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(From the catalog)
Some time in 1958, Jay DeFeo propped against the sliding double door of her backroom studio on San Franciscos Fillmore Street a roughly seven-by-nine-foot canvas that bore the scraped-down green, pink, and orange marks of one of her discarded mountain series paintings and under those, faint traces of another, still earlier picture on the theme, prophetically enough, of Jacob wrestling with the angel. Onto this surface she began loading piles of mostly white and dark-gray oil paint in sharply divided, deeply grooved segments radiating from a recessed point slightly more than four inches to the right of, and slightly less than four above, the canvass center. (People who saw the work as it progressed have reported the presence of other colorsreds, ocher, and blue; of these, only a few flecks of very pale ocher remain visible on the face of the picture today.) DeFeo later told the archivist Paul Karlstrom that initially her
only guideline for the painting was an idea that had a center to it. There was, she said,no notion of the rose about it. Months would go by before DeFeo assigned even a working title to her picture; finally, after eight yearsand an eternitys worth of bedraggling vicissitudeshe called it The Rose.
At the end of the sixties, when The Rose emerged briefly in public from what had come to seem a process of its own devisingbeyond the artists power to sustain, its accumulated mythology had already become something of an albatrossit measured
over a foot larger in its height and width than the original canvas and, alarmingly, bellied out eight inches at the highest relief of the strange cementlike mix of pigments and other substances that comprised its surface. When tested for probable impact on a trucking companys forklift, it had been estimated to weigh a menacing 2,300 pounds. (A more accurate, recent estimate puts it at almost exactly one ton.) Its dense yet fragile crust had also begun to break apart. During the two months it was on view at the San Francisco Museum of Art in 1969, it was observed daily to be shedding debris, and a chunk from the lower-right corner had already disappeared. Clearly, the question in 1969, and for twenty-five years after, was where to put it. Among the various museums and private collectors approached, there were no takers. Out in the world, visibly glorious yet homeless and in bad physical shape, The Rose was inappropriate.
Why DeFeo began The Rose illogically off-center, in the first place, has never been addressed. It may have had something to do with the strange, razor-sharp, focus-shunting markers that vertically divide The Eyes, the large 1958 graphite drawing that DeFeo always said pointed her directly to The Roses more compendious, abstract image. Neither is there any clear evidence as to exactly when she revised the Deathrose format, but after putting it aside for a while to focus on its convex companion picture, The Jewel (1959), she decided that the canvas should be symmetrical and it wasnt really the right proportions. Balancing the painting on a couple of paint cans and two plywood shims set atop a footstool, she placed it above and to the left of its customary position and drew elaborate extension lines on the door and wall moldings around the support; a photograph of this arrangement served as the prototype for a new version of the work which wouldnt sacrifice the image that was already there. Assisted by Wally Hedrick, Michael McClure,
Craig Kaufmann, and Bruce and Jean Conner, DeFeo then cut away the initial canvas, lifted it into the squared-off window bay of the front room, and there glued it onto a larger, nearly eight-by-eleven-foot unprimed canvas stretched to just fit the dimensions of the two middle windows and wall. The point was, as Hedrick puts it, to center the center while expanding the parameters of the whole design.
Over the next six years or so, the painting heaved its way through a whorl of transformations. DeFeo told Rebecca Solnit: It went through a whole cycle of art history: the primitive, the archaic, the classic, and then on to the baroque. . . . All those stages were interesting and complete in themselves, but just not what the final version was or what I intended. With paint troweled on then carved and hacked away, in what DeFeo came to consider a marriage of painting and sculpture, the original fanned-out geometry tightened by 1960 to a more rigidly crystalline net. To this, DeFeo began adding rough-textured redwood slats and small clusters of pine dowels for definition and to bolster the paint against sagging. The files of Bay City Paint, where DeFeo bought gallon cans of black and titanium white and a dense, chalky texturing foundation called Prime-Rite, show that between 1960 and 1965 she paid a total of $5,375.51 for materials, most of which went into The Rose alone. DeFeo also introduced metallic powders into the mix for a micalike sparkle, and there are rumors of other additivesbits of copper wire, beads; and pearls from her mid-fifties jewelry-making period. (I think I saw a barrette go in there once, McClure said recently.) A1961 photograph shows the artist posed lithely before a nearly all-white version in which the rays have been subsumed in an all-over glacial slide. By around 1964, the straight ridges buckled to accommodate an interweaving of organic shapesoutcroppings of (again) gray pigment, which, according to Conner resembled giant acanthus leaves, and which soon after, in what DeFeo called the super-baroque or rococo phase, became over-pronounced as a system of blowsily plumped-up loops. I really
wasnt aware of how flamboyant it had become, DeFeo told
Karlstrom, I had been so involved . . . and suddenly I walked into
the studio one day and the whole thing seemed to have gotten completely
out of hand.. I felt that it needed to be pulled back to something more classic in character.
Bruce Conner has likened the atmosphere in DeFeos studio during the making of The Rose to that of a prehistoric cave. Thick with wads of scrapped paint, the floor sloped away from a six-inch rise directly in front of where the painting stood crosslit by daylight coming through the side windows. Traversing this this encrusted space was, Conner says, like walking on the back of a whale. Wally Hedrick remembers: It was driving her crazy. She
would line up these radiating lines and get them where she wanted them and would come back the next day and go berserk. She fought this by working harder and drinking a quart of
Christian Brothers brandy a day and smoking two to three packs of Gauloises. .It was like a lubricant. Her hands would be covered
with white lead. It killed her.
Whether or not lubricant abuse in combination with continual exposure to oil paints and other materials caused DeFeos eventual death from lung cancer at the age of sixty, in 1989, such
excesses certainly had an immediate impact upon her condition. As early as Match 1965, Walter Hopps was trying to get DeFeo to let the painting go and allow it to be exhibited (with its new title The White Rose at the Pasadena Art Museum, where he was then the
director. According to James Demetrion, the Pasadena , curator who eventually succeeded Hopps in 1967, Walter was
concerned that the picture be released and not botched up. True to form, DeFeo kept putting off the show and, with it, the removal of the painting from her studioa daunting proposition which Hopps had offered to manage and use his Pasadena resources to pay for. The fateful process, Conner says, needed
an uncontrolled event to make it stop, and the sudden termination (due, in part, to DeFeos excesses) of DeFeos and Hedricks lease at 2322 Fillmore toward the end of 1965 provided just that.
Shot over two days in early November 1965 and finally completed
in 1967, Bruce Conners seven-minute film The White Rose documents rapturously the last look of the picture as it existed in the Fillmore studio and the events over seven hours of its removal by Angelic Hosts (as the subtitle indicates, referring to the team of Bekins movers in their white coveralls) from the otherwise bare apartment to a van on the street below. By way of jagged cuts, blinks, and flickers, in six loosely defined movements, Conner communicates the stress of the immediate occasion and a great deal of the ardor surrounding it. For the
sound track he chose the elegiac first half of Gil Evanss extended orchestration of the adagio from Joaquin Rodrigos Concierto de Aranjuez, with Miles Davis in the lead on trumpet. The Great Rose Transplant, as DeFeo called it, involved sawing away a two-foot section of windowsill to allow the painting to make its exit to the forklift outside. All that day I wondered if Jay was going to go out the window herself, says Conner, and two images from the film support his apprehension. In one, Conner and the Bekins crew, returning from their lunch break, find DeFeo stretched out across the painting, thus lending the recumbent assemblage, with its paper wrappings and packing crate, the aspect of an open, makeshift coffin. In another, with
the van having pulled away and footage running out, she sits forlorn on the carved-out sill, legs a-dangle in midair; when Conner comes around the corner of the adjacent window, she briefly indulges the filmmakers camera eye with a brave little smile.
Within a couple of days, DeFeos picture arrived at the Pasadena Museum, and shortly afterward, she followed. For three months off and on in Pasadena, with a chronic case of flu, she struggled to make the refinements she envisioned for the work. Mostly, it seems, she set herself to sharpening the edges toward the center and adjusting the highlights along the rays, illusionistic touches
that clinch The Rose as the marvel of complex visuality we see today. After Hopps convinced her she had given the painting all she could, she abandoned it to his and Demetrions keeping and retired alone to a country house outside San Francisco, in Ross. Three years later, in the spring of 1969, The Rose passed in rapid succession from Pasadena, where Demetrion finally exhibited it in March, to the San Francisco Museum of Art (it spread its charms there before a black backdrop), and then across town to the conference room in the newly completed wing of the San Francisco Art Institute, where it remained, bolted to a concrete wall, and eventually hidden from view, until 1995.
In 1972, DeFeo commented in a letter to Bruce Conner on the myth that had formed around the paintings creationand, she wrote, The poor painting is the physical symbol of that myth. Asked by DeFeoalso in 1972to examine the painting and propose a way to secure it, the conservator Thornton (Tony) Rockwell quickly identified its structural essence as an unnatural act. . . . the attempt to suspend a ton of paint in midair supported only by a thin sheet of cotton canvas. Rockwell remembers: Jay was worried that the painting was on the verge of collapse. Her fears were indeed justified. The canvas was not up to supporting the massive weight of the paint. Small tears had started to develop along the tacking edges at the left and right. Draws were developing. The painting had sagged over the bottom edge of the stretchers and along the top edge, as well, in an arc. Deep cracks were developing in the paint film due to shifts in the canvas. Chunks were detaching, and other chunks were in danger of doing so.
Over the next couple of years, DeFeo and Conner, in his role as DeFeos manager, redoubled their efforts to place The Rose in one or another permanent collection. At one point, the San Francisco Museum, where Rockwell was then chief conservator, proposed a public conservation exhibition, with The Rose as centerpiece, to raise funds for treatment, but there was no commitment to acquire the work, and the museum soon backed away from the project. DeFeos own funds were running lowshe had $1,500 from a N.E.A. grant plus a friends $500 donation to put towards conserving the workso that, in 1974, Rockwell could set about completing only the first phase of his prescribed two-phase campaign. He and his assistants managed to clean the surface of grime and coffee and nicotine stains and to fill the many undercuts and cracks with a temporary wax and rosin adhesive. They then applied a complex, multilayered facing that would act as a truss to both reinforce and protect the surface. Held in place by wire mesh stretched across a top layer of white casting plaster, this support systemsimilar to the kind used for archaeological itemsbrought the objects overall weight to well over two tons. Not long thereafter, the already mummified Rose went into deep storage, virtually entombed in its schoolroom setting behind a partial fiberboard wall.
The epic engineering feat that allowed The Rose to reemerge
last October from its suspended life had its beginnings in 1992 when Leah Levy, a trustee of DeFeos estate, commissioned the archaeologist and conservator Niccolo Caldararo, who had worked closely with DeFeo on examining and treating her works in the eighties, to make a preliminary diagnosis of the painting toward a plan for its full-scale conservation. Working in the conference room over the next two summers and the winter break in the Art Institutes 199394 academic year, Caldararo gathered data from a range of testing devicesspectrographic analysis of paint samplings, microwave and ultrasound scanning, gas chromatography and fiber-optic lipstick camera viewsto determine the consistency and state of the pigment and how well the canvas was holding on its strainers. For close inspection of the surface and the taking of paint samples, Tony Rockwell worked with Caldararo to cut three square windows into the facing. The paint early on had sagged in two huge bulges to the rear of the lower half on either side of the central strainer, and there were many air pockets and fist-size voids within the pigments DeFeo had spread in uneven gobs at different times across her canvas. Given those prior conditions, the conservators examinings, together with the ultrasound imagery and flber-optic views, showed no further signs of collapse.
In October 1994, the Whitney Museum of American Art committed to acquiring the painting once the extraordinarily elaborate and risky steps toward its conservation had been undertaken.
(The decision was prompted by the curator Lisa Phillipss initial research for the Whitneys exhibition, Beat Culture and the New America: 19501965, in which The Rose held pride of place.) By early 1995, Caldararo and Rockwell had joined with the mural conservator Anne Rosenthal to form the Rose Conservation
Group, and the three of them finalized a treatment proposal as well as a plan, worked out with the art-handler Scott Atthowe, for lifting and lowering the painting in a steel carriage from the conference room wall and, when the time came, out the wall-size window for transport to Atthowes warehouse in Oakland and then to New York.
In June, with The Rose in its protective facing and new carriage, hoisted by a pair of gantries into a facedown position on a deeply padded platform, the group started excavating from behind. They stripped away most of the canvas wide of the center
(where some slices between rays go clear to the support) and the top and side edges (where the paint layers often thin out to a mere smudge). The back surface they exposed appeared shot with inconsistencies. Anne Rosenthal observed that the paint
itself was hard and brittle, but with osteoporosis throughout. The cavities in thickly painted areas, where some of the paint remains uncured in malleable, cheeselike clumps, were seen to be arrayed like catacombs. Tapping on the exposed paint
revealed still more cavities to be opened for filling. Occasionally, a small pine needlepresumably from one of the many defunct Christmas trees DeFeo tended to collect at Fillmore Streetwould be found nestled in the pigment. By early September, Caldararo, Rockwell, and Rosenthal had proceeded, after shielding with a polymer the more delicate areas of canvas and thinly applied paint, to consolidate the backside with a thick spread of epoxy putty, fingers of which were pressed into the air pockets and voids. With structural and aeronautical engineers and consultants from Industrial Light and Magics fabrication studios, they devised and put in place a heavy-duty backing structure
built up from multiple fiberglass and epoxy laminations. On top
of this blanket, they contoured (and further laminated) a plywood grid attached by ninety-two threaded stainless-steel rods,
hooked at one end over the wood and set with epoxy into holes drilled in the thicker paint masses of the painting itself. The steel : pins, Rockwell remarked, make a good mechanical bond with the back of the thick paint masses and provide structural support to prevent the downward creep or cold flow of the paint in , response to gravity. A rigid, hollow steel-bar frame was set into
notches inside the perimeter of the grid to accommodate handling bars and hanging fixtures, and a similar but detachable lift, frame was built to ease transporting the picture and setting it up for exhibition.
With its new backingthe entire structure now weighs over 2,600 poundsthe painting was hoisted again on the gantries and turned belly-up. The conservators spent the next six weeks undoing Rockwells protective facing: They chipped away at the
r plaster molds, plucked out excelsior stuffing, peeled back the pads of cotton muslin and tosa (mulberry) tissue, and slowly warmed and extracted wax-and-rosin fillings from cracks and undercuts. They injected a synthetic resin emulsion into fragile areas of the paint and reaffixed many small chips that had come loose. They found the front mostly intact, firm, but with spots of mold and darkened areas of white paint (any white will discolor
, when left in unbroken darkness over a long period). They
cleaned the surface and performed inpainting with a removable acrylic resin on salient fractures, including one horizontal hairline crack that curved just above the pictures center point like a Madonnas smile. On October 12, The Rose was lifted by a crane off the balcony outside the conference room and lowered
onto a flatbed truck. For another week, cleaning and inpainting continued at Atthowes warehouse, and a few people were invited to view the picture, at last upright in its lift frame there. On November 9, floodlit at the far end of a gallery corridor,
it was brightly greeting visitors at the Whitneys Beat Culture opening,
DeFeo seems to have considered her work habitually in sets of twos and threes, or multiples thereof. She often worked in pairs but conceived of many of her paintings in triads, Of the many works leading up to The Rose, The Eyes and Doctor Jazz (1958) occur as rare one-shot images; another, Apparition (1956), finds its companion piece, many years later, in After
Image (1970), The Rose had its spiky, many-hued counterpart in The Jewel, but also, DeFeo said, formed a triptych with two earlier, impasto-strewn paintings, Origin (1956) and The Veronica (1957), because they all deal with plant forms. A more telling factor about The Rose, however, is that the number of rays in the imageeighteencorresponds in cabalistic numerology to the Hebrew word hai, meaning life,
No mistake about it, The Rose is a creation picture. In a talk on her work at Mills College in 1986, DeFeo likened its kaleidoscopic memory process to a pinwheel where everything gets swept into it on one side [and] then, on the other, were things spilling out. Things of The Rose also spill out in a fair pictorial account of the unity of divine light caught in the cosmogonic act, the effulgent issue of which (the changeable universe) is that lights se!f-shattering. Of course, what distinguishes The Rose from other, kindred mandala-like images is its paradoxical, palpitating meatiness. Taken at face value, the thing is imposing. At a glance, the sheer mass kicks into visibility of the kind to induce gulps in the unwary viewer, and its staying powerboth as you look and as you call it to mind days afterwardis equally immense. Its that sort of head-on collision with ineffability locked into earthy stuff that had the intimates of DeFeos process recalling the work, as George Herms did last year, as
the ultimate living being. The Rose concisely summons up the subjective life of the infinite. It makes tumultuous creation look variously sociable and moody. The suspended image burns the near air, an incandescence that feels both related and alien to the muddy substances producing it.
Look closely and you see the care DeFeo lavished on her project, and how well she knew what she was doing: how the reverse illusionism of highlightings on the bottom flattens the sculptural effect, bringing the outer flarings to sit optically in the same dimension as the central point, smooth and light-reflective and tender as a doily. And how regular one-point perspective is turned accordingly, switching the centric focus outward in the perceivers direction.
Every painting must make its pact with gravity. This one hinges, and rocks, from the median span, with wings (or flippers) scalloped at the extremities on both sides. The wide angle of the span, a sort of sprung horizon, makes a buoyancy, while deep clefts in the rays below effect a shudder, as if a gong had gone off at a depth behind the paint. The gross weight lifts from an inspissated, crotchlike fold about three-quarters down the middle. Given the proper viewing distance, the geomantic, elusive colors suffuse among themselves. There are obsidians across from charcoal blacks, and lambent whites next to grays that abruptly scintillate out of their leaden slurries. In the slurries are gouges and more delicate marks, like engravings on bone.
A small picture presented the interior of an immensely long and rectangu1ar vault or tunnel, with low walls, smooth, white, and without interruption or device. Certain accessory points of the design served well to convey the idea that this excavation lay at an exceeding depth below the surface of the earth. No outlet was observed in any portion of its vast extent, and no torch or other artificial source of light was discernible; yet a flood of intense rays rolled throughout, and bathed the whole in ghastly and inappropriate splendour.
Edgar Allan Poe, The Fall of the House of Usher
A peculiar Gothic strain, typified by what Greil Marcus calls a precious intensity, in the works of DeFeo, Conner, and others of their immediate circle links those California artists mystic leaningsso often mordant or languidwith Poe. Thus, in 1969, Alexander Fried.found his reviewers experience of The Rose analogous to looking into a long, long tunnel. . . . From the tunnels glowing heart emerge bursts of. ..clouds or fallen volcanic stones and clods. The obvious parallel is with Poes conjuring of one of the pure abstractions and phantasmagoric conceptions over which Roderick Ushers elaborate fancy brooded, and whose relative smallness is no underqualification. Gothicness in its medieval guise historically held that the job of imagemaking was, as Roger Bacon put it, to make visible the spiritual sense. DeFeos own divinations have a hunt-and-peck candor: She pledged herself to a higher reality without much of a clue as to its contours or even at what elevation it might be found. She granted that romantic touchstone negative capability (in Keatss formula, of being in uncertainties, mysteries, doubts, without any irritable reaching after fact and reason) a permanent green light.
How much did DeFeo get in the way of her own picture? The work took her over for more than seven years and might well have destroyed her. But the destruction had to have been, at least partly, reciprocal; compelled to heap everything onto the successive versions of the same surface, she very likely lost the master take in the process. The same could be saidindeed has been saidof de Koonings Woman I (195053), another abandoned work that achieves the improbable status of failed masterpiece. Like de Kooning, DeFeo was attempting a symbol that would be at once comprehensive and accurate. As it looks now, she very closely succeeded both ways.
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