I
received this remembrance of Herb Vogel by email from Lucio Pozzi. The Vogels, who I’d known for some
time, introduced me to Lucio back in the early 90’s, when I ran into them all
having lunch at Jerry’s Restaurant in SoHo. Since then Lucio has been a friend
and important figure in my life. In 2008 I posted Lucio's memories of art dealer John Weber, along with this watercolor, one of my favorites:
Lucio Pozzi, Barbardos, 11 January 1972, watercolor on paper, 11.5 x 23.1"
For
a few years I lived under a giant skylight in a windowless, basement level,
nineteenth century former police truck repair garage on Mulberry Street. There,
the city was far away. I slept on a convertible couch or, during my daughter's
visiting nights, she on the bed and I on a futon on the floor.
>
Certain summer afternoons Herbie would ring my bell,
unannounced. He was wearing checkered shorts, an old pair of sandals and a
light non-descript shirt. Despite his having undergone skin cancer surgery a
few times on his face, he never wore a hat. With his left hand he would carry a
translucent plastic bag full of water in which swam a few rare fishes picked up
in the store a block away from me. With his right he held a large paper
shopping bag containing a couple of wrapped rectangular works of art. The
Uptown subway stop was around the corner.
>
He knew he had to wait for me to run up the ramp to open the
door. The familiarity of our greetings were as precious as the years of our
friendship and collaboration. No hugs, shouts or laughter, just a glass of
water, and the tangible pleasure of sitting around the worktable, plain talk
about family and then words about the art of other artists and mine. When
theoretical considerations would arise, Herbie was very quick in situating them
in simple words in the history of contemporary discourse. Nothing escaped his
passionate attention.
>
It was hopeless on my part to ask whom the works in the bag
were by or to see them. Only once he showed me a half-dozen drawings by Joseph Beuys he was particularly proud of having
secured.
>
On my walls he could see the many ventures I was engaged in
- perhaps on the left a large oil painting containing human figures, in the
center some plywood geometric polychrome acrylic cutouts, to the right a
photograph mounted on tinted canvas. On a nearby table there could have been a
landscape watercolor and a dotted gouache texture on paper.
>
His quick eye wandered in the space while chatting, like a
fox exploring the night. He would then have me open the flat files of recent
works on paper. When a group attracted his attention he took it all.
Occasionally he also chose a small piece on canvas or on wood.
>
Sometimes I disagreed about the relevance or quality of what
he chose. His respect for the artist had him listen with grace, but we often
ended up by his taking what he wanted and me adding what I preferred. Now that
the works he had selected are shown to me by the museums that acquired them, I
am stunned by how his eye and mind saw beyond my perception of my own work. I
would say he was always right. As evening approached he would exit wearing a
faint smile, that of a cat who had just savored a good fish meal. And I was
left energized.
>
The art would have to fit the shopping bag, or if too large
I would deliver it at home. On those occasions he and Dorothy either offered me
an Entenmann's cake and tea or, especially after walking had become difficult
for Herbie, I would be invited at the diner across the street. He was very
particular about food. Never salad, no wine, yes to chopped chicken liver and
ice cream.
>
Often Dorothy also came to the studio, but on those
occasions the visit would be arranged ahead of time. We would dine in my neighborhood.
Dorothy shared with her husband a fastidious concern for the correct handling
of the artworks. She also is extremely thorough in cataloguing the collection.
While looking at art, her comments would be drier than his, always very
pragmatic, to the point, no flattery, few words being better than many. The
discussions preceding their final agreement on what was being seen enhanced the
conversations.--Lucio Pozzi
Photo via Washington Post
Has the internet eroded the studio visit? I often rely on jpegs to know what fellow artists are up to.
ReplyDeleteEmbedded in Lucio's recollection of Herb's visits is a sense of time passing slowly between two friends. Conversations built on repeated visits, getting to know each other in addition to the artwork.
I love the internet, for the ways it makes the world smaller, lets me look at artwork that's on exhibition in London or elsewhere...
but it's NOT a studio visit.
It's a simple act that is also so complex...depending on the visitor.
I recently had a dealer tell me that only dealers have the right perspective to discuss an artist's work with them, because they're objective. This dealer thought that other artists can't help but layer their involvement with their own work into the conversation.
Lucio's post was uplifting. His comment, "And I was left energized." ...after Herb's visits was inspiring.