An American Art Double Take

January 28, 2010

Hanging in the American galleries, there is a trio of paintings—all painted in 1926—that may prompt a double-take: Miki Hayakawa’s Portrait of a Negro; Yun Gee’s Artist Studio, and Otis Oldfield’s Portrait of Yun Gee. Look closely and you will discover the connections that I love pointing out to visitors.



Hayakawa

Miki Hayakawa, Portrait of a Negro, 1926, purchased with funds provided by Mrs. James D. Macneil



Gee

Yun Gee, Artist Studio, 1926, purchased with funds provided by Mr. and Mrs. Robert B. Honeyman, Jr. and Mrs. James D. Macneil



Oldfield

Otis William Oldfield, Portrait of Yun Gee, 1926, purchased with funds provided by Dr. and Mrs. Christian Title and Carey Nachenberg

Using bold colors and modern forms in his prismatic studio scene, Gee has depicted Hayakawa at work on one of her portraits from her series of single figures of different races. His is a modernist vision of the sitter in front of the red drapery and posing before Hayakawa's easel, on which we see her canvas (to which he even added her signature “Miki H.”) and on it the image of the African American model taking shape in her realist style.

A noted portraitist, Oldfield taught both Gee and Hayakawa. Oldfield collaborated with Gee to found the Modern Art Gallery, the first artists’ cooperative in San Francisco, and painted his student the year Gee founded the Chinese Revolutionary Artists Club, which instructed Chinese art students in Western artistic methods. Acquired together in 2004, these interconnected paintings reveal the little-known camaraderie and diversity of the talented community of modern artists working in the Bay Area as early as the 1920s.

Austen Bailly