Friday, April 17, 2020

Bernard Arnest Exhibits at Lehigh University Art Gallery

Continuing our posts on various artists who exhibited at Lehigh University's Art Galleries, we now focus on  Bernard Arnest whom Francis Quirk brought to the University in 1964.

Interestingly, Arnest had representation from the Kraushaar Gallery in New York who represented a number of other artists who exhibited at Lehigh including Raphael Soyer and Ruth Gikow. Interestingly, there are some similarities among these three artists' styles. This, in turn, gives us an indication os the gallery owner's tastes and those of its New York clientel. We know that there was an ongoing relationship between Quirk and the gallery.

Francis Quirk  Bernard Arnest Lehigh University Exhibit
Lehigh University's Brown and White blurb on Bernard Arnest and Raymond Mintz 1964 exhibit


Biography of Bernard Arnest






Bernard Arnest 1940




Born in Denver in 1917, Arnest attended East High School, where he studied with its longtime art teacher, Helen Perry who was influential in the education of several successful artists. Herself a student of André Lhote in Paris, Perry for many years maintained a high standard in the Denver Public Schools.
Before attending East, Arnest wanted to study piano. However, in high school drawing class he discovered his aptitude for art. At Perry’s recommendation he benefited from supplemental instruction at the newly founded Kirkland School of Art and at the school of fine art and design operated in downtown Denver.
The initial public recognition of Arnest’s artistic talent occurred at East when he was the first-place winner of the Charles Milton Carter Memorial Prize. The prize earned him a prominent place in an exhibition—along with fellow runners-up—at Chappell House, the first home of the Denver Art Museum.
Following graduation from East, Arnest enrolled at the Broadmoor Art Academy in Colorado Springs, where he studied with Boardman Robinson and Henry Varnum Poor from 1935-37 and 1938-39. It was the state’s leading art school with a national reputation, and it attracted a diverse student body, including a large percentage of women artists.
Several of Arnest’s small-format paintings from this time depict scenes of harvesting and cattle ranching. He was a skilled draftsman emphasizing the subjects’ rhythmic curves and movements. 
The institution’s leading mural instructors were Robinson and Mechau, had an enviable success record in winning government mural competitions. From 1936 to 1940 students, faculty and alumni executed 60 murals.
Settlers on the Texas Plains By Bernard Arnest 1940

A 1940 oil on canvas, Arnest’s WPA-era mural was installed in the post office at Wellington, Texas, where it can still be seen. He painted it while in Colorado Springs in the late 1930s. 
Photo by Philip Parisi for his book "The Texas Post Office Murals," 2004, courtesy Texas A&M University Press

Arnest won the commission for the post office in Wellington, Texas, in 1939 and the following year installed the completed mural, where it remains in its original location. Titled Settlers on the Texas Plains and executed in a combination of tempera and oil on canvas, the mural shows Texans building a shelter and sowing crops on the area plains, “fundamental activities,” in his words, “of opening and using a new land.”
He also submitted a mural design of a cattle drive in the Texas Panhandle to the Amarillo post office competition but did not get the commission. In addition to his own mural painting, he and two other students assisted Robinson with his eighteen-panel mural for the Department of Justice in Washington, D.C., depicting portentous moments and leading figures in the history of law. After completing his studies, Arnest briefly served as Robinson’s teaching assistant. 
Bernard Arnest on ladder working on a mural for Boardman Robinson
Boardman Robinson’s students at the school of the Colorado Springs Fine Arts Center assist him in the mid-1930s with his murals collectively titled "Great Events and Figures of the Law." The murals were installed at the Department of Justice in Washington, D.C. The student on the ladder is Bernard Arnest; standing is David Fredenthal. Photo by Laura Gilpin.
© 1979 Amon Carter Museum of American Art, Fort Worth, Texas.

In 1940 the John SimonGuggenheim Memorial Foundation awarded Arnest a fellowship in painting. He used it to do creative painting in San Francisco and to experience the city’s thriving art scene that included the San Francisco Museum of (Modern) Art. There Arnest visited the Picasso retrospective in 1940. That same year the museum mounted Arnest’s one-man show, the first of a number in his professional career.
After the Japanese bombing of Pearl Harbor in December 1941, Arnest enlisted with the Army Signal Corps. Commissioned a Second Lieutenant a year later, he served for nine months in Iceland in 1943 and then with the Tenth Replacement Depot in England before joining a five-man team of artists in 1944 attached to the History Section of the US Army’s European Theater of Operations. The section was established to collect information for use in the official American history of the war to be written and published after the end of hostilities.
Arnest served as the section’s Chief War Artist through the war’s end. He worked in England, France, Germany, Belgium, and the Netherlands, sketching and painting vignettes of American Army life, the famous bridge at Remagen, Buchenwald concentration camp prisoners, the meeting of Soviet and American troops at Strehla on the Elbe River in 1945, and the ruins of bombed-out cities in which civilians tried to survive. He also won a Bronze Star for helping a rescue mission near a minefield in Aachen, Germany.
Untitled (Wounded Soldier) pen and ink wash by Bernard Arnest  

After the war he worked for two years in New York City, believing that every artist should spend at least one year there. During that time, he began a thirty-nine-year affiliation with Kraushaar Galleries. In addition to acquainting himself with the new postwar developments in American art, he traveled up and down the East Coast painting scenes from North Carolina to New Hampshire. 
In 1947 as his money was running out, he fortuitously received a job offer from the Minneapolis School of Fine Arts (since 1970, Minneapolis College of Art and Design—MCAD). Shortly after Arnest assumed his instructor of painting position in 1949, the Minneapolis Institute of Arts gave him a one-man show of rural and urban landscape paintings and drawings of East Coast and wartime European subjects.
Red Barn  Bernard Arnest 1949  Minnesota Historical Society

Arnest’s service as an artist in the US Army helped him earn the commission in 1955 to paint a three-panel mural in the west lobby of the new Veterans Service Building on the grounds of the state capitol in Saint Paul, Minnesota. He based the composition depicting modern combat conditions on his wartime sketches and paintings with texts beneath the images excerpted from President Abraham Lincoln’s Gettysburg Address. 
St Paul Veterans Service Building   Bernard Arnest
Bernard Arnest Mural Veterans Service Building St. Paul, Minnesota 1955
Mural in situ.

Mural Veterans Service Building St. Paul, Minnesota
Bernard Arnest Mural Veterans Service Building St. Paul, Minnesota
Close up of Mural

The Lincoln quote reads "It is for us, the living, to be dedicated here to the unfinished work, which they how fought here have thus far so nobly advanced."




Veterans Service Building St. Paul, MN  Mural by Bernard Arnest
Close up of  Bernard Arnest Mural Veterans Service Building St. Paul, Minnesota 1955
Close up of  Bernard Arnest Mural Veterans Service Building St. Paul, Minnesota 1955


Veterans Service Building St. Paul, MN  Mural by Bernard Arnest
Close up of  Bernard Arnest Mural Veterans Service Building St. Paul, Minnesota 1955 
We thank Mark Arnest for graciously providing the photos. We have not been able to determine if the mural is still in situ. Mark keeps a facebook page on Arnest. 

Arnest's mural is interesting as the viewer can see elements of both his technical excellence and his willingess to move into the abstract.  The figures in the mural are well drawn, yet they are placed in environments with bright to garish patches of color. These colorful abstract background patches convey the sense of damaged buildings.  There is a hint of combat in the left section, soldiers milling in the largest central portion and medics carrying a soldier on a stretcher in the third. This is not the type of mural that one would expect in a veterans building in 1955. For that era, the mural is cutting edge. It is worth noting that a "Promise of Youth" fountain that was to be placed in the building was the subject of significant controversy. So it may be concluded that the modernist architect Brooks Caven was willing to push the boundaries.

The following year the First National Bank engaged Arnest to paint an abstract mural for its bank branch (now closed) at the Southdale Center, the nation’s first indoor regional shopping mall, which opened in 1956 in Edina, Minnesota. 
After completing the spring semester at the University of Minnesota in 1957, Bernard Arnest relocated the family to Colorado Springs to join Colorado College its faculty as professor and chairman of the art department. He also was a principal consultant for the Advanced Placement in Art program developed by the College Entrance Examination Board. In the early 1960s he also served as a consultant on college and university art programs at Stanford University, Pennsylvania State University, and the Ford Foundation.
in 1960 as a US Department of State consultant for its international educational/cultural exchange program and receiving a grant to depict the landscape and people of Afghanistan under the auspices of the US Embassy in Kabul. There, he lectured in English before select groups and traveled around the country making field sketches. He executed several paintings in the country that made up his solo show at the American Exhibition at Kabul’s 1960 Afghan National Fair. Some of those works along with others he finished after returning to Colorado Springs were exhibited later at the Design Center and Art Galleries in Denver and at Lehigh University.
The 1964 Lehigh University exhibition of Aarnest's paintings from Afghanistan also included those of Raymond Mintz in an exhibition organized by Francis Quirk. This was not the first time Bethlehem, Pennsylvania saw Arnest's work. Earlier in 1957, one of his paintings joined those of Edward Hopper, James Penney and others in another Lehigh exhibition.

We provide a selection of Arnest's Afghanistan paintings below. We cannot fully confirm that these were the actual,s specific paintings exhibited at Lehigh at the time. However, we do believe that these are a representative sample.  In the works, one can again see both the technical skill and a willingness to creatively use color and shape in a more fluid manner. 
Afghans Resting by Bernard Arnest Photo courtesy of Mark Arnest
  
Afghan Family by Bernard Arnest Photo courtesy of Mark Arnest
Afghan Seated by Bernard Arnest Photo courtesy of Mark Arnest



Bernard Arnest   Painting of Afghanistan Windblown People
White Wind by Bernard Arnest Photo courtesy of Mark Arnest

Bernard Arnest   landscape Painting of Afghanistan
Wheat Field by Bernard Arnest Photo courtesy of Mark Arnest


Arnest retired from Colorado College in 1982 as professor emeritus of art, a step he felt he should have taken some forty years earlier. While he enjoyed teaching, he welcomed the lack of schedules and deadlines, leaving him free to paint and do a little writing.
He died in 1986.

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