Monday, January 28, 2013

Celebrating five years (Patayear 139, vulg. 2012)

   When we formed the Brewton Foundation in February 2008, we knew of only 20 surviving artworks by James Brewton (1930-1967). With the encouragement of a curator (our 'patron saint'), we started to hunt for more. During the last five years we've interviewed scores of people and located more than 100 Brewton works. We are ready to show!

   A few highlights from 2012:

Exhibition ~~ For the first time in 41 years, Jim's work was in a show. His Portrait of Edgar Allan Poe (c. 1959), was in "Haunting Narratives: Detours from Philadelphia Realism, 1935 to the Present" at the Woodmere Art Museum, May 12 through July 15.

Press ~~ The show at the Woodmere garnered some notice for Jim's painting:

   Brady, Shaun: "New Exhibit Explores Our 'Haunting Narratives'," (with photo of Brewton's portrait of Edgar Allan Poe) Metro Philadelphia, May 15, 2012; and

   "Realism in a Minor Key," American Artist magazine, October 2012 (with photo of Brewton's portrait of Edgar Allan Poe) "tinged with a touch more than the typical darkness."

Back-of-house ~~ We're moving the Brewton Foundation to Pennsylvania, because the location is more relevant to Jim's life and work. The Florida nonprofit will not be dissolved until the new company is up and running, so we maintain our 501(c)(3) status.

    We're so grateful to all who have given us funding, artwork, information, expert advice and their time. In 2012, we received a very generous donation from a benefactor who prefers to remain anonymous. We're using the funds to move the nonprofit (fees to the Commonwealth of PA, required advertising, fees to the IRS); to have a film reel of a 1971 exhibition transferred to DVD; to publish www.jebrewton.org on the web; and more projects to be revealed.

To all of you who help us: Thank you. We appreciate you! 

Monday, May 21, 2012

Help us find missing paintings!

The James Edward Brewton Foundation continues to seek, preserve and promote Jim's artwork. We're very pleased and grateful to have found so much! As we enter our fourth year of research, we're publishing images of artwork that's still missing here. Please have a look--we're adding to this site all the time--and contact us if you can help us find Jim's works. Thank you!
This self-portrait by James Brewton is missing.
 It was last owned by Hobson Pittman and may have
ended up in Pennsylvania or North Carolina.
Judging from a newspaper clipping of Pittman with
the painting, it's about 40 inches in height, oils on canvas.  

Friday, June 12, 2009

Graffiti Pataphysic: Art of James E. Brewton







“I use graffiti in my work because they are anonymous and therefore for all mankind,” said Jim Brewton, in 1965. The Philadelphia-based painter died at 36, but he had found his distinctive voice at 30.
“There was an artist who was ahead of his time, who was brilliant, sensitive and non-violent…” wrote Nessa Forman in The Philadelphia Inquirer in 1971. “Brewton was into conceptual art before the term was coined. … And innovate he did, with wit, with humor, with sophistication and good taste. Ironically, his graffiti paintings and lithographs hold more insight and value for us today than when he painted them.”
Raised in Ohio, Jim Brewton studied art at the Toledo Museum school, served in the Korean War and enrolled at the Ruskin School of Art in Oxford in 1954, on the G.I. Bill. In the summer of 1955, he transferred to the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts (PAFA) in Philadelphia, Class of 1958.
Dorothy Grafly, Philadelphia Bulletin art critic, wrote in 1967: “Mr. Brewton’s career was launched dramatically when his canvas ‘The Suicide of Judas’ won the prestigious $1000 Schiedt prize in the national biennial exhibition of American painting and sculpture … during the 1959-60 season. The tall ex-marine sergeant … thus captured—at the very early age of 28—the same award William Glackens, Stuart Davis, Hans Hofmann, Ivan Albright and Charles Burchfield had earned in their maturity.”
It’s unclear when Brewton became fascinated by Alfred Jarry and ’Pataphysics. Colleagues say he was talking about Jarry by 1958. At the time, Brewton was working at The Print Club in Philadelphia, where he was electrified by the spontaneous style of Danish artist Asger Jorn, a founder of the CoBrA and Situationist International groups.
Brewton left Philadelphia for Denmark in 1962, working for about a year with ceramicist Erik Nyholm, Jorn and others. Although he had always been one for daring use of color, Brewton’s later works show a more liberated style that owed its freedom to CoBrA. The principles of Jorn’s Comparative Vandalism project gave Brewton a focus for his artistic quest: the interpretation of meaning in symbols.
Philadelphia artist and teacher Hobson Pittman knew the importance of symbols in Brewton’s work, writing for a memorial exhibition catalogue: “A truly gifted artist. … Jim Brewton, from his earliest work, gave evidence of a peculiar and constant search for the nebulous and metaphysical symbol. … His standard of judgement was … innate, as it is with genuinely endowed artists. His deep understanding of aesthetics was evident in everything he did.”
While Jorn gave graffiti a passing nod as part of his Comparative Vandalism project, Brewton incorporated graffiti and ’Pataphysics into his interpretation of the world. Yet his vision was absolutely original, as Hobson Pittman noted: “It is the assimilation ... the editing and discretion of borrowing without imitation, that shows the signs of greatness.”
Brewton called his new practice “Graffiti Pataphysic.” Between 1963 and 1967, he created his most original pieces. In the last phase of his life, Brewton created collages, prints, sculptures and paintings that are cogent, elegant comments about freedom, racism, sex, war, assassination and music.
In 1965 Brewton returned to Denmark, where he was artist-in-residence at Aage Damgaard’s studio (Damgaard founded the Herning—now “Heart”—Kunstmuseum). That year, Brewton had a successful solo exhibition, “Graffiti Pataphysic: The American Dream-Girl,” at the AP Galerie in Copenhagen; and another, “Graffiti Pataphysic,” at the Kenmore Galleries in Philadelphia. Andy Warhol, in town for his October 1965 show at the Institute of Contemporary Art (ICA), noticed Brewton’s work at the Kenmore Galleries and invited him to the ICA opening.
On May 15, 1967, Brewton’s work was featured in a four-man show at the Socrates Perakis Art Gallery in Philadelphia. Four days earlier, discouraged and ill, 36-year-old Brewton had shot himself in his studio.
Two memorial shows were held. Brewton’s work was exhibited at the Peale Galleries at PAFA, along with that of Robert Rauschenberg, in 1968. In 1971, the Kenmore Galleries held another memorial with proceeds going to a PAFA student fund. When the show closed, Brewton’s works were dispersed; they have not been shown publicly since then.

The James Edward Brewton Foundation was formed in 2008 to locate, catalogue, restore and lend the artist’s works to museums and other arts venues; and to promote study and appreciation of the modern-art movements Brewton drew upon for inspiration. More than 100 Brewton works have been catalogued to date. The Brewton Foundation is a 501(c)(3) tax-exempt organization. For more information, post a comment and we'll be happy to contact you.

Wednesday, September 24, 2008

The Scandinavian Institute for Comparative Vandalism




Asger Jorn (left) and Jim Brewton, unloading artwork for an exhibition--or records of Jorn's Comparative Vandalism project--in Denmark, 1965. 


Tuesday, June 10, 2008

About Us

The James Edward Brewton Foundation was formed in early 2008. We locate and catalogue works of art, writings and other items associated with the artistic legacy of American artist James Edward Brewton (1930-1967). Brewton's work, called "Graffiti Pataphysic," reflects his interest in Surrealism, the CoBrA group and the works of Alfred Jarry.
Since the foundation's inception, we have located more than 100 Brewton works. The Brewton Foundation is a 501(c)(3) tax-exempt organization.