One of the most stylistically pioneering of the early
modernists, Max Weber was a key figure in introducing avant-garde art to
America. He worked in the mediums of oil, watercolor, printmaking and sculpture,
and his subjects sometimes reflected the spiritualism of his religion. His
styles included Fauvism, Cubism, Dynamism, Expressionism, and Futurism and
reflected the broad spectrum of revolutionary art activity in Paris at the turn
of the 19th into the 20th centuries.
He also created some social-realist
paintings during the 1930s with depictions of factory scenes. These works
reflected his left-wing political leanings, which he expressed as national
chairman of the American Artists Congress, "the most powerful left-wing artists'
organization of the period" (Baigell). He was a writer on topics of modern
aesthetics including 'The Fourth Dimension from a Plastic Point of View',
published in "Camera Work" in July 1910.
He was from a strong Jewish
background, having been born in Bialystok, Russia, and in 1891, he settled in
Brooklyn. At the Pratt Institute, he studied with Arthur Wesley Dow from whom he
learned to see forms as visual relationships rather than objects. He taught
public school art in Lynchburg, Virginia from 1901 to 1903, and Duluth,
Minnesota from 1903 to 1905, and then studied in Paris at the Academie Julian,
Academie Colarossi, and Academie de la Grande Chaumiere. He was much influenced
by Cubist artists Pablo Picasso and George Braque and then returned to New York
in 1909, where he experimented with many modernist styles.
He was among
the first American artists to show an interest in Indians of the American
Southwest, and in 1913, his one-man exhibition at the Newark Museum was the
first exhibition of an American museum for a modernist artist.
Sources: Matthew Baigell, "Dictionary of American Art" Peter Falk,
"Who Was Who in American Art" |