Alfred
H. Maurer was born on April 21, 1868, the son of the
Currier & Ives artist, Louis Maurer. In 1884 he left
school to work in the family lithographic enterprise
of Maurer and Heppenheimer. One year later he enrolled
at the National Academy of Design where he studied under
Edgar Ward. He attended selected classes at the National
Academy of Design beginning in 1885 and continuing through
1897. In 1897 Maurer sailed for France in search
of the refinements afforded by Parisian art training.
Shortly after arriving in the great "city of lights" he
registered for classes at the Académie Julian,
but attended classes there for only three weeks before
striking out on his own. Maurer lived and worked in France
from 1897-1901 and from 1902-1914.
Maurer officially launched his career in 1901 with fashionable
Whistlerian and Chase-inspired, fin-de-siècle
portraits, which garnered critical acclaim on both sides
of the Atlantic. He simultaneously painted engaging genre
scenes that chronicled the pulse of contemporary life
at Parisian cafés, dance halls, and along the
shore. By late 1906-07, however, Maurer had shifted his
artistic direction and had committed to working in a
Fauve aesthetic. He was creating striking new paintings
executed with expressive brushwork and rendered with
a concentration on an intensified palette of highly saturated
colors. Maurer exhibited his Fauve landscapes, portraits
and still lifes at important international exhibitions
including the 1907 Salon d'Automne, where his colorful
paintings could be seen in context with other similar
works by leading Fauve artists.
In 1909 Maurer debuted his new Fauve paintings in a
two-man exhibition with John Marin at Alfred Stieglitz's
New York gallery, "291." American critics,
reviewing this landmark exhibit, labeled Maurer’s
Fauve pictures everything from "screams in primary
colors" to "color notes of spiritual impressions."
One year later, in 1910, Maurer again exhibited at Stieglitz's
gallery in a group exhibition called "The Younger
American Painters." In 1913 he had an important
showing of his work at the Folsom Galleries in New York
and sent four paintings from France to New York for inclusion
in the legendary 1913 Armory Show.
With the advent of World War I, Maurer was forced to
leave France and return to the United States. After reestablishing
himself in New York in 1914, Maurer sought to find support
and recognition for his new modernist work. In 1916 he
participated in the Forum exhibition held at Anderson
Galleries and exhibited regularly with the New York based
Society of Independent Artists. He was elected a director
of this organization in 1919. In 1924 the dealer
Erhard Weyhe offered Maurer sustained support for his
artistic endeavors and bought the contents of the artist’s
studio. He represented Maurer at his Lexington Avenue
gallery and offered him exhibitions nearly every year
until 1932.
In the 1920s and early 30s Maurer's visual repertoire
expanded to include a range of new modernist forms and
structures. Throughout the twenties Maurer painted brilliantly
colored landscapes depicting the wooded areas, winding
creeks and rolling hills around the Shady Brook boarding
house, where he stayed in Ulster County from April/May
until November, nearly every year from 1916 until 1932.
Around 1926 Maurer devoted a good deal of time to painting
flower studies infused with a marked degree of spontaneity.
These florals, executed in various media, including oils
and gouache, were scripted in a kind of personal calligraphy.
During the 1920s Maurer became an important American
pioneer of Cubist painting. He developed a highly personal
and identifiable Cubist style. He devoted a great deal
of time to working on Cubist still lifes and heads, which
he rendered through highly innovative painting methods
and techniques. Around 1927-28 after moving into a new
studio space, he began working from the live model. Using
the model as a focal point, he created figurative paintings
and drawings that ranged from Cubist-oriented to Cézannesque,
to those that were more whimsical in spirit. During the
1920s Maurer also became fixated on painting images of
female figures, sometimes referred to as the "Two
Sister" paintings. These figure-based compositions
took a variety of forms. At times they were naturalistic
and in other instances they were highly provocative abstract
statements.
In Maurer’s last years, much of his work became
decisively Expressionist in character. Figurative
distortions took on pronounced importance in his art, as
formal and emotive elements collided with amplified intensity.
At times Maurer's work seemed to echo a sort of personal
angst, a troubling unrest that ultimately culminated in
the artist's tragic suicide in 1932.
© Copyright 2007 Hollis Taggart Galleries