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James C. Harrison

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James C. Harrison
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James C. Harrison, American (Detroit), 1925-1990. A 1980s mixed media on Fabriano paper portrait after Francisco Goya (Spanish, 1746-1828), titled "Goya". Monogramed "J. H." and dated "May 29,1989" center left, Ledis Flam Gallery label verso. Image 27 1/2 x 39", framed 31 1/4 x 43" overall.


“Goya” pays homage to the renowned Spanish Old Master, Francisco Goya (1746-1828). Featuring primal splashes of bold elemental colors, the viewers eye is drawn to the central representation of Goya’s 1796 “Self-Portrait”. Harrison intuitively balances a vivid yellow ochre used to highlight the intensity of Goya expression, with a somber blue shadowing that conveys the ruminative nature of his gaze. Rough sketches of two figures, paused mid-battle, emanate from his head almost as an expression of thought. The image is grounded by another rendition of Goya’s work - Plate 79 “Truth has Died” from The Disasters of War series. In contrast with the colorful, organic depiction above, this image portrays a monochromatic woman lying prostrate in death with arms folded below her bare breasts. Cleverly cross-hatched beams of light radiate from her body, bearing a hasty semblance to Goya’s distinctly etched lines.

Goya’s The Disasters of War, an 82 print series produced using etching, aquatint and engraving techniques between 1810 and 1820, is hailed as the sacrosanct emblem of anti-war conviction. “Truth has Died” and the subsequent plate “Will She Live Again?” present the illuminated female form as an allegorical lesson illustrating the loss of truth and justice during the perversity of war. Existential questions of renascence, whether personal or cultural, are artistically ubiquitous and Harrison is not exempt. Totems and symbols suggesting themes of rebirth and personal rejuvenation are prevalent throughout his work. Francisco Goya is notorious for unapologetic, often satirical, critiques on the events and culture of his day. Similarly, Harrison also artistically explored his personal rancor against the rise of American post-war conformity, affluence, and consumerism. Like the Old Master, Harrison was unafraid to explore the darkest realms of the human condition. However, he preferred to turn the focus inward, conducting conscious introspection with the same intrepid bravery. In “Goya”, Harrison creates an impactful marriage of artistic reverence and visual story telling. He masterfully blurs the lines between ‘the artist’ and ‘the art’, bringing an Old World master into to the progressive realms of abstract-expressionism and contemporary art.

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Biography:

Born November 27th, 1925 in Detroit, Harrison graduated from Cass Tech High School with a commercial art degree in 1943. Harrison went on to study briefly at Cranbrook Academy of Art and Olivet College before realizing that a traditional educational setting was not agreeable with him. Thus, he became largely a self-taught artist, and moved to New York City in 1950. A member of the second-generation New York School, Harrison progresses from Abstract to Neo Expressionism with a disarming intimacy.

“It is not uncommon to feel suddenly immobilized by a rush of sublime rapture as one stands before his work.“

- Gregory Gilligan, Contributing Editor to Art International and Arts Magazine, 1989

Within Harrison’s work, there is a compelling tension between classical allegories, Jungian imagery, and intense subjectivity. His distinctive ‘rough handling’ and layered visual syntax shows an artist's struggle to transcend his own internalized chaos. Frequently collaborating with Thelonious Monk photographer Doug Quackenbush throughout the 1950s, Harrison befriended and exchanged works with Cy Twombly in 1955.

Though he participated in several group exhibitions, the vast majority of his works produced between the 1960s and 1980s were held as closely guarded secrets. He would often revisit his works adding to or further explaining his inspiration for each one. As his interests changed or his understanding deepened, Harrison would inscribe the backs of his works to reflect this evolution. These writings now shed light on Harrison’s complex personality as he critiqued his own art, days, weeks or even decades later. Harrison had his first solo exhibition at A Place Apart Gallery in Brooklyn in 1983.

“To Harrison, all images were religious, in that the contents of the imagination were sacred. He understood that imaging and dreaming were processes; the point of modern art was to reveal the process as much as the resulting images. He read his drawings as texts of the Collective Unconscious, where meaning is elusive, changeable, layered, and funny. Baroque webs and fiery geometries dance together, delineating, as James Hillman calls archetypes, "the skeletal structures of the psyche".”

- The Brooklyn Rail, April, 2006



Solo Exhibitions:
1983 A Place Apart Gallery, Brooklyn, NY
1986, 1987, 1989, 1990 LedisFlam Gallery, Brooklyn, NY
1988 Galerie Vincent Steinmetz, Amsterdam, Netherlands
1988 Shaffy Cultural Center, Amsterdam, Netherlands
1989 Galerie Brinkman, Amsterdam, Netherlands
1989 Dart Gallery, Chicago, IL
1989 Addison/Ripley Gallery, Washington, D.C.
1989: Martha Schaeffer Fine Arts, New York, NY
1992 Parameters Galleries, the Chrysler Museum, Norfolk, VA

Group Exhibitions:

1946 Olivet College, Olivet, MI
1947 Wehye Gallery, New York, NY
1948 Yaddo, Saratoga Springs, NY
1949 Detroit Institute of Art, Detroit, MI
1949 Grand Rapids Art Gallery, Grand Rapids, MI
1952 Art Institute of Chicago, Chicago, IL
1952 Toledo Museum of Art, Toledo, OH
1952 Colorado Springs Fine Art Center, Colorado Spring, CO
1952 San Francisco Museum of Art, San Francisco, CA
1954 Morris Gallery, New York, NY
1955 Wildenstein Gallery, New York, NY
1956 Theater East Gallery, New York, NY
1957, 1958 Bodley Gallery, New York, NY
1957 St. Marks on the Bowery, New York, NY
1963 Olivet College, Olivet, MI
1968 Western Michigan University, Kalamazoo, MI
1968 Northern Illinois University, Dekalb, IL
1978 C.G. Jung Foundation, New York, NY
1978 Harkness House Gallery, New York, NY
1982, 1983 A Place Apart Gallery, Brooklyn, NY
1982 BACA Downtown, Brooklyn, NY
1984 Art Galaxy, New York, NY
1986 Gerard Gallery, New York, NY
1986 Minor Injury, Brooklyn, NY
1987, 1988 LedisFlam Gallery, Brooklyn, NY
1987 Pulitzer Art Gallery, Amsterdam, Holland
1988 RPM Studio, New York, NY
1988 Arsenal Gallery, New York, NY