Jane Piper (1916-1991)
An important contributor to American coloristic modernism,
Jane Piper created a sophisticated oeuvre defined by experimentation
with color and gesture. Her role in American art was, in
part, guided by her studies with Philadelphia's premier
avant-garde artists. Her first teacher of note was Grace
Gemberling, a former student of influential painting teacher
Arthur B. Carles. She later took classes at the Pennsylvania
Academy of Fine Arts and at the Barnes Foundation, where
she had access to both the history of American painting
and the important developments of French Impressionism
and Post-Impressionism. The work of both Cézanne
and Matisse were important influences throughout her long
career.
Outside these institutions, Piper studied privately with
printmaker Earl Horter, who introduced her to Carles. Carles
became an important mentor to Piper, both as an instructor
and as a promoter of her work; he prompted dealer Robert
Carlen to give her a solo show in 1943, the first year
she began exhibiting. Carles also suggested that Piper
study at Hans Hofmann's school in Provincetown, Mass.,
which she did in 1941. Her connection to Cape Cod was a
long one; in 1964, she built a second home in Wellfleet,
where she spent many summers painting.
In using prismatic color and broad strokes of pigment
to define her compositions, Piper reveals the influence
of her teachers as well as her debts to Cézanne
and Matisse. She explored abstraction in the early part
of her career, using wide patches of color to structure
the space of her canvas. While her work was often highly
abstracted, Piper usually based her paintings on still
life and landscape, themes that she used throughout her
career. Paintings from the 1940s and 1950s incorporated
planes of color and were characterized by strong directional
movement. In the early 1960s, Piper began creating more
abstracted compositions, using blocks and broad patches
of color. Shortly after, she deliberately left abstraction
to pursue more representational imagery; her later style
is characterized by experimentation with the color white
that sets off and highlights the high key of the other
colors in the composition. In this period--indeed, throughout
her career--Piper used white extensively. One critic observed
that "she used white in a way that made it do almost
anything she wanted it to do--go back, come forward, stay
still, or seem to move." (1)
Piper enjoyed a long career marked by frequent exhibitions
at institutions including the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine
Arts, the Philadelphia Museum of Art, the Allentown Art
Museum, Lehigh University, Swarthmore College, and the
Woodmere Art Gallery. Her work has been the subject of
numerous positive reviews and essays, particularly from
the 1970s on, when she exhibited more frequently.
Although closely associated with the city of Philadelphia
(where she was born and raised), Piper also lived in Harlem,
Cape Cod, and Spain. It is, perhaps, her Philadelphia teaching
career that so closely aligned her with the city. In the
mid-1950's, Piper began teaching at institutions including
the Philadelphia Museum of Art and the Philadelphia College
of Art (now the University of the Arts). In this way, Piper
continued the lineage of high-keyed Philadelphia abstraction
that she inherited.
( 1) Larry Day, quoted in Bill Scott, Jane Piper and
Her Circle (Harrisburg, Pa.: The State Museum of Pennsylvania,
2000), 7.
© Copyright 2007 Hollis Taggart Galleries