Born
in Canandaigua, upstate New York, Arthur Dove
is credited as being the first innovative abstract
painter in America. Many of his abstractions
showed obvious Oriental influence and were derived
from landscape and organic subjects with color
used freely and calligraphic line emphasizing
energy or force. Generally his method was to
make watercolor sketches outdoors and later
oil paintings in his studio.
He
also made assemblages from a variety of materials
including aluminum, tin, copper, glass, wood,
fabric, and found objects. Some were three dimensional
like sculpture, and he was a meticulous craftsman.
He
was named for the presidential and vice presidential
candidates in 1880 and grew up in a conventional
upper middle class family in Geneva, New York
where his father was a brickmaker and contractor.
Dove started drawing at an early age and began
painting at age nine at the encouragement of
a neighbor, Newton Weatherby, who was a naturalist
and truck farmer as well as amateur painter
and musician. Weatherby inspired a life-long
love of nature in Dove, which was evident in
his artwork.
His
independent spirit was evident early when at
the age of twelve he resigned from the Presbyterian
Church for refusing to allow an atheist a right
to his opinion. He attended Hobart College for
two years and Cornell University, where he studied
pre law to please his father but became increasingly
interested in art. A creator of humorous caricatures,
he was yearbook editor and was guided towards
illustration by an instructor.
After
graduating in 1903, he was a commercial illustrator
in New York, working for "Harpers,"
"Scribners," "Collier's,"
"Life," and the "Saturday Evening
Post." He married a hometown friend, lived
comfortably in the city, and painted in his
spare time, but his growing desire to paint
led to their going to Paris.
There
he met Alfred
Maurer, who was to be his best friend for
the remainder of his life, and through him moved
in art circles that included Matisse, Picasso,
and Cezanne. His style at that time was impressionist,
but he and Maurer worked to reduce impressionism
to larger areas of pure color in the manner
of Matisse.
He
returned to New York in 1909 and took up illustrating
again briefly, but through contact with Alfred
Steiglitz, exhibited with Steiglitz' Gallery
291 of avant-garde artists. The American public's
first exposure to Dove was in a 1912 exhibit
at Gallery 291 and shocked many viewers who
regarded him as a deranged modernist. Steiglitz
friendship and encouragement proved extremely
valuable to Dove who also moved in avant-garde
art circles with John Sloan, William Glackens,
Robert Henri, Alfred
Maurer, and Georgia
O'Keeffe.
Struggling
financially, he moved his young family to Westport,
Connecticut and with little family support for
his career, his first marriage broke up. He
later married Helen Torr and they lived frugally
on houseboats and as caretakers in private homes.
Although critics began to recognize his work,
the public did not respond during his lifetime,
and few of his works sold.
In
1933, he inherited the meagre estate of his
parents and moved to Geneva for five years where
he tried to make a living as a farmer but had
little success. Bad health forced him in 1938
to an inlet on Long Island Sound, and he lived
there the remaining six years of his life as
a semi-invalid with painting as his only activity.
With the help of his wife who held his hand
with the brush, he was highly productive doing
paintings with loose wash-like qualities. His
cheerful personality was reflected in the tranquil
mood of his work. He died of a heart attack
in November, 1946.