Romaine Brooks: Gray Matters

Media - 1966.49.1 - SAAM-1966.49.1_2 - 124667
Romaine Brooks, Self-Portrait, 1923, oil on canvas, Smithsonian American Art Museum, Gift of the artist, 1966.49.1
June 16, 2016

The paintings of Romaine Brooks have always made me want to learn more about the artist, ever since first seeing a selection of her work in the Renwick Gallery's Grand Salon in 2009, including her self-portrait and multiple images of dancer-performer Ida Rubinstein. I was immediately drawn into the world of the paintings, their muted tones of grays, whites, and blacks, the people portrayed, and what I perceived to be the psychological veneer applied to each work. Some artists seem to reveal just as much about themselves as they do about their subject. Who was Romaine Brooks?

The exhibition, The Art of Romaine Brooks, has some answers. The artist lived most of her life in Paris where she was a leading figure of an artistic counterculture of upper-class Europeans and American expats. Brooks crafted an androgynous appearance that challenged conventional ideas of how women should look and behave. An out lesbian, she was not afraid to explore gender and sexuality in her works, portraying a pantheon of strong women who were game-changers in the world of arts and letters.

In addition to the paintings, SAAM's exhibition features a selection of drawings that Brooks completed in the 1930s, about the same time she was working on her unpublished memoir, No Pleasant Memories. Unlike the paintings, the drawings seem to have been created in a dream state: the lines are fluid and look as if the pencil never left the page. They are otherworldly, inward looking states of emotion. Together with the paintings, they illuminate the inner life of the artist.

There's a reason that a reviewer of her first solo exhibition in Paris in 1910 referred to Brooks as the "thief of souls." More than one hundred years later, we get a glimpse into the artist's soul as well.

View an online gallery of Brooks' paintings and drawings.

The Art of Romaine Brooks opens tomorrow, June 17, 2016 and remains on view through October 2, 2016. Join us tomorrow afternoon from 4-7 pm in the museum's McEvoy Auditorium for a panel discussion by scholars and experts on the life and art of Romaine Brooks.

Update: If you missed the panel discussion, view the archived webcast.

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