It
seems to be the time for birds. Everyday I see a large calendar over my desk featuring
the fun art of CHARLEY HARPER, who was a Cincinnati-based American Modernist artist, best
known for his highly stylized wildlife prints, posters, and book illustrations. I love his work because of his great sense of
humor and his sometimes play on words. For example, his pileated woodpecker pecking for ants he titled “Antypasto".
Charley
was born in Frenchton,
West Virginia, in 1922 into a farming family. On his
family farm, he developed an early appreciation and love of animals as well as design which influenced his work to his last days.
He attended West Virginia Wesleyan College and graduated from
the Cincinnati Art Academy, where he also taught for many yearsSupposedly
on the first day, Charley met fellow artist Edie McKee*, whom he
married shortly after graduation in 1947.
After a WWII tour of duty with the 104th
Infantry in Europe, aided by an art scholarship, he went on a four-months'
painting tour of the country with his bride. He worked in a Cincinnati studio
as a commercial artist by day and in his home as a fine artist by night."
Charley
returned to the Art Academy of Cincinnati as a teacher and also worked for a
commercial firm before working on his own. He and his wife worked out of their
Roselawn and Finneytown homes, and later, with their only child, Brett Harper,
formed Harper Studios.
Charley Harper died of pneumonia in Cincinnati on Sunday, June 10, 2007, at age 84.
During
his career, Charley Harper illustrated numerous books, notably The
Golden Book of Biology, magazines such as Ford Times, as well as
many prints, posters, and other works. As his subjects are mainly natural, with
birds prominently featured, Charley often created works for many nature-based
organizations, among them the National Park
Service, Cincinnati
Zoo, Cincinnati
Nature Center, Cornell Lab
of Ornithology, Hamilton
County (Ohio) Park District, and Hawk Mountain
Sanctuary in Pennsylvania. He also designed interpretive
displays for Everglades
National Park.
In a style he called "minimal
realism", Charley Harper captured the essence of his subjects with the
fewest possible visual elements. When asked to describe his unique visual
style, Charley responded:
When I look at a wildlife or nature subject,
I don't see the feathers in the wings, I just count the wings. I see
exciting shapes, color combinations, patterns, textures, fascinating behavior, and endless
possibilities for making interesting pictures. I regard the picture as an ecosystem in which all the elements are interrelated,
interdependent, perfectly balanced, without trimming or unutilized parts; and
herein lies the lure of painting; in a world of chaos, the picture is one small
rectangle in which the artist can create an ordered universe.”
He
began his career by creating very realistic pictures but began to lose his
interest in this approach. This skill wasn't wasted, however, for as he said “You’ve got to know
how to put everything in before you will know what you can leave out
successfully.”
"I felt shackled
by the laws of perspective and shading and decided that the constant attempt to
create the illusion of three dimensions on the two-dimensional plane of the
picture was limiting me as an artist. Realistic painting persuades the viewer
that he is looking into space rather than at a flat surface. It denies the
picture plane, which I affirm and use as an element of design. Wildlife art has
been dominated by realism, but I have chosen to do it differently because I
think flat, hard-edge and simple."
Charlie said it
was the difference between painting the thing itself or painting a picture of
the thing. "I didn’t start out to paint a bird – the bird already existed. I
started out to paint a picture of a bird, a picture which didn’t exist before I
came along, a picture which gives me a chance to share with you my thoughts
about the bird.
Once you accept this seemingly simplistic but really quite
profound premise, you will appreciate the many varied approaches to the making
of pictures, all of which start where realism leaves off, but all of which
require an understanding of realism for their successful execution.”
He contrasted his nature-oriented artwork
with the realism of John James Audubon,
drawing influence from Cubism, Minimalism, Einsteinian physics and countless other developments in
Modern art and science. His style distilled and simplified complex organisms
and natural subjects, yet they are often arranged in a complex fashion.His
serigraphs were large expanses of rich color, which gave the viewer a very
different perspective on the animal kingdom. He was a conservationist as well as an
artist, revealing the unique aspects of wildlife subjects through
highly stylized geometric reduction.
He said he was "the only wildlife
artist who has never been compared to Audubon," yet his wildlife art was
just as instructive - the only difference was that he laced his lessons
with humor.Charlie believed that humor made it easier to encourage changes in
our attitudes and awareness of environmental concerns.
On the subject of his simplified forms, Charley
noted:
"I don't think there was much resistance to
the way I simplified things. I think everybody understood that. Some people
liked it and others didn't care for it. There's some who want to count all the
feathers in the wings and then others who never think about counting the
feathers, like me.”
The results are bold, colorful, and often
whimsical. The designer Todd Oldham wrote of him,
"Charley's inspired yet the accurate color sense is undeniable, and when
combined with the precision he exacts on rendering only the most important
details, one is always left with a sense of awe." Charley, on
numerous examples, also went outside the medium of graphic art and included
short prose poems for the artwork he made.
In
his art work Charlie imaginatively
investigated the similarities between human and wild animal behaviors, but
completely without anthropomorphism. "I learn as much as I can about the
creatures that interest me, and they all do. I observe them and find out how
they interact with each other and their environments and ask myself, 'What
if?'"In 2002 his artwork was selected for the International Migratory Bird Day conservation theme-
Exploring Habitats.
*EDIE McKee HARPER was an American photographer, artis and wildlife conservationist, working in many mediums, including sculptures, paintings, textiles, jewelry and lithographs for 60 years. She died 3 years after Charlie.
Birds: top- Pileated woodpecker
Left- Clair de Loon
Right- Barn swallow
Left- Goldfinch
Right- "His eyes are on the sparrows"
Left- Scissortail flycatcher
Rigt- Rosebreasted Grosebeak