Gifted, highly original painter Arnold Friedman charted
his own unique course in early twentieth-century modernism.
Friedman was born to Hungarian Jewish parents in Corona,
Queens, where he worked as a post office clerk for more
than forty years, painting on evenings and weekends. He
would only devote himself to full-time painting after he
retired at age 59 in 1933. Under the auspices of the Federal
Arts Project of the Works Progress Administration, Friedman
painted murals for Chalfonte-Haddon Hall in Atlantic City,
New Jersey and post office buildings in Orange, Virginia;
Kingstree, South Carolina; and Warrenton, Georgia.
Friedman’s style underwent several transformations
during his career. He began working as a fine artist in
1905 under the tutelage of Robert Henri and Kenneth Hayes
Miller at the Art Students League in New York. These painters
had an important influence on his early style, which was
geared towards representational subjects. However,
during his studies at the Art Students League, Friedman
found himself a misfit as an older postal clerk, and harnessed
the belief that “every painter must learn his
own trade.”
In 1909, Friedman took a six-month leave of absence from
his job to study art in Paris. During this time, he was
exposed to the virtues of Impressionism. He was most influenced
by the Pointillism of Camille Pisarro, and his admiration
of other Impressionists and Post-Impressionists was reflected
in his own art after his return to New York. Friedman’s
trip to France also introduced him to Cubism, which he
went on to experiment with for a brief period. Drawing
extensively from these European influences, Friedman developed
his own style and created a unique approach to painting.
Upon his return to New York, Friedman employed cool tonalities
and smooth finishes; he generally painted traditional subjects
of landscapes, portraits, and nudes all expressing his
deep commitment to color. Friedman also worked in a Synchromist-inspired
idiom at this time, exploring color contrasts through abstracted
planes. In the 1910s and 1920s, he exhibited with
many of the most avant-garde venues and dealers of the
period, including the Montross Galleries, the Society of
Independent Artists, and Bourgeois Galleries.
Later in his career, Friedman devoted himself to working
from nature in an abstracted style, abandoning the brush
for a palette knife. This method of painting allowed for
powerful effects of texture and abbreviated forms. His
style during his later career is distinct, as Friedman
painted with scumbled surfaces that create contours and
texture to define characteristics of his subjects, typically
landscapes, cityscapes, interiors, still lifes, and portraits.
Throughout his career, he received attention from the most
influential critics of his era; these reviews generally
praised Friedman’s individuality. In 1945 Clement
Greenberg described a group of paintings that “established
him as one of the strongest and most original landscapists
we have.” Greenberg went on to observe, “His
originality is the expression of a pure, honest, serious,
and independent personality rather than of a method.”(1)
Until his death in his seventies, Friedman was actively
painting and developing his unique style. His oeuvre appears
to have been limited to approximately 300 works.
Friedman’s work is represented in major collections,
including the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the Museum of
Modern Art, the Smithsonian American Art Museum, the Newark
Museum, and the Detroit Institute of Arts. He was also
a member of the Society of Independent Artists and the
Salons of America.
1. Clement Greenberg, “Art,” The Nation,
133 (March 17, 1945), 314.
© Copyright 2007 Hollis Taggart Galleries