A watershed moment for David Hockney: Henry Geldzahler and Christopher Scott (1969)
Henry Geldzahler was once described as ‘the most powerful and controversial art curator alive’. As an important David Hockney double portrait of the curator and his partner comes up for auction, we recall his radical impact on New York’s arts scene
It’s hard to think of many figures more influential on New
York’s cultural scene in the second half of the 20th century than Henry Geldzahler. During an 18-year
spell at the Metropolitan Museum of Art he was Curator of American
Art and then Contemporary Art, before serving as Commissioner
of Cultural Affairs for New York City between 1977 and 1982
under Mayor Edward I. Koch. According to The New Yorker magazine’s longstanding
art critic Calvin Tomkins, ‘If you were involved in any way
in the [cultural] world, you met Henry.’
David Hockney first met Geldzahler on a trip to New York
in the mid-Sixties, and the pair would become firm friends.
In one of his greatest works — the double portrait Henry Geldzahler and Christopher Scott, which
is being offered from The Barney A. Ebsworth Collection at Christie’s in London on 6 March — the
British artist painted Geldzahler with his then partner in
their 7th Avenue apartment.
‘There are lots of pictures of Henry,’ Hockney said recently.
‘He didn’t have many mirrors in his home. He knew what he
looked like just by asking people to make portraits of him.’
Frank Stella,
Alice Neel and the sculptor
George Segal are among the other artists who have depicted
Geldzahler, who was also the subject of a 90-minute film
by
Andy Warhol, Henry Geldzahler, in which he can
be seen, close up, silently smoking a cigar. ‘Everyone thought of him as their friend,’ Stella said after Geldzahler’s death in 1994 aged 59. ‘The thing about Henry was that he lived among us.’
Read more about Henry Geldzahler and Christopher Scott (1969) by David Hockney
The son of a diamond broker, Henry Geldzahler was born
in the Belgian city of Antwerp in 1935. The family fled to
the United States in 1940, the year of the Nazi occupation
of Belgium. Raised in New York, Geldzahler studied art history
at Yale and then Harvard before joining the Met.
New York at the time had established itself as the unquestionable
centre of the art world, wresting that status away from Paris
thanks, above all, to the rise of the Abstract Expressionists.
In the early 1960s, the city was the crucible for another
major movement — Pop Art — and Geldzahler was at the absolute heart of it.
He admitted to ‘speaking to Andy Warhol every day on the phone,
often for hours’, and perhaps a good way to think of him is
as a kind of embedded curator. (Geldzahler even took part
in Claus Oldenburg’s
‘Happenings’, for one of them lying on a rubber dinghy
in a swimming pool dressed in a terry-cloth robe.)
Randall Bourscheidt, who appeared opposite Nico in Warhol’s 1966 film The Closet, remembers Geldzahler regularly turning up for lunch
at The Factory. ‘He and Andy were good friends, and that
was the unusual thing about Henry,’ he says. ‘He went out
of his way to hang out with artists, 24/7. He immersed himself
in the scene, which was really a novel thing to do at the
time. Museum curators were meant to liaise with patrons,
not artists.’
Henry Geldzahler photographed in New York in 1972. Photo: Arnold Newman/Getty Images. Artwork: © 2019 The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts, Inc. / Licensed by DACS, London
This novel approach would bear fruit in 1969 with
one of the landmark exhibitions of the entire 20th century,
New York Sculpture & Painting: 1940-1970
at the Metropolitan Museum. Curated by Geldzahler, it was
a giant affair featuring 408 works in 35 galleries, by 43
artists who in recent decades had made his city artistically
great. They ranged from
Arshile Gorky,
Jackson Pollock, Stella and
David Smith to
Jasper Johns,
Mark Rothko, Warhol and
Robert Rauschenberg.
‘My guiding principles in deciding which artists to include
in the exhibition have been the extent to which their work
has commanded critical attention or significantly deflected
the course of recent art,’ Geldzahler explained in the press
release announcing the show. ‘These “deflectors”, as they
may be called, are those artists who have been crucial in
redirecting the history of painting and sculpture in the
past three decades.’
In the accompanying catalogue, Geldzahler wrote that ‘not even
at the height of the High Renaissance, Impressionism or Cubism
has anything like this number of artists seemed so crucial
to the development of the art of their time. We are celebrating
a fortunate era of plenitude.’
Convinced this show was truly special, he held it in the Met’s
second-floor galleries, clearing out all the Old Master paintings
by European artists that usually hung there. It proved a hit with
visitors and critics alike, soon becoming known — widely and
simply — as ‘Henry's Show’.
Henry Geldzahler (second right) shows visitors around New York Sculpture & Painting: 1940-1970, the landmark exhibition he curated at the Metropolitan Museum in 1969. Photograph: © Bruce Davidson / Magnum Photos. Image © 2019 The Metropolitan Museum of Art/Art Resource/Scala, Florence. Artwork: © Franz Kline, DACS 2019
According to Stella (again speaking in 1994), the nickname
was apt: ‘That was as important a show as there has ever
been in New York, a high watermark, and Henry was solely
responsible. I mean, there was support for it at the Met,
but Henry carried it all out on his own.’
In truth, a number of conservative New Yorkers, many of them
inside his own museum, objected that the Metropolitan — celebrating
its centenary that year — was an august institution meant
for work by historic greats; that this was a storming of
the citadel; and that New York had numerous other venues
to show contemporary pieces. In an interview in 1993, Geldzahler
recalled the The New York Times art critic Hilton
Kramer ‘attacking the show on even more occasions than his
paper covered the Vietnam War’.
As Calvin Tomkins remembers it, however, such figures were in the
minority. New York Sculpture & Painting: 1940-1970 represented an
‘enormously exciting moment’, he says, ‘a triumph of American
art’.
Geldzahler was just 34 at the time, a dynamic, charismatic,
young man who swiftly became the subject of much publicity.
New York magazine dubbed him ‘the most powerful
and controversial art curator alive’.
In the 1970s, he supplemented his duties at the Met with a
role at the
National Endowment for the Arts (a US government agency
supporting cultural activity nationwide). As its visual arts
director, his initiatives included the introduction of grants
for museums to buy the work of living, American artists.
‘Even the most radical new art is continuous with and dependent upon tradition’ — Henry Geldzahler
In 1977, he left the Metropolitan Museum completely, becoming
head of New York City’s culture department. There, he reconnected
with Randall Bourscheidt, who served as his deputy and remembers him as ‘an inspiring boss’ but also a maddening one.
‘He placed great confidence in his team, entrusting us to make
his many plans a reality,’ Bourscheidt explains, ‘but let’s just say he wasn’t at
his desk much. Henry felt his job was to be out and about,
meeting cultural players across the city. There’s no doubt,
however, that, in his five years as commissioner, New York
benefited greatly.’
Among his successes was overseeing a doubling of the city’s
cultural budget (to $42 million), making it the highest of
any city or state in the US. He also proved adept at negotiating
with private corporations and foundations to give generously
to cultural causes — and this at a time when New York was
still recovering from a fiscal crisis in 1975 that had left it
almost bankrupt.
Geldzahler’s credits include the opening of both
Socrates Sculpture Park and the
Isamo Noguchi Museum, as well as the Lila Acheson Wallace wing,
devoted to modern and contemporary art, at the Metropolitan
Museum; the renovation and extension of Carnegie Hall; and
the ratification of long-term, financial support for institutions
such as New York State Theater at Lincoln Center.
Then, one morning in October 1982, Geldzahler walked into Mayor
Koch’s office, with a bunch of flowers in one hand and his
resignation letter in the other. Five years in city politics
was enough, he felt. He was to spend the rest of his life
working as an independent writer and curator — and while not the constant fixture at galleries and studios he had
been in the Sixties, he still gave support to a wave of new
artists including
Jean-Michel Basquiat,
Keith Haring and
Francesco Clemente.
Geldzahler always appreciated that art was a continuum, that
it doesn’t — in his words — ‘get sliced into decades like
salami’. He wrote in the catalogue for New York Sculpture & Painting: 1940-1970 that ‘even the most radical new art is continuous
with and dependent upon tradition’. And in that sense, showing
contemporary pieces in the Metropolitan wasn’t, for him,
an act of provocation but of logic.
‘People took notice of what Henry said and did — over a prolonged period of time’ — Vincent Fremont
According to Vincent Fremont, who managed Warhol’s Factory
studio for many years, what most stood out about Geldzahler
was ‘his warm and ready wit. You really had to be quick to
keep up with him’.
An oft-told story comes from during his heyday at the Met,
when Geldzahler took a phone call from the switchboard. ‘This simply has to stop,’ an irate operator told him.
‘Two of every three calls to this museum are for you.’
‘My dear,’ Geldzahler replied, ‘can I help it if I’m the only
curator here whose artists are still alive?’
Some have suggested he also influenced artists’ work. Warhol
himself once said, ‘Henry gave me all of my ideas.’ That,
of course, was an exaggeration, but Geldzahler did take credit
for inspiring the Pop Art star's ‘Flowers’ paintings following a
taxi ride in 1965, during which he showed Warhol a two-page magazine
advert featuring colourful blooms.
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It’s surely better to see Geldzahler as a Diaghilev-like impresario
than as a creative force, however. ‘Or, to use a 21st-century
term, as an influencer,’ suggests Fremont. ‘People took notice
of what Henry said and did — over a prolonged period of time.’
In the case of his 1969 exhibition alone, he established
a canon of post-war American art that we still observe to
this day.
On Thursday 7 February, Randall Bourscheidt and Vincent Fremont joined Peter Brant and Gary Tinterow for a panel discussion about Henry Geldzahler at Christie’s New York, 20 Rockefeller Plaza. Chaired by Marc Porter, Chairman of Christie’s Americas, highlights from the event can be watched in the short film, above.