Discipline: Visual Art

James Brooks

Discipline: Visual Art
Region: Easthampton, NY
MacDowell Fellowships: 1955
James D. Brooks (1906–1992) was an American muralist, abstract painter, and winner of the Logan Medal of the Arts. Brooks studied art at Southern Methodist University, Dallas, and, after moving to New York in 1926, took night classes at the Art Students League. Like many other Abstract Expressionists, Brooks painted murals for the Works Progress Administration (WPA) Federal Art Project in the late 1930s and early 1940s. His best-known project was a mural titled Flight (1940–42) at the International Marine Terminal building (Terminal A) at LaGuardia Airport. This vibrant, monumental work — the largest of the WPA murals — measures 12 feet high and 237 feet long and depicts the history of flying, from early mythology to the latest innovations, in a clean, Social Realist style. From 1942 to 1945, Brooks served as a combat artist with the U.S. Army in the Middle East and returned to New York in 1946, at the height of what would later be termed the Abstract Expressionist movement. An inveterate risk taker, he soon abandoned figuration for abstraction. He reconnected with Jackson Pollock, a friend from the WPA days. Brooks not only took over their Eighth Street studio when Pollock and Lee Krasner moved to Long Island, but also credited Pollock with encouraging him to try a more gestural style. During the late 1940s, Brooks's aesthetic evolved from a loose derivation of Cubism to a moodier, more atmospheric style. In the summer of 1947, Brooks had a breakthrough. He was painting on paper, and glued the paper onto heavy cloth for archival purposes. He noticed that the paste he used to attach the paper to the cloth bled through to the side he was painting on. From then on he would start by working on the cloth and then switch to the front of the painting, combining accidents with deliberate choices in an approach that he used for several years. In the 1960s, Brooks shifted styles again, building compositions out of larger, bolder, and simpler forms. Brooks had his first solo show at the Peridot Gallery, New York (1949), and continued to show regularly in New York galleries over the next 30 years. In 1963, the Whitney Museum of American Art, New York, mounted a retrospective that traveled Brandeis University, Baltimore Museum of Art; Walker Art Center in Minneapolis, the Washington Gallery of Modern Art, and University of California Art Galleries in Los Angeles. Another retrospective toured in 1975, and yet another was installed at Portland Museum of Art (Maine) in 1983. His work was featured in the Whitney annuals of 1950, 1951, 1953–55, 1957–59, 1963, and 1967; “12 Americans” at the Museum of Modern Art in 1956; and “Documenta” in Kassel, Germany in 1959. He received a John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation Fellowship in 1969.

Studios

Adams

James Brooks worked in the Adams studio.

Given to the MacDowell Association by Margaret Adams of Chicago, the half-timbered, stuccoed Adams Studio was designed by MacDowell Fellow and architect F. Tolles Chamberlin ca. 1914. Chamberlin was primarily a painter, but also provided designs for the Lodge and an early renovation of the main hall. The studio’s structural integrity was restored during a thorough renovation in…

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