Hovsep Pushman [Armenian: Յովսէփ Փուշման] (1877-1966) was an American artist of Armenian background. He was known for his contemplative still lifes and sensitive portraits of women, often in exotic dress.
He was most closely associated during his lifetime with the Grand Central Art Galleries, which represented him from its opening in 1922 until his death in 1966.
Life
Hovsep Pushman was born and grew up in the town of Dikranagerd in the Ottoman Empire, where his family, originally "Pushmanian", was in the carpet business. Pushman showed artistic ability early, and at age 11 was the youngest student ever admitted to Istanbul's Imperial School of Fine Arts.
In 1896, Pushman's family emigrated to Chicago, where he studied Chinese culture, immersing himself in Asian art, and began to teach at the age of 17. He then moved to Paris and studied at the Académie Julian under Jules Joseph Lefebvre, Tony Robert-Fleury and Adolphe Déchenaud.
Pushman exhibited his work at the Salon des Artistes Français, where he won medals in 1914 and 1921.
Pushman returned to the United States in 1914, and in 1916 moved to Riverside, California, living at the city's Mission Inn until 1919. There he accepted some portrait commissions, including one that still hangs at the inn.
In 1918 Pushman and a group of California painters founded the Laguna Beach Art Association; the same year he was awarded the California Art Club's Ackerman Prize.
After his time in California Pushman spent several years in Paris. He opened his own studio in 1921 and, with the encouragement of Robert-Fleury, concentrated his efforts on exotic portraits and still lifes of carefully arranged objects he had collected.
According to James Cox, former director of the Grand Central Art Galleries, which represented Pushman for much of his life:
"Pushman's paintings typically featured oriental idols, pottery and glassware, all glowing duskily as if illuminated by candlelight. They were symbolic, spiritual paintings, and were sometimes accompanied by readings, which help explain their allegorical significance. Most important, they were exquisitely beautiful, executed with technical precision".
In 1923, Pushman returned yet again to the United States and settled in New York City. His connection to the Grand Central Art Galleries began when he befriended Erwin Barrie, who once managed Carson Pirie Scott's art collection. Barrie introduced the artist to Walter Leighton Clark, who was in the process of establishing the Galleries.
When Clark secured space in New York City's Grand Central Terminal, Barrie was hired as director and he encouraged Pushman to join the Grand Central Art Galleries.
Pushman set up his studio in the Carnegie Hall building, where he created the remarkable works he showed at the Galleries:
"Erwin Barrie maintained a separate velvet-walled salon for the exclusive use of Pushman. The only illumination allowed on his paintings were specially designed reflector lights attached to the rear of his carefully selected antique frames. The 'Pushman Room' is a legend in the American art world".
In 1932, Pushman was honored with a one-man show at the Galleries. Sixteen paintings were on display and all sold the opening day. The prices ranged from $3,500 up to $10,000 (the equivalent of more than $150,000 in 2009).
The same year his painting The Daughter of the Sheykh, which had won a silver medal in Paris in 1921, was purchased by the Metropolitan Museum of Art.
The winner of the 1936 art drawing at the Grand Central Art Galleries, Walter S. Gifford of AT and T, selected a Pushman still life of a Chinese statuette.
The 1940s and 1950s brought controversy and change to Pushman's world.
In 1940 he sued the New York Graphic Society for reproducing a painting without his permission. While initially the ruling went against the painter, it was eventually reversed; the decision now protects artists' creative works.
He had often turned down buyers interested in his work, reportedly once refusing an offer of $6,000 for a small canvas; in 1942 became only the second painter in 117 years to refuse entry into the National Academy.
In 1958 the Grand Central Art Galleries, which had been Pushman's home since they opened in 1923, were forced out of the Grand Central Terminal. Eighty-one-year-old Pushman was present at the final reception at the Galleries' Terminal location, which was attended by more than 400 people.
Pushman died on February 13, 1966, in New York City.
Three months later, Hulia Shaljian Pushman, his widow, followed him.
Legacy
For more than two decades after Hovsep Pushman's death his sons, Arsene and Armand, preserved their father's studio intact. All of Pushman's objects, carpets, antiques, and paintings stayed until the last of the family's heirs died around 1990.
Pushman's paintings are in the collections of many major museums, including the Metropolitan Museum of Art, Boston's Museum of Fine Arts, the Seattle Art Museum, the San Diego Art Institute, the Houston Art Museum, the Rockford Art Museum, and the Minneapolis Institute of Arts. | © Wikipedia
Public Collections
Detroit Institute of Arts;
Houston Art Museum;
Milwaukee Art Institute, Wisconsin;
Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York City;
Minneapolis Art Museum, Minnesota;
Montclair Art Museum, New Jersey;
Museum of Fine Arts, Boston;
New Britain Institute, Connecticut;
Norfolk Art Association, Virginia;
Philbrook Art Center, Tulsa;
Rockford Art Guild, Illinois;
San Diego Fine Arts Society;
Seattle Art Museum.
Hovsep Pushman è stato uno di quei rari artisti il cui lavoro è stato apprezzato da critici e collezionisti e che ha goduto di riconoscimento e fortuna.
In una mostra personale del 1932 alle Grand Central Art Galleries di New York, l'intera esposizione di 16 dipinti di Pushman fu venduta prima della fine della giornata di apertura.
Pushman, in seguito cittadino americano naturalizzato, nacque in Armenia nel 1877.
All'età di 11 anni ottenne una borsa di studio presso l'Accademia d'arte di Costantinopoli.
A 17 anni era andato negli Stati Uniti ed aveva iniziato ad insegnare arte a Chicago.
Ha studiato la cultura cinese, immergendosi nell'arte orientale e forse nella filosofia. Ha poi studiato a Parigi sotto Lefebvre, Robert-Fleury e Dechenaud.
Espose le sue opere al Salon des Artistes Francais di Parigi, vincendo una medaglia di bronzo nel 1914 e una medaglia d'argento nel 1921.
Nel 1918 vinse anche il California Art Club's Ackerman Prize.
L'identità artistica di Pushman iniziò a prendere forma dopo aver aperto il suo studio nel 1921.
Robert-Fleury, dopo aver visto una delle prime nature morte dello studio di Pushman, consigliò all'artista: "Quel dipinto sei tu".
Successivamente, la carriera di Pushman fu dedicata ad un soggetto, il misticismo orientale, ed una forma, la natura morta. I suoi dipinti rappresentavano tipicamente idoli orientali, ceramiche e oggetti in vetro, tutti luminosi come se fossero illuminati dalla luce di una candela.
Erano dipinti simbolici e spirituali e talvolta erano accompagnati da letture, che aiutano a spiegare il loro significato allegorico. Soprattutto, erano squisitamente belli, eseguiti con precisione tecnica.
Austere Solitude esemplifica la straordinaria bellezza, l'atmosfera misteriosa e la tecnica impeccabile che hanno reso il lavoro di Pushman così altamente rispettato.
Pushman morì nel 1966 a New York City.