LUCRETIA VAN HORN (1882-1970) Untitled (Four Abstract Figures) oil on board signed 'L VAN HORN' (lower right) 13 1/8 x 20 1/4 (33.3 x 51.4 cm) Executed in circa 1930s Footnotes: Provenance Collection of the artist. Private collection, Bay Area (acquired by descent from the above). Collection of Thomas Hunt, Bay Area and Eureka (acquired directly from the above). By bequest from the above. Few artists moved so fluidly among the defining artistic currents of the early twentieth century as Lucretia Van Horn (1882-1970). Yet despite a life spent at the center of remarkable creative circles, from Paris and Mexico City to Berkeley and San Francisco, her contributions have remained largely absent from conventional histories of American modernism. The present collection offers a rare opportunity to reconsider Van Horn not merely as a talented artist deserving rediscovery, but as a dynamic figure whose career illuminates the interconnected worlds of Mexican muralism, European modernism, and the progressive artistic communities that shaped California in the decades between the world wars (Annie K. Roddy, Lucretia Van Horn: The Artist's Meaningful Impact on the Development of Modernism in the Bay Area, MA thesis, Sotheby's Institute of Art, 2022). Tracing more than four decades of artistic production, these works reveal a career defined by continual reinvention. Trained at the Art Students League of New York before continuing her studies at the Académie Julian in Paris, where she became the first woman awarded the prestigious Julian-Smith Prize in 1904, Van Horn emerged from a generation of women artists who gained access to professional artistic training while still confronting the limitations of a predominantly male art world (St. Gaudens and Morsman, Emerging from the Shadows, Vol. IV; Jeri L. Wolfson Collection, artist biography, 'Lucretia Van Horn'). Her earliest works, including elegant illustrations executed in the first years of the twentieth century, demonstrate a mastery of line and ornament informed by Art Nouveau, Symbolism, and the graphic innovations then transforming European visual culture. Yet unlike many artists whose careers remained rooted in a single aesthetic language, Van Horn possessed a restless curiosity that continually propelled her toward new forms of expression. A decisive transformation occurred in 1926, when Van Horn traveled to Mexico City and entered the orbit of Diego Rivera at a pivotal moment in his career. As Rivera completed the monumental frescoes for the Ministry of Education, Van Horn joined the group of artists assisting with their execution, immersing herself in the revolutionary artistic climate that was reshaping modern Mexican art. Their friendship would endure for decades. Having both lived and studied in Paris, Rivera and Van Horn communicated in French, and she frequently served as his interpreter and advocate during his visits to the United States, introducing him to influential figures within California's artistic community. Rivera painted Van Horn's likeness on several occasions, immortalized her within the Ministry murals themselves, and presented her with works from his own hand. Among the most compelling testaments to this relationship is the present Portrait of Lucretia Van Horn (1926), one of the earliest surviving records of their friendship and mutual artistic regard. Exposure to Rivera's synthesis of monumentality, social consciousness, and formal innovation profoundly altered Van Horn's artistic trajectory. The refined decorative linearity of her earlier illustrations gradually yielded to simplified forms, sculptural volumes, and compositions imbued with a new sense of strength and presence. Works such as Tehuanas Bathing reveal an artist not merely influenced by Mexican modernism but actively engaging with and reinterpreting its visual language through her own distinct sensibility (St. Gaudens and Morsman, Emerging from the Shadows, Vol. IV, p. 1128). Yet Rivera represents only one chapter of Van Horn's artistic evolution. Following her move to Berkeley in 1927, she entered the vibrant and increasingly experimental artistic circles of the Bay Area, where her home became a gathering place for artists, collectors, writers, and intellectuals. Among her friends and colleagues were Ralph Stackpole, Albert Bender, David Park, Marjorie Eaton, and the influential German-born dealer Galka Scheyer. Contemporary accounts suggest that Van Horn's influence derived not only from her artistic accomplishments but also from her formidable presence. As writer Gordon Newell later recalled, she entered a room 'like a windstorm, and everything would change; she was always the center of things.' Such charisma, combined with her intellectual curiosity and enthusiasm for new artistic ideas, helped position her at the center of many of the relationships and exchanges that would shape the region's artistic culture (Nancy Boas, David Park: A Painter's Life, Berkeley: University of California Press, 2012, p. 21). She became not merely an observer, but as an active participant in conversations that would shape the direction of modern art on the West Coast. Later accounts describe her as mentor, advocate, collector, and connector, a figure whose influence extended well beyond her own studio (Jeri L. Wolfson Collection artist biography). Particularly significant was her friendship with Scheyer, the visionary promoter of the Blue Four-Wassily Kandinsky, Paul Klee, Lyonel Feininger, and Alexej von Jawlensky. Through Scheyer, California artists encountered some of the most radical developments of European modernism at a moment when such ideas remained unfamiliar to much of the American public. Recollections by Marjorie Eaton place Van Horn within Scheyer's immediate circle during these formative years, while later accounts describe Van Horn's lifelong admiration for Paul Klee. The influence of these encounters reverberates throughout her later work. Architectural forms dissolve into lyrical geometry; landscapes become increasingly imaginative and ambiguous; figures drift between representation and abstraction. Rather than embracing any single movement, Van Horn absorbed these diverse influences and transformed them into a highly individual visual vocabulary. The present group vividly demonstrates this artistic evolution. From the sculptural figuration inspired by Mexico to increasingly experimental abstractions and dreamlike compositions, the works chart an artist continually pushing beyond convention. They also reveal the breadth of a career that unfolded in dialogue with some of the most influential artistic developments of the twentieth century. Long overshadowed by many of the artists with whom she worked, collected, exhibited, and collaborated, Van Horn emerges here not as a peripheral figure, but as a vital presence within the story of California modernism. Through her art, friendships, and advocacy, she fostered a creative environment in which new ideas could flourish. The present collection offers not only a survey of a remarkable artistic journey, but an invitation to reconsider the place of Lucretia Van Horn within the broader history of American modernism. For further information on this lot please visit Bonhams.com For further information about this lot please visit the lot listing
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