japonisme in the land of the pueblo (etc.) V
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"Where are the blossoms of those summers!
-- fallen, one by one;
so all of my family departed,
each in his turn,
to the land of spirits.
I am on the hilltop and
must go down into the valley;
and when Uncas follows
in my footsteps there will
no longer be any of the
blood of the Sagamores,
for my boy is
the last of the Mohicans,"
Chingachgook spoke to Hawkeye.
winold reiss grew up in germany poring over the tales of james fennimore cooper.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjGaKpWwPC6dizWoZT6IqzCLKYuDDfw_EfPemOy3WpswmRrbdYY4iNVug0-0yIVdNWVQkOQoIhyl38nVYDyA0m0l1fWOgyeSP8S4uSqRxN3cbMA5F37Md7j5HNu9SJnHr6Rc9Dxig/s400/ncwyeth.jpg)
(from the last of the mohicans)
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and he did, but not before he developed a monumental career for himself in the arts. this cover which he did for a magazine which he helped found places him directly in the japonisme moment.
we see all of the familiar signs of the times as we have seen in the german posters we've looked at in the last few weeks, and at the american ones they inspired, and the japanese portraits of actors which had in turn inspired the germans.
the outlines, the bold patterns, the flatness and outlines, the blocks of color; the diagonal structure is not utilized, but had that moment of japonisme not happened, winold reiss would not have designed this cover the way he did.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiobAPoe1Zd6ezqpFTPOjLYlHF7jW3g8E4aDsWfhaRLHr5RjCtOz33Hn42dDqVGYu4WqgU207rTpONiQYlEAnoI0MjEmz4BPE-1oPxkSknv0Nfl8aBzRjlEfWSSYGBdMeFos-9Pig/s400/winold-reiss.jpg)
And so he decided to come to America in 1913 for the express purpose of studying the North American Indian in his native habitat and also to introduce modern decorative art, which, although a flourishing and accepted style in Munich and Vienna, where it had its origin, was practically unknown in the United States. The Crillon Restaurant, which Mr. Reiss decorated in 1920, was the first demonstration of the decorative possibilities of the new style. Since that time Mr. Reiss has been one of the outstanding pioneers in introducing a modern decor which should harmonize with American architecture and express American taste. 1
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While the first M.A.C. cover was self-consciously sophisticated and represented a tour-de-force of the lithographic art, the tenth (ca. 1917) shows us another, quite different, side of his artistic personality, the love of primitive natural motifs and the ability to reduce and simplify them to essential patterns of form, line, and color. The bird and flower motif becomes a signature in much of Reiss's later work small design sketch whose strong lines, squarish grids, and punctuation of broad flat surfaces with simplified decorations recall the work of Josef Hoffmann and the Vienna Secession. 2
(sounds like japonisme to me....)
cont. on page later
Labels: james fennimore cooper, native americans, posters, winold reiss