As a painter, William Baziotes regularly drew on Surrealist
and primitive sources. The poetic quality of his work is
rooted in his mastery of the technical aspects of painting,
his ability to mine the cultures of the past, and, most importantly,
his talent for marrying the cerebral and whimsical. Writings
by Charles Baudelaire and the French Symbolist poets provided
potent inspiration for Baziotes, who also yearned to express
deep-seated emotions and states of mind.
Baziotes adopted the Surrealists’ investment in fantasy
and the principle of automatism as points of departure for
his compositions. In 1942, Baziotes, his wife Ethel, Robert
Motherwell, Jackson Pollock, and Lee Krasner began to meet
regularly to play Surrealist games and to write poetry together.
This spirit of openness and collaboration shaped Baziotes’ artistic
sensibilities and hastened the incorporation of Surrealist
elements in his work. In order to balance the spontaneity
of automatic painting, Baziotes also assimilated Synthetic
Cubist techniques; he was familiar with the work of Joan
Miró and Pablo Picasso.
Baziotes’ understanding of Surrealism was highly personal—he
drew inspiration from myriad sources and used many layers
of translucent glaze to create psychically charged paintings
that resonated with the memory of their creation. Although
spiritual intensity suffuses the work, the iconography, usually
biomorphic, is abstracted and evocative, never explicit.
Baziotes explained this intentional ambiguity in 1959: “It
is the mysterious that I love in my painting. It is the stillness
and the silence. I want my picture to take effect very slowly,
to obsess and to haunt.”(1) Rarely literal, his titles
are clues to the layers of symbolic and personal meaning.
Born and raised in Pittsburgh, Baziotes began his formal
art training in 1933 at the National Academy of Design in
New York City, where he studied through 1936 with Charles
Curran, Ivan Olinsky, Gifford Beal, and Leon Kroll. After
three years at the Academy, Baziotes started painting realistic
landscapes and still lifes. While employed by the WPA Art
Project in the late 1930s, he began to execute works in a
more stylized manner and showed diminishing interest in rendering
subjects with anatomical verity.
The 1940s brought close relationships with many artists
in the emerging Abstract Expressionist group. Although Baziotes
shared their interest in primitive art and automatism, his
work consistently displayed stronger affinities with European
surrealism. Baziotes met Chilean-born Surrealist Roberto
Matta in May 1940, the same year he exhibited with the Surrealists
in a group show organized for the New School. By 1941, Baziotes
was actively experimenting with abstraction and Matta introduced
him to Robert Motherwell. The following year Baziotes exhibited
in the “First Papers of Surrealism” exhibition,
along with artists including Motherwell and David Hare. Baziotes
was honored with his first one-man show in New York in 1944
at Peggy Guggenheim’s Art of This Century Gallery.
His next solo showing was in 1946 at the Kootz Gallery, which
represented Baziotes through 1958. In 1962, he was one of
the celebrated artists included in Sydney Janis’ important
exhibition, Ten American Painters.
Baziotes, who was of Greek descent, often used the forms
that appeared in the ancient sculpture he owned, and during
the 1950s he studied Greek sculpture at the Metropolitan
Museum of Art. Baziotes drew visual inspiration from a wide
range of sources, including the rich colors of Persian miniatures
and even the grotesque variations seen in specimens from
the natural sciences.
In the latter part of his career, Baziotes taught extensively.
He became a founding member of the school on Eighth Street
in 1948 and in the years that followed, he taught at the
Brooklyn Museum Art School, People’s Art Center, the
Museum of Modern Art, and Hunter College in New York.
1) William Baziotes, It Is 4 (Autumn 1959), 11.
© Copyright 2007 Hollis Taggart Galleries