The son and grandson of architects, Bluemner was born in
Hanover, Germany, in 1867, and was encouraged to follow in
his family’s trade. He showed early promise as an artist
as well, and his first one-man show of portraits was held
at the Berlin Latin School in 1886. In 1892 he won a medal
at the Royal Academy of Design in Berlin where he studied
painting and architecture. Dissatisfied with the restrictive
aesthetic policies of Emperor Wilhelm II’s government,
Bluemner left for America that same year.
Bluemner arrived in New York, then moved on to Chicago in
1893, hoping to gain architectural commissions at the World’s
Columbian Exposition. He designed prefabricated units for
the Exposition and freelanced as a draftsman. He returned
to New York in 1901, and the following year he won a commission
for the Bronx Borough Courthouse that his partner finagled
away using Bluemner’s design. Although Bluemner sued
and eventually won the lawsuit, the experience permanently
turned him away from architecture. Between 1908 and 1910,
Bluemner began painting in earnest, making sketching trips
throughout New Jersey and Long Island. In 1910, the year
he “kicked the building business over,” he met
Alfred Stieglitz, who sparked his interest in the artistic
innovations of the European and American avant-garde. Bluemner
painted his first oil in 1911.
In 1912 Bluemner sailed for Europe, where he had a one-man
show of landscapes at the Gurlitt Galleries in Berlin. After
Berlin, he traveled to Paris and Italy where he saw the work
of Matisse, Cézanne, and the Futurists, and created
thousands of sketches inspired by the museums he visited.
Stopping over in England, Bluemner toured Roger Fry's Post-Impressionist
exhibition at Grafton Galleries and became fully committed
to the modernist ideology.
Upon his return to the United States, Bluemner contributed
one landscape to the 1913 Armory Show and wrote an article
defending modernism for Stieglitz’s progressive publication Camera
Work. The ongoing connection with Stieglitz had a significant
impact on Bluemner’s career—in 1915 Stieglitz
gave him a solo exhibition at his gallery, 291. Bluemner’s
paintings of this period were tightly structured compositions
in the Cubist manner blazing with Fauve-inspired reds, oranges,
and contrasting hues. Bluemner exhibited in the 1916 Forum
Exhibition and regularly at the Bourgeois Gallery (artist
George Of introduced him to proprietor Stephan Bourgeois,
who remained a lifelong friend). He also showed at the Montross
Gallery, mainly exhibiting intensely colored oils synthesizing
abstract and concrete form that were based on earlier sketches
of New Jersey countryscapes and factories. Stieglitz continued
to support him and gave him a solo show in 1928. The following
year Bluemner had a one-man exhibition at the Whitney Studio
Galleries.
Bluemner was fascinated with the formal, emotional, and
spiritual qualities of strong color. He dubbed himself the “Vermillionaire” in
reference to his reliance on bright red hues for his houses
and barns. He explored his color theories in angular, brightly
colored landscapes, abstracted from nature. As his career
progressed, Bluemner found inspiration in classical music
and Freudian concepts of the subconscious. His late compositions
in oil or casein, on which he often bestowed titles alluding
to music, became more abstract, displaying heightened emotional
content, simplified masses, and pulsating color.
After his wife’s death in 1926, Bluemner moved to
South Braintree, Massachusetts, to live in virtual seclusion.
He continued to paint and exhibit until he was involved in
an auto accident and told he could never paint again. Bluemner
died by his own hand on January 12, 1938.
Underappreciated and financially impoverished during his
lifetime, Bluemner is today the object of renewed critical
and public interest. In 2005–06, his career was the
subject of a major retrospective, “Oscar Bluemner:
A Passion for Color,” organized by the Whitney Museum
of American Art, New York. Bluemner is represented in private
and public institutions, including the Metropolitan Museum
of Art, New York; the Museum of Modern Art, New York; the
Phillips Collection, and the Corcoran Gallery, both in Washington,
D.C.; the Montclair Art Museum, New Jersey, and the Amon
Carter Museum of Western Art, Texas.
© Copyright 2007 Hollis Taggart Galleries