend forms of art that promoted order and integration in society and in individual personalities. Society in turn had to see the artist as a harbinger of an intensified emotional life, but which accommodated changed perception in constructive ways. The chief fear of the traditionalists was that the new art, which seemed shocking in form and disruptive in intent, would separate artist and public to the detriment of both.

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title Keepers of Culture The Art-thought of Kenyon Cox Royal Cortissoz - photo 1

title:Keepers of Culture : The Art-thought of Kenyon Cox, Royal Cortissoz, and Frank Jewett Mather, Jr.
author:Morgan, H. Wayne.
publisher:Kent State University Press
isbn10 | asin:0873383907
print isbn13:9780873383905
ebook isbn13:9780585262314
language:English
subjectArt criticism--United States--History--19th century, Art criticism--United States--History--20th century, Cox, Kenyon,--1856-1919--Philosophy, Cortissoz, Royal,--1869-1948--Philosophy, Mather, Frank Jewett,--1868-1953--Philosophy.
publication date:1989
lcc:N7475.M67 1989eb
ddc:701/.18/0973
subject:Art criticism--United States--History--19th century, Art criticism--United States--History--20th century, Cox, Kenyon,--1856-1919--Philosophy, Cortissoz, Royal,--1869-1948--Philosophy, Mather, Frank Jewett,--1868-1953--Philosophy.
Page iii
Keepers of Culture
The Art-Thought of Kenyon Cox, Royal Cortissoz, and Frank Jewett Mather, Jr.
H. Wayne Morgan
Page iv 1989 by The Kent State University Press Kent Ohio 44242 All - photo 2
Page iv
1989 by The Kent State University Press, Kent, Ohio 44242
All rights reserved
Library of Congress Catalog Card Number 89-32669
ISBN 0-87338-390-7
Manufactured in the United States of America
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Morgan, H. Wayne (Howard Wayne)
Keepers of culture : the art-thought of Kenyon Cox, Royal
Cortissoz, and Frank Jewett Mather, Jr. / H. Wayne Morgan.
p. cm.
Bibliography: p.
Includes index.
ISBN 0-87338-390-7 (alk. paper) Picture 3
1. Art criticismUnited StatesHistory19th century. 2. Art criti
cismUnited StatesHistory20th century. 3. Cox, Kenyon, 1856
1919Philosophy. 4. Cortissoz, Royal, 18691948Philosophy. 5.
Mather, Frank Jewett, 18681953Philosophy. I. Title.
N7475.M67 1989
701'.18'0973dc20 89-32669
CIP
British Library Cataloging-in-Publication data are available.
Page v
For
ANNE
Page vii
Contents
Preface
ix
Introduction: Traditional versus Modern
1
Kenyon Cox: Traditionalist Painter and Critic
13
Royal Cortissoz: Traditionalist for Everyman
61
Frank Jewett Mather, Jr.: The Humanist as Critic
103
Afterword
151
Notes
153
Selected Bibliography
175
Index
181

Page ix
Preface
The conflict between modern and traditional art at the beginning of this century is one of the best-known episodes in American cultural history. In the sense that their styles and attitudes of mind dominated the discussion and production of new art, the modernists won the war. But the traditionalists remained strong in the arenas of public opinion and taste. It is a testament to the importance of the ideas involved that the basic issues are not yet settled in the larger cultural world. Fortunately, it is not necessary or possible to choose between the two. No one doubts that modernism, whatever its forms, has been a great and logical addition to art. Yet those who dislike what they usually loosely label "modern art" or "abstraction" have retained an audience. Perhaps the issues involved recur cyclically because they represent varied emphases in cultural desires.
This book is an introduction to the traditionalist art-thought of the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. I use traditional throughout in a commonsense way, as the protagonists of the story did. It includes the beliefs that there are no sharp breaks in life, that any new idea must convince people of its familiar and workable antecedents before it can claim legitimacy, that cultural attributes are interdependent, and that ideas and taste change slowly for understandable reasons. The debate suggests that people naturally seek to retain the security of the well-known and familiar, while at the same time and without contradiction in their own minds desire the new and challenging.
This is a very personal book that has arisen out of my general research in the period. It is a purely introductory overview, couched as analytical biographies in order to make human what otherwise might be an abstract and artificial subject. The biographical details of these men's lives are interesting in themselves. I also hope to show that traditional art-thought in these, and presumably in other cases, was an organic part of each subject's life. It thus matched in personal ways the intellectual insistence on integration and organic development in society and culture among such observers.
Page x
In my view the three men whose ideas are presented here best represented American traditionalism. All commanded significant audiences during lifetimes of writing on both the current art scene and on the larger ideals and ambitions involved in art production and appreciation. Each was well grounded in cultural history and presented a thoughtful view of the role of art in modern life. Much of what they said remains valid. They shared central beliefs about art and its mission, and their ideas often overlapped. But traditionalism was no more a single, codified movement than was modernism. The work of these three men typified the differences as well as the similarities in the art-thought that confronted what seemed to them a destructive innovation.
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