Beach boys:
Four days in Wainscott
Your blogger just returned from a jaunt to Wainscott NY (Long Island), and my lodgings had a copy of a Vanity Fair magazine that featured East Hampton's history as an art colony. I knew of the Jackson Pollock house, of course. But one name that popped off the page for me was Harold Stevenson, painter of "The New Adam" (1962), the spectacular (and huge, 8 ft. x 39 ft.) multi-panel artwork depicting the full-frontal naked body of bisexual actor Sal Mineo (1939-1976). To wit:
For those who might want to know a bit more:
Harold Stevenson
Openly gay artist Harold Stevenson Jr
was born in 1929 in Idabel, southeastern Oklahoma near the Texas
border, where he decided to be a painter while still in the second
grade. At age ten he opened a painting studio right in the middle of
town, painting portraits (and selling them). Even while later living
abroad, he maintained an address in Idabel, where he lived until his
death in a log cabin in the woods just outside of town. The artist
incorporated his own hometown history into his painting when he created
one hundred portraits of residents of Idabel for The Great Society
(1967–68). Stevenson sold his estate in Wainscott NY (the Hamptons) and
returned to reside in Idabel, where he died in 2018 at age 89.
Mitchell Algus, Harold’s gallery representative since 1992, recalls
asking Stevenson if he was teased for being gay while a schoolboy.
Harold replied, “Honey, I owned that school.” Stevenson’s longtime
partner was Lloyd Tugwell II, a Choctaw art teacher who died in 2005
after a fall down the stairs at their Hamptons home. He is buried in the
Stevenson family plot in Idabel.
In 1949 Stevenson moved to New York to
pursue a career in art and almost immediately became the darling of
international high society – Stravinsky, Cole Porter, Elizabeth Arden,
Tennessee Williams, the Duke and Duchess of Windsor, Truman Capote,
Kitty Carlisle, Gloria Swanson, Christian Dior, Peggy Guggenheim,
Salvador Dali and the like. As an exhibitor in the 1964 Venice Biennale,
his paintings of nude men were confiscated for indecency.
He
was part of the avant-garde movement and consequently befriended Andy Warhol, who
would make Stevenson the subject of Warhol’s first film, Harold, and would include him in the pop artist’s video Heat (1972).
In 1959, Stevenson relocated to Europe, where he resided in France and
Italy and exhibited regularly in galleries for nearly twenty years. He
was itinerant his entire life, jockeying between New York, Paris, Key
West and southeast Oklahoma. During a career of nearly seven decades,
the nude male figure always dominated his works (often labeled
"homoerotic fantasies"), but the artist’s most iconic works were
products from the 1960s.
The New Adam (1962)
Painting by Harold Stevenson Jr.; Model, actor Sal Mineo (1939-1976)
In early 1963 visitors to the Galerie Iris Clert,
Paris, were hardly prepared for the painting that greeted them, a
colossal 8-foot-tall by 39-foot-long male nude, precisely and sensually
rendered in full anatomical detail. In Paris (and later in New York,
Chicago, and L.A.), the work was greeted with “shock,” recalls
self-taught Harold Stevenson, who conceived The New Adam as an
homage to his lover, Lord Timothy Willoughby d’Eresby – although he used
the actor Sal Mineo as his model. In an interview, Harold said of
Mineo, “He was a sweetheart person, and kind of stupid.” Lord Willoughby
(1936-1963), who was the grandson of Lady Astor, went missing in the Mediterranean
Sea with his crew in 1963 on the way to Corsica from Cap Ferrat. Shortly before that tragic event, Stevenson had
painted a portrait of him in 25 pieces, displayed in Paris in 1962.
Stevenson had been invited along for the sailing, but declined.
Spread over nine linen panels and initially installed as a three-wall wraparound, The New Adam presented
a vast, seemingly unbounded ocean of flesh. This work engaged a much
older tradition in art, recalling countless female odalisques, as well
as Michelangelo’s iconic image of Adam, whose pointing gesture Stevenson
redirects inward, toward the body. Over 40 years later, the Guggenheim
Museum New York was honored through an anonymous gift to have this
landmark of art history join its permanent collection in 2005, but it
has not been displayed since 2006.
Eye of Lightning Billy (1962),
Stevenson’s large-scale painting of the close-up of a human eye, was
included in the pivotal exhibition The New Realists (1962), which also
featured artists like Robert Rauschenberg, Andy Warhol, Robert Indiana
and many others. The following year, Stevenson exhibited a 48-foot-high
painting of the matador El Cordobas at the Eiffel Tower. It had to be
taken down after four days because of the enormous traffic jams it
caused. In the 1980s, while living in Key West, he incorporated
references to Greco-Roman and Egyptian archetypes into his works. In the
last decade of his life Stevenson focused on sensuous paintings of the
young model Christopher John.
Sources: Ron Clark and Ted Mann
Curious blog visitors who want to know more about Sal Mineo can head on over to my other blog:
That first picture is givin' me LIFE 🙂
ReplyDeleteReally interesting piece on Harold Stevenson Jr. Thank you!
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