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William Copley (artist)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Painting by William N. Copley (photo by Paolo Monti, 1960)

William N. Copley (January 24, 1919 – May 7, 1996) also known as CPLY, was an American painter, writer, gallerist, collector, patron, publisher and art entrepreneur.[1] His works as an artist have been classified as late Surrealist and precursory to Pop Art.[2]

YouTube Encyclopedic

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  • Copley, Boy with a Squirrel
  • Artists Talk: L.A. Legends, With Larry Bell, Billy Al Bengston, Ed Moses, and Ed Ruscha
  • Conservation of "Portrait of a Lady" by John Singleton Copley
  • John Singleton Copley
  • John Singleton Copley

Transcription

(piano playing) Beth: So imagine wanting to be an artist but you live in a city where there are virtually no artists, no art schools, no art museums, no galleries and no one who wants to buy serious paintings. This is precisely the situation that John Singleton Copley found himself in in Boston in the 1760's. Steven: We're looking at a portrait of Copley's half-brother. This is Henry Pelham and the painting is called Boy with Flying Squirrel. So for somebody who was largely self taught, the painting is pretty remarkable. My gaze goes first to his face, that wonderful red curtain gathers my attention and frames that face so beautifully. But when I'm done there, my eye runs down his shoulder, down his arm to his hand and just look at the precision with which those fingertips are rendered and they so beautifully and loosely hold that gold chain. My eye then runs down, of course, to the squirrel. It's wonderfully cute, he's nibbling on a little nut which then links up to the area where his dark coat on his back meet with the light coat of his belly. Which mirrors the edge of the sitter's cuff and then on the cuff, on one side you have the light catching and then on the near side you have that area in shadow. It just plays beautifully, alternating against itself. Beth: So while this is a portrait of Copley's half-brother, it's also a kind of demonstration piece. By 1765, when Copley painted this, he was a well-regarded professional portrait painter in Boston but he wanted to be more. Copley also knew that portrait painting was actually at the bottom of the hierarchy of subjects created by the academies in Europe. The highest paintings being paintings of religion and mythology and history, portraiture and still life being the lowest. But it was portraits that people wanted in the new American cities. Steven: Right, so the merchant class in Boston, the wealthy elite, had begun to really recognize the value of portraying themselves. But Copley wanted to push beyond that. Copley knew that in Europe painting was more. And so this painting was actually made, as you said, as a demonstration piece to see if he could hold his own with the European academies. Beth: So he had this packed up in someone's luggage who was going off to London and there it was actually pretty well received by Benjamin West, an American painter who was living in London who was very successful, and by Sir Joshua Reynolds who was president of the Royal Academy in England. So the first thing we might notice is that we're not looking at the front of the figure's face, we're looking at him from the side. So we think Copley did this because he wanted to show that he could paint not just portraits but also genre paintings or scenes of everyday life. I think Copley was also really showing off what he could do with foreshortening which is really a very difficult thing to do. If you look at the sitter's right hand, it's just perfectly foreshortened. As is the corner of the table. When this painting goes to England, Sir Joshua Reynolds does praise it, but he says, "Before too long you better come to London and get some real training "here before your manner and taste are corrupted or fixed by working "in this little way in Boston." Which I think gives us a sense of the way that England loomed as this important artistic presence. Copley felt that the situation in Boston was so inhospitable to artists that he said, "Artists were treated like shoemakers." Steven: So Copley's clearly aware of the limitations of Boston, limitations of the colonies. Beth: He's aware that portraiture, which is what he does, is a low form of art but he's also I think in a way very practical. He knows that this is what people want and he's able to do it masterfully and beautifully but there is, I think, a lingering sense that he's not painting the grand history and religious and mythological paintings of the European tradition and maybe can't compete on that level. Steven: So we have this beautiful, ambitious painting that situates John Singleton Copley in this very specific historical moment. (piano playing)

Early life and introduction to art

Copley was born in New York City in 1919 to parents John and Flora Lodwell; they died shortly after in the 1919 Spanish Flu epidemic. Copley was adopted in 1921 by Ira C. Copley, the owner of sixteen newspaper companies in Chicago and San Diego.[3] Ira C. Copley remarried after the death of his wife, Edith, several years after the adoption took place. The three lived in Aurora, Illinois, until Copley was ten years old whereby the family moved to Coronado Island, California.[4]

Copley was sent to Phillips Andover and then Yale University by his adopted parents. He was drafted in the Second World War in the middle of his education at Yale, a decision negotiated by the school and the army.[5] Copley experimented with politics upon returning home from the war, working as a reporter for his father's newspaper.[6]

By 1946, Copley met and married Marjorie Doris Wead, the daughter of a test pilot for the Navy.[7] Doris's sister was married to John Ployardt, a Canadian-born animator and narrator at Walt Disney Studios.[8] Copley and Ployardt soon became friends and Ployardt began introducing Copley to painting and Surrealism.[9] The two traveled to Mexico and New York, discovering art, meeting the artists behind the works, and grasping Surrealist ideas. It was during this time that Copley and Ployardt decided to open a gallery in Los Angeles to exhibit Surrealist works.[10]

Galleries and foundation

Copley and Ployardt tracked down Man Ray while living in Los Angeles. Ray then introduced them to Marcel Duchamp in New York City. There, Duchamp opened many doors for them, introducing the two to New York dealers in Surrealism.[11] In 1948, Copley and Ployardt opened The Copley Galleries in Beverly Hills, displaying works by artists including René Magritte, Max Ernst, Yves Tanguy, Roberto Matta, Joseph Cornell, and Man Ray.[12] However, Los Angeles had not yet caught on to the Surrealist scene as other locations such as New York City had done, and the Copley Galleries faced hardships in gaining popularity and sales. Copley painted part-time during the gallery's running from the encouragement of friends Duchamp and Ernst and worked on painting full-time when the gallery closed after its first year.[13]

Copley moved to Paris in 1949–50, leaving behind his wife and two children to continue to paint.[14] During his time in Paris, he remained in Surrealist circles and continued to paint with a uniquely American style. Man Ray introduced him to Noma Rathner, whom he married in 1954. Man Ray took numerous portraits of the Copleys and served as best man at their wedding in Paris.[15] Their home in Longpont-sur-Orge in the outskirts of Paris became a central gathering place in the postwar era for a community of Surrealists to reunite after their dispersal during the war.[16]

The Copleys developed the William and Noma Copley Foundation, later known as the Cassandra Collection, in 1953 with the funds from his father's inheritance.[17] The board, in which Marcel Duchamp was also an adviser, gave small grants to artists and musicians. Upon Duchamp's death in 1968, the William and Noma Copley Foundation (later the Cassandra Foundation) gave Marcel Duchamp's last work, "Etant Donnés" to the Philadelphia Museum of Art, where it is still on view.[18]

Collecting

From the time of the Copley Galleries until his death, Copley amassed a large collection of artworks with an emphasis on Surrealist works. The basis of his collection started when he began purchasing works that did not sell at the Copley Galleries.[19] From there, he amassed monumental works including Man Ray's "A l'Heure de l'Observatoire – Les Amoureux." Copley's collection was sold at auction in 1979 for $6.7 million, at the time the highest total for the auction of a single owner's collection in the United States.[20]

Artwork and exhibitions

Copley's first exhibition took place in Los Angeles in 1951 at Royer's Book Shop.[21] From there Copley participated in numerous solo and group exhibitions worldwide. In 1961, Copley was given an exhibition in Amsterdam by the Stedelijk Museum. The museum became the first public institution to add a Copley to their collection.[22]

Copley's paintings throughout the 1950s and 60s dealt with ironic and humorous images of stereotypical American symbols like the Western saloon, cowboys, and pin-up girls combined with flags.[23] His works during this period were often considered a combination of American and Mexican folk art and melded in well with the new young POP movement occurring in America when he returned to New York in the 1960s. Artists like Andy Warhol, Christo, Roy Lichtenstein and many others were frequent visitors at Copley's studio on Lower Broadway.[24] Copley believed that pop art had always interested him, claiming American pop art had much to do with "self-disgust" and "satire."[25]

The Letter Edged in Black Press (SMS)

In 1967, after a divorce with his second wife, Noma, Copley and new friend Dmitri Petrov decided to publish portfolios of 20th-century artist collaborations with the abbreviation SMS (for "Shit Must Stop").[26] Copley's Upper West Side loft became a meeting place for performers, artists, curators, and composers to work together on the open-ended collective.[27] The SMS portfolio contained six volumes, each of which were shipped out from the artists to subscribers. The works included came from artists both well-renowned and obscure, including Marcel Duchamp, Roy Lichtenstein, Man Ray, Christo, Richard Hamilton, Claes Oldenburg, John Cage, Terry Riley, La Monte Young, Dick Higgins, Ronnie Landfield, Bruce Nauman, Meret Oppenheim, Neil Jenney, Yoko Ono and others.[28][29]

CPLY X-Rated

Copley's works in the 1970s focused on his own understating of differences and challenges between men and women in romantic and sexual relationships. His works were now erotic, even pornographic. In 1974 he exhibited these new works at what was then the New York Cultural Center in Columbus Circle, New York in a show titled "CPLY X-Rated." These pieces were a sudden change from his previous romantic whimsical periods. The American public had difficulty with the material, for which Copley expressed, "Americans... don't know the difference between eroticism and pornography. Because eroticism has always existed in art. And pornography has never necessarily been in art."[30] Copley's experienced greater feedback in Europe, where the work was then well received. In conjunction with the New York Cultural Center Show, there was a special "CPLY X-Rated Poster and Catalog.

Later years

Copley moved to Roxbury, Connecticut in 1980, where he built a studio and spent time among friends.[31] In 1992 he moved full-time to Key West, Florida, due to health issues and lived with his sixth and final wife, Cynthia Gooch. He died on May 7, 1996, at age 77 from complications from a stroke he had suffered three weeks earlier.[32]

Mr. Copley's first five marriages ended in divorce. He had a son and two daughters.[33] His daughter, Claire S. Copley,[34] founded the short-lived, but influential Claire Copley Gallery, which exhibited important works by Michael Asher and Bas Jan Ader.[35]

Selected solo exhibitions

  • 2022 "Works on Paper", Galerie Max Hetzler, Berlin
  • 2022 Sadie Coles HQ, London
  • 2020 "The Ballad of William N. Copley", Galerie Max Hetzler, Berlin
  • 2020 "The New York Years", Kasmin, New York
  • 2020 "William N. Copley: The Temptation of St. Anthony (Revisited)", Nino Mier, Los Angeles
  • 2020 "William N. Copley: Drawings and Paintings 1966–1991", Nino Mier, Los Angeles
  • 2018 "William N. Copley: The Coffin They Carry You Off In", Institute of Contemporary Art (ICA), Miami
  • 2018 "Publishing the Portable Museum: William N. Copley’s The Letter Edged in Black Press", Alden Projects, New York
  • 2017 "William N. Copley: Women", Kasmin Gallery, New York (catalogue)
  • 2016 "William N. Copley: The World According to CPLY", The Menil Collection, Houston (travelled to Fondazione Prada, Milan)
  • 2016 "The World According to CPLY", The Menil Collection, Houston
  • 2015 Galerie 1900-2000, Paris
  • 2015 "William N. Copley: Drawings (1962 – 1973)", Kasmin Gallery, New York
  • 2015 "William N. Copley: Paintings from 1960 – 1994", Showroom by Paul van Esch & Partners Art Advisory, Amsterdam
  • 2014 "William N. Copley: Paintings and Mirrors", Michael Fuchs Galerie, Berlin
  • 2013 "Finally We Laugh", Galerie Linn Lühn, Düsseldorf (catalogue)
  • 2013 "William Copley & Big Fat Black Cock", Inc. Gang Bust, Venus Over Manhattan, New York (catalogue)
  • 2012 "Patriotism of CPLY and All That", Kasmin Gallery, New York
  • 2012 "William N. Copley: Works 1948 – 1983", Galerie Von Braunbehrens, Munich (catalogue)
  • 2012 Museum Frieder Burda, Baden Baden
  • 2011 "X-Rated," Sadie Coles HQ, London
  • 2010 "CPLY: X-Rated," Paul Kasmin Gallery, New York
  • 2004 Musée d'Art Moderne et Contemporain
  • 1980–81 Badischer Kunstverein, Karlsruhe, Germany
    • Stedelijk Van Abbemuseum, Eindhoven, The Netherlands (traveling retrospective)
    • Musée National d'Art Moderne, Centre Georges Pompidou, Paris
    • Kunsthalle Bern
  • 1979 "CPLY: Reflections on a Past Life," Institute of the Arts, Rice University, Houston
  • 1974 "CPLY/X-RATED," New York Cultural Center, New York

Selected group exhibitions

Selected press

Museum and public collections

Notes

  1. ^ "William N. Copley Biography". William N. Copley Estate/Copley LLC, New York. Retrieved April 7, 2020.
  2. ^ "Art Directory- William N. Copley". Art Directory.
  3. ^ Smith, Roberta (May 9, 1996). "William N. Copley, 77, Painter And Collector of Surrealist Art". New York Times Obituaries. NY Times.
  4. ^ "William N. Copley Biography". William N. Copley Estate/Copley LLC, New York. Retrieved April 7, 2020.
  5. ^ "William N. Copley Biography". William N. Copley Estate/Copley LLC, New York. Retrieved April 7, 2020.
  6. ^ "William N. Copley Biography". William N. Copley Estate/Copley LLC, New York. Retrieved April 7, 2020.
  7. ^ "William N. Copley Biography". William N. Copley Estate/Copley LLC, New York. Retrieved April 7, 2020.
  8. ^ "William N. Copley Biography". William N. Copley Estate/Copley LLC, New York. Retrieved April 7, 2020.
  9. ^ "William N. Copley Biography". William N. Copley Estate/Copley LLC, New York. Retrieved April 7, 2020.
  10. ^ "William N. Copley Biography". William N. Copley Estate/Copley LLC, New York. Retrieved April 7, 2020.
  11. ^ "William N. Copley Biography". William N. Copley Estate/Copley LLC, New York. Retrieved April 7, 2020.
  12. ^ The Jonathan Griffin, "The Surrealist Bungalow: William N. Copley and the Copley Galleries (1948–49)," east of Borneo (January 13, 2014) https://eastofborneo.org/articles/the-surrealist-bungalow-william-n-copley-and-the-copley-galleries-1948-49/
  13. ^ Cummings, Paul. "Oral History Interview with William Copley". Interview. Archives of American Art.
  14. ^ "Art Directory-". Art Directory.
  15. ^ Neil Baldwin, Man Ray. American Artist, (Da Capo Press, 1988), 398
  16. ^ Cay Sophie Rabinowitz, ed. William N. Copley: An American Close to Paris: Longpont-Sur-Orge (New York: Osmos, 2018).
  17. ^ "Archives Directory- Copley, William Nelson". The Frick Collection.
  18. ^ "William N. Copley Biography". William N. Copley Estate/Copley LLC, New York. Retrieved April 7, 2020.
  19. ^ Cummings, Paul. "Oral History Interview with William Copley". Interview. Archives of American Art.
  20. ^ Smith, Roberta (May 9, 1996). "William N. Copley, 77, Painter And Collector of Surrealist Art". New York Times Obituaries. NY Times.
  21. ^ "William N. Copley Biography". William N. Copley Estate/Copley LLC, New York. Retrieved April 7, 2020.
  22. ^ "William N. Copley Biography". William N. Copley Estate/Copley LLC, New York. Retrieved April 7, 2020.
  23. ^ "Art Directory- William N. Copley". Art Directory.
  24. ^ "William N. Copley Biography". William N. Copley Estate/Copley LLC, New York. Retrieved April 7, 2020.
  25. ^ "William N. Copley Biography". William N. Copley Estate/Copley LLC, New York. Retrieved April 7, 2020.
  26. ^ "William N. Copley Biography". William N. Copley Estate/Copley LLC, New York. Retrieved April 7, 2020.
  27. ^ "SMS: A Collection of Multiples". Archives. Davidson Galleries.
  28. ^ Brooklyn Museum, open collection, objects
  29. ^ "SMS: A Collection of Multiples". Archives. Davidson Galleries.
  30. ^ Cummings, Paul. "Oral History Interview with William Copley". Interview. Archives of American Art.
  31. ^ "William N. Copley Biography". William N. Copley Estate/Copley LLC, New York. Retrieved April 7, 2020.
  32. ^ Smith, Roberta (May 9, 1996). "William N. Copley, 77, Painter And Collector of Surrealist Art". New York Times Obituaries. NY Times.
  33. ^ Smith, Roberta (May 9, 1996). "William N. Copley, 77, Painter And Collector of Surrealist Art". New York Times Obituaries. NY Times.
  34. ^ "Alan Eisenberg Marries Claire Copley". The New York Times. May 24, 1982.
  35. ^ Griffin, Jonathan. "The Surrealist Bungalow: William N. Copley and the Copley Galleries (1948–49)." East of Borneo, January 13, 2014, http://www.eastofborneo.org/articles/the-surrealist-bungalow-william-n-copley-and-the-copley-galleries-1948-49
This page was last edited on 30 March 2024, at 15:53
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