Biography of an Important New Mexico Taos Society Artist Walter Ufer

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  • čas přidán 16. 04. 2020
  • Learn the history of famous Southwest artist, Walter Ufer, whose paintings of Taos Indians, Pueblo architecture and New Mexico landscape have sold for over a million dollars.
    Walter Ufer was born 1876 and grew up in Louisville, Kentucky, the son of a master gunsmith. His artistic endeavors received support from his parents and teachers and, after an apprenticeship in the printing plant of a Louisville commercial lithographer, Ufer traveled to Dresden, Germany to study at the Royal Applied Art Schools and the Royal Academy.
    After seven years spent abroad, during which he met J.H. Sharp and Ernest Blumenschein, Ufer moved to Chicago, where he find a powerful benefactor in Carter Harrison, the mayor. Harrison, along with his friend and partner, the meat-packing tycoon Oscar Mayer, would help fund Walter Ufer's artistic endeavors.
    Ufer visited Taos on a painting trip in 1914 arranged by Carter Harrison, and as with most artists of the era who came in contact with Taos, Walter Ufer was smitten from the start. The landscape was of interest but, for Ufer, it was the Taos Indian who served as the subject of his fascination more than anything else.
    His approach to the Indians was slightly different than many of his contemporaries. Ufer was a strong supporter of individual freedoms and he was a devout socialist (he was friend of Leon Trotsky). Ufer saw the Pueblo Indians as having been oppressed for centuries in such a manner as to stomp out their racial and cultural identity. "The Indian has lost his race pride," Ufer said, "he wants only to be an American. Our civilization has terrific power. We don't feel it, but that man out there in the mountains feels it, and he cannot cope with such pressure."
    These feelings of anger and despair were a continuing theme in Ufer's work. He joined many picket lines and protests by labor groups and, during the flu pandemic of 1918-19, which killed over a half a million Americans a disproportionate amount of Pueblo Indians, Walter Ufer worked tirelessly to assist the only doctor in Taos in treating the ill.
    Some degree of the despair associated with his compassion was probably psychiatric. An alcoholic and depressive, Ufer suffered from many crippling episodes of desolation. When suffering, he was moody and unproductive, and his entire body of work is the product of his better days, as drinking and gambling occupied him during his dark spells.
    Despite all that, he sold large amounts of work during the 1920s and achieved a fairly high profile. Warm and personable, he had many friends, whose friendship he would occasionally abuse by borrowing money and failing to pay it back. Aside from a disastrous experiment in 1923 wherein Ufer, on the urging of his agent, failed to sell a lot of paintings that all featured the same Indian figure on a white horse against a background of Taos Mountain, he was generally successful until the stock market crash of 1929. Destitution did not sit well with Walter Ufer, and he succumbed entirely to alcoholism.
    Walter Ufer’s paintings have become some of the most valuable of all the Taos Society artists, his major works consistently topping a million dollars at auction. His paintings are in the permanent collections of the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the Art Institute of Chicago, the Brooklyn Museum, and the Corcoran Gallery in Washington D.C.
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