by Kevin O'Connor
BRATTLEBORO — Artist Wolf Kahn recalls picking up this town’s newspaper 40 years ago to see himself introduced to Vermonters through a particularly top-dollar interview.
The first question was, ‘How many paintings do you do a year?’ I said maybe 100. The second was, ‘How much do you charge?’ I said a couple of hundred bucks. The next time I had to have my barn reshingled, all of a sudden the price went up.”
Kahn nevertheless thinks highly of his neighbors, be they the farmers who live next door or their cattle that graze his land.
I’ve gotten to feel like I’m no longer just a flatlander — I belong here.”
Locals say that’s an understatement.
Wolf Kahn is to southern Vermont what Winslow Homer is to the coast of Maine, Georgia O’Keeffe to the New Mexico high desert and Claude Monet to the French countryside,” Brattleboro Museum & Art Center museum director Danny Lichtenfeld asserts. “Wolf’s depictions of our barns, fields, trees and hillsides form the prevailing visual impression of our area for people all around the world.”
The director might be surprised to hear an argument — from the artist himself.
I’m not trying to paint Vermont,” Kahn says. “I’m painting paintings, and it turns out people think they look like Vermont.”
It takes a special talent to smear pink, orange and purple oils and pastels on canvas and spark vivid thoughts of the Green Mountain State. That’s why, as Kahn prepares to mark his 90th birthday, the Brattleboro museum is presenting a major new exhibit of his work.
Focusing on paintings from the last 10 years, this exhibition celebrates a modern master approaching 90 who is still actively engaged in studio life,” curator Mara Williams writes in the show’s introductory statement. “These are virtuosic compositions, symphonic in scale and complexity, at once original and a précis of the art historical influences of a lifetime.”
And an epic span at that. Kahn was born in Stuttgart, Germany, on Oct. 4, 1927, and by age 5 was drawing the musicians in the orchestra his father conducted. That stopped at 13, when he was beaten by a gang of Nazis (“they broke my bicycle, too”) and was forced to flee his homeland on a “Kindertransport” train that saved Jewish children just weeks before the start of World War II.
After emigrating to the United States by way of England in 1940, Kahn graduated from New York City’s High School of Music and Art. He went on to serve in the Navy and, under the GI Bill, studied with renowned painter Hans Hofmann before completing his bachelor’s degree in a single year at the University of Chicago and launching his career in 1951.
Kahn’s work can be found in the collections of New York’s Metropolitan Museum of Art, Washington, D.C.’s Smithsonian American Art Museum and the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, as well as the collections of President Bill Clinton, former New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg and onetime U.S. Secretary of State Henry Kissinger.
Beginning Friday and continuing through Oct. 8, Kahn also will exhibit in Brattleboro. He has spent each summer and fall there since 1968, when a friend drove him around the region, only to recognize and follow a real estate agent’s vehicle to the hillside farm the artist soon made his second home.
Kahn laughs when recalling how the Brattleboro Reformer finally introduced him a decade later in a 1977 interview.
Vermont’s fall colors have had a felicitous influence,” reporter Virginia Page wrote at the time.
He’s equally unabashed about sharing comments from his critics. Visit his website and you can read how the late art historian Robert Rosenblum, visiting Kahn’s studio, once told the artist: “There is nothing here that Monet hasn’t done already.”
The New York Sun, for its part, added: “Can art this ingratiating be taken seriously? The question dogs critical appraisal of Wolf Kahn. His popularity with a broad public and the unclouded loveliness of his landscapes give rise to grumblings that he has not earned his keep.”
Then again, the latter newspaper folded in 2008, while Kahn traveled to Washington, D.C., this January to receive the U.S. State Department’s International Medal of Arts for sharing his paintings with American diplomatic outposts worldwide.
How does the artist describe his work?
I try not to,” he says. “I never want to look at it the way an outsider would. There’s a certain mystery in making paintings, and I don’t want to destroy that. What people think art’s about is not always what it’s about. Lately I’ve decided my painting isn’t about describing places or things, it’s much closer to just an expression of enthusiasm.”
Kahn voices similar answers when asked personal questions.
I’m really not interested in myself,” he says. “I’m interested in the world around me.”
He lives to convey it.
I’m painting more now than I ever did before.”
And increasingly, to confound it. The show’s introductory statement notes that “his preferred applicator is a cheap stiff-bristled brush, the kind do-it-yourself homeowners buy and toss instead of cleaning.”
When people say, ‘You must have a great time using colors,’” Kahn adds, “I say, ‘Right now, I’m painting gray.’”
Why the switch?
Goes with the color of my hair. Actually my hair now is white. But gray allows you to do a lot of things that bright color doesn’t. It’s a more austere way of going about the world.”
Not that the artist is monochromatic. He still wears hues as playful as his personality — albeit while staring seriously at a blank canvas.
I’m a bit of a workaholic — I don’t stop,” the soon-to-be nonagenarian says. “People ask me, ‘You must be having a wonderful time.’ I say, ‘Sometimes I do, but more often I don’t because each painting has to go through stages.’ It’s not an easy profession. You’ve got to have a lot of perseverance.”
So why continue?
Bad habit,” Kahn concludes. “I don’t know how to do anything else very well.”