The son of German immigrants, William Sommer was born
in Detroit on January 18, 1867. He was largely self-taught,
but received instruction early on from artist and commercial
lithographer Julius Melchers. In 1881 Melchers helped Sommer
obtain an apprenticeship with the Detroit Calvert Lithograph
Company. After his seven-year apprenticeship concluded,
Sommer established a solid reputation as a lithographer,
and job offers took him to Boston, New York, and England.
In 1890 Sommer traveled to Europe with, and at the expense
of, fellow lithographer Fred Hager. He completed a year
of additional training in Munich, where he worked with
Professors Johann Herterich, Ludwig Schmid, and Adolph
Menzel, and he made brief excursions to the Alps, Italy
and Holland. When he returned to the United States, Sommer
supported himself as a commercial lithographer in New York,
while pursuing his own art in paints and pastels. In keeping
with the Munich aesthetic, he painted portraits in predominantly
earthen tones with broad strokes of the brush.
In 1907 Sommer accepted a position with the Otis Lithograph
Company of Cleveland, Ohio. His fellow lithographers at
Otis included William Zorach and Abel Warshawsky, both
of whom soon left to study art in Paris. In 1911 Sommer
co-founded the Kokoon Arts Club to promote modern art in
Cleveland. Zorach and Warshawsky joined the group upon
returning from Paris. Warshawsky taught Sommer the fundamentals
of Impressionism, the style that Sommer practiced from
1910 to 1912. Zorach introduced Sommer to Post-Impressionism—an
influence that registered in the large, flat areas of bright
color and simplified forms in Sommer’s works of 1913
and 1914. A visit to the 1913 Armory Show in New York sparked
an interest in works by Henri Matisse and the Fauves, and
Sommer’s canvases began displaying similarly vivid
colors and energetic brushwork.
In 1914 Sommer relocated to Brandywine, midway between
Cleveland and Akron. He converted an abandoned schoolhouse
into a studio, producing festive watercolors of sensuous
nudes that show Matisse’s influence. He kept up with
the vanguard artists and thinkers through his job at Otis.
Inspired by Cézanne and German Expressionism, Sommer
began combining angular and curving forms in his compositions
in about 1917. Increasingly, through the mid-1920s, he
painted expressive, geometric oils with dense forms in
earth tones, focusing on themes of children, livestock,
landscapes, and still lifes. Throughout his career, Sommer
assimilated fractured masses by adopting flat, patterned
arrangements inspired by Matisse’s lines and colors.
By the late 1920s, Sommer’s classic period, he had
developed his own unique style. Using watercolor, which
had become his primary medium, he handled Midwestern subject
matter according to the aesthetic principles of European
modernism. In 1924 the Cleveland Museum of Art awarded
Sommer First Prize for drawing; thereafter, he garnered
awards from that institution and exhibited yearly in their
May shows. From his earliest Munich works to the portraits
and genre subjects of the 1940s, Sommer consistently displayed
mastery of line.
Sommer was hard hit by the Depression and gladly accepted
work on several large-scale murals for federal art projects.
He continued to paint until his death on June 20, 1949.
Art critic Hilton Kramer noted in the New York Times that “his
work seems to have been born . . . of a remarkable inner
serenity and lyric grace. Whatever the disorder or disappointments
of his life, his art is beautifully controlled.” The
Cleveland Museum of Art celebrated Sommer’s career
with a memorial exhibition in 1950, and the Akron Art Institute
hosted a retrospective show in 1970.
Sommer’s work is represented in leading public collections,
among them the Philadelphia Museum of Art; the Art Institute
of Chicago; the Fogg Art Museum, Cambridge, Massachusetts;
the Cleveland Museum of Art; the Butler Institute of American
Art, Youngstown, Ohio; Akron Art Institute; and Oberlin College,
Oberlin, Ohio.
© Copyright 2007 Hollis Taggart Galleries