The Chicago Picasso—it has no other name—turned 50 years old in August 2017 and it was a very big
deal. How big a deal it is might mystify non-Chicagoans who underestimate the Toddlin’ Town’s municipal
vanity. Aspirations to be lauded as
a World Class City and center of the fine arts meets common Babbitt boosterism. It was the subject of essays by two of the city’s sharpest newspapermen, Rick Kogan of the Tribune who was at the dedication and Neil Steinberg of
the Sun-Times,
who was not, as well as several magazine pieces, all sorts
of TV time, and social media
postings.
The
city itself is staged a reenactment of the unveiling on August 8 that year in Daley Plaza conceived by
artist and historian Paul Durica
with all of the appropriate civic arts
tsars and mavens and musical performances by the Chicago Children’s Choir and the After School Matters Orchestra. The musicians of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra and Lyric
Opera Chorus evidently expected to get paid. This gathering was
actually a week early. I don’t know why they didn’t pick the
actual anniversary. Maybe the Plaza was booked.
The actual dedication was held on August
15, 1967 during a summer had been in
the news mostly for the riots that
swept the South and West Sides. Mayor Richard J. Daley, whose crown as Boss of The City That Works had been tarnished, was mighty glad
for the opportunity to show off just how highbrow the Hog Butcher to
the World could really be.
Of
course today the Picasso is a—mostly—beloved Chicago icon. Back in 1967 many of
the city’s elite cultural gatekeepers,
some of whom had never gotten over the shock of the 1913 Armory Show and were widely looked down upon as mere provincials by Manhattan sophisticates, and the blue collar lunch box proletariat were united in despising and
being mystified by the Spanish artist’s gift to a city he had never seen. Many suspected a commie plot or foresaw a fall into decadence and corruption. Others just thought it was ugly and dumb.
Classic Chicago chroniclers Studs Terkel and Mike Royko were both on hand to document the Picasso dedication.
Count
Chicago’s keenest observer, Daily
News columnist Mike Royko in the latter category. He called it “big,
homely metal thing …[with] a long stupid face…[that] looks like some giant
insect that is about to eat a smaller, weaker insect. It has eyes that are
pitiless, cold, mean.” Which meant it
was perfect for the city. “Its eyes are like the eyes of every slum owner who
made a buck off the small and weak. And of every building inspector who took a
wad from a slum owner to make it all possible.”
That
other tireless chronicler of Chicago voices, Studs Terkel was on hand lugging around his heavy old reel-to-reel semi-portable tape recorder to capture the wisdom of
the hoi
polloi. Quotes from that
tape litter almost all of the
stories being done this week about the original dedication. You can all most hear the hard bitten accents
of some. From Rick Hogan’s piece:
“A pelvic
structure of a prehistoric monster,” “A politician because it’s got so many
faces,” “A bird, “A big butterfly.” Some people were befuddled (“Is that the
front view?”) and one was obviously a loyal Democrat (“If Daley says it’s good,
it’s good enough for me”).
And
from Steinberg’s :
“At first glance, it looks rather grotesque…” said
one. “You got something like this, 99 percent of the people don’t know what it
resembles,” observed another. “A nightmare,” added a third. “A woman!?”
marveled another. “A woman, yes, definitely, now it makes some sense. At first,
when they had no idea what it was, I didn’t think too much of it. But now I
like the idea of a woman being placed at the civic center. It seems like the
woman has to do with everything in life, and this has to do with the good
things in life. This is a civic center and the goodness of a woman. That’s my
idea.”
Which reminds us of the huge controversy about just
what the hell the thing was, anyway, much of it fueled by the media.
There were many theories put forward—a vulture, the artist’s pet
Afghan hound, a baboon, a starving lion, a woman of course, and
just a big practical joke on the city.
As for me, youthful as I was
at the time, I never had any doubt
it was a woman. Despite attempts to revive the controversy this year,
mostly by clueless TV anchor people,
it turned out that I was right.
Art scholars have found doodles and sketches of
similar forms dating back to Picasso’s halcyon days in
Paris back in 1913. Somewhat definitive
is a 1962 sketch of a nearly identical
form that the artist clearly labeled Head of a Woman. Hard to argue with that. And we even know pretty certainly which woman—a teen age girl
actually.
Sylvette
David was about 17 or 18 when Picasso spotted her in the company of her boyfriend walking by his studio in 1954. The old satyr
was smitten, as he often
was. He was able to get the girl with the
long swan-like neck and the high pony tail that spread out behind
it to pose for him for several studies, including a realistic profile and several cubist deconstructions. Unlike many of his other muses he was never able to bed girl and in fact named one of his
40 compositions of her was called The One Who Said No. That pony tail not only became the
“wings” of the Chicago statue, it
inspired the signature look casual
look for Brigit Bardot. Sylvette went on to her own successful
career as a painter and artist now known as
Lydia Corbett. She is now a lively
80 years old and recently said of Picasso, “I never thanked him enough. He
immortalized me. I’m like the Mona Lisa. Amazing, don’t you think?”
Back in 1957, I was not at the unveiling. I had graduated from Niles West High School in Skokie
that spring and was spending the summer washing dishes at a Howard
Johnson and getting ready to start Shimer
College in Mt. Caroll, Illinois that fall. I read all about the controversy in the
papers, and undoubtedly devoured Royko’s sour
take on it. I first saw it in person a few months later at an anti-war rally in the Plaza. As a matter of fact all of my early
encounters were at rallies and marches
where the towering sculpture dominated
the wide open space.
I remember being impressed by its size and
how its rust brown surface echoed
the cladding of the Dailey Center
itself. I was pretty sure that Picasso
was not an art-to-match-the-sofa kind
of guy. I was right, he had not dictated
a color. That came from the supplier of the steel to
construct it, the American Bridge
Company division of the United
States Steel Corporation which used naturally
oxidizing COR-TEN steel, the
same material as used in the building.
Over the years both have darkened to what is now a grey with only hints of
reddish brown.
Picasso was hands down the most famous artist in the world when he
was visited by a committee of Chicago boosters bringing tacky gifts from Hizzoner with a request for him to create a monumental art work for
otherwise desolate plaza of the new monument that the Mayor was erecting
to himself. The artist was amused, flattered, and skeptical. But among the gifts was a photo of Oak Park’s native son Ernest Hemingway. Picasso excitedly
exclaimed, “My friend! I taught him everything he knew about bullfighting.
Was he from Chicago?” His visitors may
have been a little vague in their
reply. At any rate he agreed—and more
over agreed to make his creation a gift to
the city.
He started work in May, 1964 basing his design on
sketches he had already made, including the Head
of a Woman mentioned before. He translated those two dimensional images into a three
dimensional by making sketches on plywood,
cutting out the parts, and assembling them with
glue and wire. He had been using a
similar process to make smaller scale
painted-on-sheet metal sculptures from his cubist reflections since Sylvette had posed for him. But this time he proposed to leave the surface of the finished work raw, rather than painted
in order to emphasize the shapes that seemed to shift when viewed from different
angles.
Picasso with few revisions translated this first
model into a 42 inch high maquette that was first displayed to
the public in London during a major retrospective exhibit. It
drew raves from the British art cognisante. Then the excited city hall put the model on display at the Art Institute where it remains to this day. So Chicagoans, at least the museum visiting slice of the population knew what the pig in the poke was going to look like. Some shared an excitement of being in the avant garde, but many were furious on both esthetic and political
grounds—the artist was a known leftist
and had recently been glad to accept a Lenin Prize, the Soviet
Union’s answer to the Nobel
Prize. There was loose talk in some captive nation taverns in the city’s ethnic neighborhoods of blowing
the damn thing to smithereens.
The Woods
Charitable Fund, Chauncey and Marion
Deering McCormick Foundation, and the Field
Foundation ponied up the roughly
$352,000 cost of erecting the 50 foot high sculpture that would weigh 147
tons. American Bridge created a final 12
high model for Picasso to approve that included some structural re-enforcements to support the enormous weight. The artist agreed and fabrication work began
at the U.S. Steel rolling mills in Gary, Indiana.
The parts
were delivered by truck and
instillation began on a re-enforced pedestal on
May 2. 1967. As it rose it was shrouded in scaffolding and canvas. Work was completed in early August and final
touches were put on dedication plans.
On the big day the Plaza was filled with the
curious. Mayor Daley and every other politico
with enough clout crowded the dais along with all of the accredited art lovers. Gwendolyn
Brooks was asked to compose and read a new work for the occasion. Chances
were strong that Daley had never
read the works of the Black woman with strong opinions about race relations in the city, urban renewal, rampant police brutality, and the rising voice of Black Power. On
the other hand the poet had scored
Pulitzer Prize and someone had named her Chicago’s Poet Laureate
so she was just what the doctor called for in a program meant to buck-up the
city’s cultural credentials. For her part Brooks was flattered to be asked and aware that
this sort of thing was just what was expected of the Poet Laureate. But she was conflicted. She hardly knew what to think of what she had seen of the sculpture
and wasn’t sure she liked it or approved. “Man visits Art, but squirms...” was as much enthusiasm as she could muster that day just before the canvas shroud dropped.
The ever vigilant Royko took note, however, of
the symbolism of Brooks’ prominent
presence. “When [Aldermen] Keane and Cullerton sit behind a lady poet, things are changing.”
By the time the 25th anniversary rolled around in 1982 and Brooks was invited back for another crack at it, she had grown
used to and fond of the
Picasso. She could be more honestly effusive.
Set,
seasoned,
sardonic
still,
I continue
royal among you.
I astonish
you still.
You never
knew what I am.
That did not
matter and does not.
When
the drapery finally dropped some
observers thought they observed a scowl
on the Mayor’s face. Others thought it
was more of a bemused smirk as if he
was pleased as punch at getting away with a world class con. Likewise there are conflicting reports on the
crowd reaction. Loyal machine partisans in the media
reported cheers and applause. Others described
stunned silence giving way gradually
to the kind of polite pro-forma clapping you would give to a third rate singer.
Whatever the immediate reaction, the Picasso
quickly became a Chicago icon. As critic
Desmond Morris, author of The
Naked Ape, had predicted in
defiance of the chorus nay sayers, the
sculpture would “become an art landmark,
one of the most famous sites in
the world.”
And thanks to city Law Department faux pas
Chicago lost the copyright on the
monument’s image by publicly displaying it at the Art
Institute without protection. Souvenir stands were soon awash in post cards, posters, t-shirts,
jewelry, snow-globes, bronze trinkets of all sizes, and high-end collector’s edition art
models. Something for every budget. No one could come
home from a Windy City visit without
some kind of Picasso memorabilia.
On the cultural front, the statue was the first
monumental outdoor modern public art in the country. It immediately blew heroic bronzes and classical motifs out of the water.
Within a decade it seemed that no public project could go up without a head-scratching
set piece from downtown plazas and
government buildings to modest village halls, suburban shopping malls, and even office and factory campuses. This trend
was accelerated with a Federal Government policy that 2% of the cost of new construction be set aside for the arts and state and local policies
that aped it. A lot of sculptors got work, not all of them creative
genius like Picasso.
Nowhere was this more apparent
than in Chicago’s Loop where Alexander Calder’s Stabile adorns the Dirksen Federal Building, Claus Oldenburg’s ironic Bat Column rises, Marc Chagall’s mosaic covered monolith graced
the First National Bank of Chicago
Plaza, as well a works by Joan
Miro’s and Henry Moore.
But so does mediocre stuff
not to mention the hideous Snoopy
in Blender outside the white
elephant James R. Thompson State of Illinois building.
Today Anish Kapoor’s Cloud Gate a/k/a
The
Bean in Millennium Park may
have taken the title of Chicago’s most famous and photographed work of public
art.
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