Long ago I predicted that the studio potters of the first post-WW2 generation would begin to make it in the art world. It was a period of remarkable authenticity and invention. A few are living with that acclaim such as John Mason, Michael and Magdalena Frimkess and Ron Nagle, but for others like Rudolf Staffel it arrives posthumously.
Above image: Rudolf Staffel, Light Gatherer, no date, porcelain with copper oxide patina, 5 x 10 inches
Every other month now a vessel maker from this era is arriving at another art gallery. It’s no longer an anomaly but a trend. It may be churlish for me to say “I told you so” but why take the risk of making predictions if one cannot gloat over the (rare) times one is correct? Who, one wonders, will be next? Voulkos is long overdue for this treatment.
Credit must go to Helen Drutt Gallery in Philadelphia for nurturing Staffel for most of his career and the current gallery, David Nolan, deserves kudos too for the best photographs I have ever seen, electrifying his art which from day one should have come with a light box. A second show with Hans Hoffman, his teacher and greatest muse, would make a good followup.
And lastly, on a personal note, Rudi was one of the finest and perhaps purest artists I have ever known; gentle, generous, a great conversationalist, free of ego and agendas and unendingly kind despite the inner demons that tormented him for much of his life.
The curator’s description of the exhibition follows.
Garth Clark is Chief Editor of CFile.
David Nolan Gallery’s White Magic: Robert Ryman, Rudolf Staffel, (New York, September 10 – October 25, 2014) brings together two masters – painter, Robert Ryman (b. Nashville, Tennessee, 1930) and ceramicist, Rudolf Staffel (b. San Antonio, Texas, 1911-2002) – who, within their respective media (each strictly reduced to a palette almost exclusively of white), achieve highly complex bodies of work that celebrate form and gesture.
There is little in these artists’ lives that directly link them to one another, yet over the course of parallel careers – Staffel working principally in Philadelphia, Ryman in New York City – they became intent on similar ideals and goals, each achieving a supreme degree of innovation and mastery in their respective practices to remarkably correlative ends. Alongside a group of paintings by Ryman, we will exhibit over 40 ceramic vessels created by Staffel from the 1950s through the early 1990s, making this the first major presentation of Staffel’s work in 16 years. This exhibition will provide an opportunity to look at the work of both artists in dialogue, imparting a deeper understanding of each.
Rudolf Staffel’s ceramics are included in such international museum collections as the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, the Philadelphia Museum of Art, The Smithsonian American Art Museum, Washington, D.C., The Victoria & Albert Museum, London, and the Museum Boijmans-van Beuningen, The Hague. He was the subject of two major retrospective exhibitions: in 1990 at the Museum voor Het Kruithuis/Museum for Contemporary Art (now the Stedelijk Museum), ‘s-Hertogenbosch, The Netherlands, and in 1997 at the Museum of Applied Arts, Helsinki and the Philadelphia Museum of Art. Critics and scholars including Arthur Danto, John Perrault, and Janet Koplos have written about his work.
Robert Ryman’s work can be found in numerous international museum collections, including The Museum of Modern Art, New York, Dia Art Foundation, New York, Hallen für Neue Kunst, Schaffhausen, and the Tate Gallery, London. He was recently the subject of the major critical monograph Robert Ryman: Critical Text Since 1967, edited by Vittorio Colaizzi and Karsten Schubert and with texts by Yve-Alain Bois, Donald Kuspit, Lucy Lippard and others.
Meredith Harper is the curator of this exhibition.