HOUSTON, TX.- The Menil Collection is presenting Joseph E. Yoakum: What I Saw at the Menil Drawing Institute, the first major museum retrospective in more than twenty-five years to focus on the dream-like landscape drawings of Joseph Elmer Yoakum (1891-1972), a self-taught, visionary American artist. On view in Houston from April 22 through August 7, 2022, the exhibition illuminates Yoakums vivid creativity, imaginative vision of the land, and deep spirituality and also explores his rich, complex biography as an African American man who claimed Navajo heritage. Co-organized by the Menil Collection, Houston, the Art Institute of Chicago, and the Museum of Modern Art, New York, the exhibition offers the most comprehensive study to date of the artist, who made a significant and highly original contribution to American art.
The Menil Drawing Institute presentation features more than 80 drawings by Yoakum, most from the collections of Chicago-based artists affiliated with the School of the Art Institute of Chicago, who deeply admired the singularity of Yoakums creativity. His collectors, supporters, and friends include Roger Brown, Cynthia Carlson, Whitney Halstead, Gladys Nilsson and Jim Nutt, Christina Ramberg and Philip Hanson, Karl Wirsum and Lorri Gunn, and Ray Yoshida, all of whom helped promote the artists work during and after his lifetime. Highlights of the exhibitions themes include:
Memory: Yoakum claimed to have visited six continents in his youth, and when he began drawing at age 71, he continued his travels on paper, pulling from his memories in an intuitive process.
Landscape: The grandeur of Yoakums deserts, mountains, and oceans illuminate his skill as both a dramatic storyteller as well as his reverence for the natural world, both of which were influenced by his spiritual beliefs. Untrained in the conventions of linear perspective, he drew overlapping planes to define space and depicted plants, rivers, and other landforms that are disproportionate in relation to their settings.
Portraits: A much smaller subset of Yoakums work, his portraits typically depict celebrated figures in the African American community, such as actors, athletes, and performers, as well as Native Americans.
Technique: The exhibition explores Yoakums approach to composition and how he developed his own system of graphic vocabulary using inexpensive paper and tools and primarily drawing freehand.
Rebecca Rabinow, Director of the Menil Collection, said, Joseph Yoakum holds the rare and coveted designation of an artists artist, reflecting his foundational importance to art historians, critics, members of the creative community, and other artists, all of whom continue to be inspired by his work. Recognizing Yoakums agency in transforming his visual memories into extraordinary works of art has been a main goal of this exhibition and accompanying catalogue, which the Menil is delighted to bring to audiences in Houston.
Edouard Kopp, John R. Eckel Jr. Chief Curator of the Menil Drawing Institute, said, The Menil is proud to bring Joseph Yoakums unique and meaningful artistic contributions to a broader public, celebrating more widely what has become an essential chapter in the history of American art and the American landscape. Outside of the artistic mainstream and unrestrained by the bounds of convention, Yoakum has given us a deeply personal, idiosyncratic, and poetic vision of the land.
Joseph Yoakum
Much of what we know of Yoakums extraordinary life story comes from the artist himself. Born in Missouri just twenty-five years after the end of the Civil War, Yoakum had little schooling before he left home to work for several circuses, traveling across the United States as well as abroad. He later served in a segregated noncombat regiment during World War I before settling in Chicagos South Side. Inspired by a dream, he began his artistic career at age seventy-one, ultimately producing some two thousand drawings before his death in 1972. As the exhibition title intimates, Yoakums drawings reflect his travels to every continent except Antarctica. As he put it, I had it in my mind that I wanted to go to different places at different times. Wherever my mind led me, I would go. Ive been all over this world four times. Awareness of his biography is critical to a contemporary examination of Yoakums body of workmarked by a distinctive, linear style of draftsmanshipbut so, too, is recognizing his agency in transforming his visual memories into works of art. His idiosyncratic drawings, predominantly landscapes in ballpoint pen, colored pencil, pastel, and watercolor, convey his poetic view of nature. Simultaneously, Yoakum also made portraits of African American icons.
Joseph E. Yoakum: What I Saw is organized by Edouard Kopp, John R. Eckel, Jr. Foundation Chief Curator, Menil Drawing Institute; Mark Pascale, Janet and Craig Duchossois Curator of Prints and Drawings, The Art Institute of Chicago; Esther Adler, Curator, Department of Drawings and Prints, MoMA.
The exhibition debuted at the Art Institute of Chicago in 2021 and is currently on view at the Museum of Modern Art, New York, through March 19, 2022.
Exhibition Catalogue
An extensive, richly illustrated exhibition catalogue provides new scholarship on the artist and expands upon key themes of the show. It highlights friendships that Yoakum forged with the Chicago-based artists who cemented his place in art history; it explores how religion may have helped him cope with a racially fractured city; and it examines his complicated relationship to African American and Native American identities, while also situating Yoakums contribution in the wider context of American art.
The catalogue is available for purchase at the Menil Collection Bookstore. The book is edited by Mark Pascale, Esther Adler, and Edouard Kopp, with contributions by Esther Adler, Kathleen Ash-Milby, Mary Broadway, Clara Granzotto, Whitney Halstead, Edouard Kopp, Faheem Majeed, Laura K. Minton, Emily Olek, Mark Pascale, and Ken Sutherland.