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Emil
Bisttram was born in Hungary, near the Romanian border, in 1895.
When he was 11 years old, his family immigrated to New
York City. Emil
Bisttram grew up in the tenement buildings that had become
the destination for so many Eastern European immigrant families. Bisttram was a talented artist, and after a few years began his schooling
at the National Academy of Art and Design, then Cooper Union,
Parsons, and The Art Student’s League. Most of his studies
were completed through night courses, as Emil
Bisttram was working as a
commercial artist to support himself. His eagerness to study
would translate to a love of and great skill for teaching. Emil
Bisttram
began teaching soon after completing school, first at the New
York School of Fine and Applied Arts, and then at the Master
Institute of the Roerich Museum.
Emil Bisttram first visited Taos during the summer of 1930. Bisttram went
initially to escape the hardship of life in New York following
the stock market crash. His first visit, however, was nearly his
last. While enthralled by the beauty of New Mexico, Emil
Bisttram was
endlessly frustrated by his first attempts at painting there:
“Whenever
I tried to paint what was before me I was frustrated by the grandeur
of the scenery and the limitless space. Above all
a strange, almost mystic quality of light.”

Emil Bisttram, Rancho de Taos, Conte Crayon, 13" x 16"
Perhaps frustrated
by what may be perceived as his own limitations as an artist,
Emil
Bisttram
returned to New York. If indeed he was frustrated
at that time, it couldn’t have lasted long, as the very next
year Emil
Bisttram won a Guggenheim fellowship to study mural painting. The
fellowship enabled Emil
Bisttram to travel to Mexico where he studied
mural painting with the world famous muralist Diego Rivera. Numerous
mural commissions were to follow throughout his career, including
murals for the Department of Justice in Washington D.C., The Taos
County Courthouse, New Mexico, and the Federal Courthouse in Roswell,
New Mexico.
After his time with Rivera was through, Emil
Bisttram returned immediately
to Taos, and that same year founded the Taos School of Art, of
which he would remain the director for the rest of his life. Emil
Bisttram
came to be much admired as a teacher. Bisttram was an extremely articulate
individual, and was as skilled at explaining concepts of composition,
drawing and painting as he was at applying those concepts to his
own paintings. The school was very well attended, particularly
during the summer months. Further demonstrating his skills as an
administrator, the following year Emil
Bisttram started the first commercial
art gallery in Taos, the Heptagon Gallery.
Emil Bisttram first came to Taos as a representational painter. His
canvases show stylized renderings of Native American dancers, portraits
of natives and Mexicans, as well as depictions of local architecture.
However, Emil
Bisttram began to experiment with non-objective (ie. Abstract)
forms in his paintings. Bisttram became heavily influence by the work
and philosophy of the painter Wassily Kandinsky. Indeed, in many
of Emil
Bisttram's canvases, the influence of the Russian is evident
in the bright colors, and abstract forms that he began to employ.
In 1938 Emil
Bisttram, along with Raymond Johnson and several other
painters, founded the Transcendental Painting Group in Santa Fe,
New Mexico. The aim of the group was to work to bring painting
beyond the appearance of the physical world. Work of this type
had begun in Europe at least two decades previously, but this was
something new to America. Despite the stated goal, Emil
Bisttram often
maintained elements that were at least semi-representational in
his canvases.
Emil Bisttram continued
to be extremely active in the artistic growth of New Mexico for
the rest of his life. In 1952 he co-founded the
Taos Art Association, and in ’59 won the Grand Prize for
painting at the New Mexico State Fair. Also in 1959, a retrospective
of his work was held at the Harwood Art Museum in Taos. As a final
honor, and tribute to one who done so much for the artistic community
and the identity of New Mexico as a whole, in 1975 April 7th was
declared “Emil Bisttram Day,” a New Mexico state holiday.
The next year, 1976, Emil Bisttram died at the age of 81.
Bibliography
1. Bickerstaff, Laura, Pioneer
Artists of Taos, Sage Books, Denver,
1955, p. 55-68.
2. Coke, Van Daren, Taos and Santa Fe, The Artist’s Environment
1882-1942, University of New Mexico Press, 1963, pp. 22-23.
3. Luhan, Mabel Dodge, Taos and Its Artists, Duell Sloan and Pearce,
New York, 1947.
4. Pearson, Ralph, The Modern Renaissance in American Art, Harper,
New York, 1954, pp. 81-86.
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