Controversial, flamboyant, contentious, brilliant--Thomas Hart
Benton (1889-1975) was certainly all of those. Few American
artists have stirred so much love and hatred as he did in a
career that lasted almost seventy years. Although his painting
aroused much controversy, perhaps equally as much was created by
his words, for his piercing wit, profane sarcasms, and insightful
condemnations were fired off without restraint. In this fiery and
provocative autobiography, Benton presents an intriguing records
of American art and society during his lifetime.
The first installment of this work was published in 1937, but
Benton continued his life story in chapters added to editions
published in 1951 and 1968. This new edition includes seventy-six
drawings that add much to his narrative, plus a foreword
discussing Benton's place in American art and an afterword
covering his career after 1968, both written by art historian
Matthew Baigell.
Although Benton is most famous as a regionalist painter and
muralist, his complex and fascinating career brought him into
contact with many of the most important artists and thinkers of
the century, including Jackson Pollock, Grant Wood, Julian
Huxley, Felix Frankfurter, Eugene Debbs, John Reed, and Harry
Truman. While living in New York and on Martha's Vineyard in the
1920s and 1930s, Benton often associated with leading
intellectuals and radicals. However, when his evolving principles
of art led him away from an interest in Marxism, he was bitterly
attacked by many of his former friends, and his account of that
time reveals strikingly the fierce critical battles he faced in
trying to establish his own artistic vision.
Critics on the Left were not his only opponents, however, and
equally revealing are his responses to the moral condemnations
heaped on his murals done for the states of Indiana and Missouri
and on his realistic nudes of the late 1930s.
Throughout his account, from descriptions of his boyhood in
southwest Missouri, his travels, and his career to discussions of
specific works of art and other artists, Benton portrays people
and events as vividly in words as he does in his paintings.