Canaletto
of the Skies
David Cohen in conversation with Yvonne Jacquette in
New York City and Searsmont, Maine
A version of this article
appeared in the New York Sun, September 4, 2003, under the title "A
chat with the artist: A cocktail of perception and invention"
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Yvonnne Jacquette
Chicago River, Bridges II 2000
Oil on canvas, 73 x 100 inches (overall)
This and all images courtesy DC Moore Gallery, New York
Yvonne Jacquette has had
a busy summer. Most of it, as usual, has been spent in Maine - she's
summered in the state since 1954. But there have been trips back to
the city to make the final choice of photographs for the definitive
book about the work of her late husband Rudy Burckhardt - it is due
from Abrams next year. She had to personally touch-up many of the prints,
as he used to do. And she has been flying around Utah, sketching and
photographing what is a departure in her work: mountains.
"I had tried many years
ago and failed so badly that I thought 'Stay away from mountains,'"
she says. "They tend to flatten out from above. You have to use
a lot of shadow. Otherwise, the presence and drama of the mountain wasn't
there. Recently I was in Utah for a show of mine, and someone arranged
for me to get up in a little plane over these enormous mountains - 11,000
to 13,000 feet - so I took a crack at it, and it wasn't too bad for
a start."
Ms. Jacquette is the Canaletto
of the skies. Her paintings are rich, dense, elaborately detailed panoramas,
often nightscapes, usually of cities, viewed from airplanes and skyscrapers.
At once visionary and empirical, they hold opposites - vastness and
detail, alloverness and microscopic precision - in a perverse and fascinating
tension. Although she is concerned with actual, observed landscape -
often sensitive politically to issues of land use and urban sprawl in
her paintings - she has a modernist love of pattern and arabesque for
its own sake.
What first drove her to the
skies? "I was painting pictures of clouds from the ground up. I
would go outside at the same time everyday and look at the same patch
of sky and paint what I saw - then I would attach maybe five of them
in a row. After I'd been doing that for a year or two, I went to visit
my mother in California. I took my watercolors, thinking I would do
some skies from the ground up, but when I was in the plane I saw that
the clouds close up were much more exciting, so I started painting on
planes. About a year or so later, one day there were no clouds and,
the view was so complicated, I thought: 'That's too much.' But here
I am." She was launched, in other words, on her life's work.
And why so many nocturnes?
"That happened accidentally four or five years later. Our friend
[the poet and critic] Edward Denby was taken ill and was in the New
York hospital on the East River and he had many visitors and it didn't
look like he was going to pull through. I became the person who made
sure that he didn't become overwhelmed by visitors, so I was there a
lot. After a while he came around and said 'You shouldn't be here, go
home and do your work.' So I told him that I would visit in the evenings.
I was shocked at how different the whole image was at night. I started
a drawing there, and I just kept working on it until it settled into
something.
That particular work was
so important to her that she was initially unwilling to part with it.
"I was shamed into making a painting because the Metropolitan Museum
wanted to buy the drawing. I said no you can't have it, it's personal.
My dealer then suggested that I could borrow it back if I needed to
make a painting of it - so I did that, and that's what stated it all
off."

Herald Square Composite II
1993
Oil on canvas, 76½ x 65¼ inches
Yvonne Jacquette was born
in Pittsburgh in 1934, and began art studies at 10. From 1947 she received
private instruction from the traditionalist Robert Roché - "He
had studied with John Sloan" - who had her look at Bellini and
other Renaissance masters. "I was doing these very literal renderings
of form, but it was good to learn how to make form sculptural. He wanted
me to be an apprentice to him when I left high school but I thought,
'I want to go to art school and meet other people'."
She chose Rhode Island School
of Design, which couldn't have been more of a contrast: She was catapulted
from the Renaissance to the Bauhaus, as RISD was then very committed
to the abstract principles of the Bauhaus curriculum. "I was terrible
at it, but fascinated by what it was all about. By the time I got to
the third year I was quite interested in de Kooning. I started coming
to New York on weekends, and I got so interested in what you could learn
in galleries here and the museums when they started to show Abstract
Expressionists that I was too impatient to do my fourth year."
This combination of traditionalist
and modernist education stood her in good stead for a career committed
to intellectually ambitious perceptual realism. She supported herself
at various jobs: decorating windows at Macy's, and even, after a bit
of bluffing as regards her technical expertise, by doing drafting work
for a company that designed helicopters. She became part of a set of
artists at the forefront of a revival of representation: Alex Katz,
Janet Fish, Sylvia Plimack Mangold, Rackstraw Downes. In 1961, at a
party given by the painter Nell Blaine, she was introduced to Burckhardt
by poet Kenneth Koch. They soon began to live together and married in
1964.
There are striking affinities
between Ms. Jacquette's paintings and her late husband's photographs:
Dramatic cropping, play with scale and unexpected quirks and tenderness
in the man-made environment. "When I first met him, I was very
interested in his views of Chelsea and one of Astor Place, from high-rise
buildings looking down onto the street or across to water towers. I
just loved those. They were very interesting, because you would think
that you would get a very distanced, detached view, but they were very
friendly. They had an intimacy and warmth to them." But it was
10 or 15 years before she launched her aerial perspectives. "I
think Rudy's images were in the background all along. I had one in my
studio for years before I thought, 'There's something.'"

Mixed Perspectives,
From the World Trade Center 1998
Oil on canvas, 70 x 58½ inches
She uses photographs to guide
her painting. "I have to. The plane will circle for me, so I will
photograph around the subject. Even when I shoot from one point, I try
to get some sense of seeing it from other angles. But I always have
to start from life. The things I started from photographs have failed
- they don't have any life in them."
In fact, she says, she does
not ever paint directly from life. The scale at which she paints demands
the time and space of her studios, whether in New York's flower district
or in Searsmont, Maine. (Although earlier in her career she did paint
outdoors around the city, carrying her accoutrements in a shopping cart!)
But she does make colored drawings, whether in an airplane or a high
building, as preparation for her paintings.
Ms. Jacquette's art is a
cocktail of perception and invention. Her sense of color is highly specific,
albeit synthetic. "I trust the drawing. With pastel you can often
find an equivalent for what you see in nature. I have thousands of pastels,
broken into little bits so that I can fit more and more into my boxes.
It may not be the real color but it maybe something that works."
The compositions themselves
are at once true to the randomness of cityscapes, the odd geometries
thrown up from viewing buildings of varying heights set against the
New York or Chicago grid, for instance, and searching for patterns and
meanings in geometric elements jumping out from the observed scene to
take their privileged position in the flattened picture plane. The hexagon
roof of the Holocaust Memorial in Battery Park spied from high up in
the World Trade Center was a special favorite in this regard.
Actual human presence is
rare in Ms. Jacquette's work, but always somehow implied. There are
figures sometimes, but they are too small for the viewer to register
a face, or even a body type. Instead, there is the humanness of the
artist's touch. Eschewing gesture or impasto, she animates her surfaces
with personally invested handwriting, a warm wobble in her highly distinctive
touch markmaking. She acknowledges both Van Gogh and Seurat as inspiration
for her painstakingly individualized (feathery) brushstrokes. Georgia
O'Keefe's urban nightscapes and the radical cropping of Japanese prints
are also big influences.
Another humanizing factor
in her panoramic vision are the frequent traces of anthropomorphism:
buildings, landmasses, promontories seem limblike, or to be possessed
of giant eyes winking at the viewer. It is something she has noticed
herself: "When I first went on the little plane, it was hard to
remember, or get it down on the page. As I was circling around on the
opposite side of the site, I wondered how I would remember how a river
looked upside down. I would try but I would get very confused. If I
could make an identification with a part of the human body, or an animal
shape, or something that triggered as a memory locator, then I could
continue keeping that in mind despite the bumps and shifts of the airplane.
"I was conscious that
I had to do that, now I am not so conscious, I am not pulling on it.
I am getting more impertinent. I deliberately try and reverse what I
was taught in art school. Things that should be further back become
bigger until they get right up front and vice versa."
Some of Ms. Jacquette's most
distinctive city views were sketched on the high storeys of the World
Trade Center. Obviously, they have a new, unexpected poignancy. But
in a way, all her work is a meditation on transcience, on the earie
uniqueness of a moment's view.
"The night scenes got
a lot of help from the World Trade Center because I could go there and
I could sit in the window, at any hour, they were open until 9:30pm,
and I could choose sections at a time and watch the change in the light
until it was really dark. I found that I could start a drawing in Tower
One then go over to Tower Two and go a little higher. Sometimes I could
see the same building, but from a different angle and it would become
a different size in the drawing. I then started putting these things
together and started making composites. I almost didn't think. I would
ram these things together. Then I thought these are kind of interesting.
Now I try very hard to get a situation where I can get multiple view
points from the same building. It's hard."
Ms. Jacquette took up transcendental
meditation in the 1960s, and has practised Tibetan Buddhism since the
early 1980s. Does this influence the way she sees or works? "I
am pretty sure it does", she answers, and pulling back a screen
behind her easel, exposes a "tangka" (Tibetan devotional painting)
she is working on. She has been painting these, under the tutelage of
monks, since 1995, and has helped paint murals at the Tibetan monastery
in Sydney, New York for the last few years, too. It is amusing to think
of one of the most distinguished contemporary American painters taking
on the ego-less task of making paintings in so strict a tradition, one
that is not her own. But what kind of impact does Buddhism have on her
own world view?
"I think that its about
the idea that things aren't settled and permanent in space. When Rudy
and I went to Hong Kong in 1990 to make the film, Night Fantasies, using
music by Elliott Carter, Rudy said that I had to do the shooting of
anything I wanted to use in the film and that he would do the shooting
of anything that he wanted. [Ms. Jacquette often collaborated with Burckhardt
and frequently acted in his films, as did his circle of Bohemian friends.]
When you film at night you don't get light into the camera; you only
see the brightest things. I always saw the brilliance of the neon signs
while everything else was dark around it. Things are not solid, they
are floating. They could be sideways, the sense of the background is
mostly pretty dim." Looking at her tangka-in-progress she muses:
"The floating of the signs was sort of like these deities around
this space."

Channels
(The Inlet and Outlet of Lawry Pond, Searsmont, ME)
2001
Oil on canvas, 69½ x 58½ inches
Meanwhile, her summer flying
jaunts in Southern Utah came up trumps. "I managed to get the kinds
of angles I like, so the views weren't trite. There won't be paintings
for a while, but I finally got some pastels finished. There were such
fantastic color contrasts, in the reds and oranges of the rocks, I didn't
have rely on shadows. Do you know that part of the country?", she
asks. I don't, but from her description of the colors, it sounds like
a readymade Yvonne Jacquette. "Not at all", she replies. "I've
had to completely refigure out how to use color."
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