My Dear
Girl: The Art of Florence Hosmer
By
Helen Marie Casey
Review by
Kim Triedman
9/17/2012
“I want us to explore what it means to be an artist, to work
as an artist, and to lack acclaim.” Thus
begins author Helen Marie Casey in the preface to her new book, My Dear
Girl: The Art of Florence Hosmer, released by Black Lawrence Press earlier
this year. The artist in question, who
lived in Sudbury, MA for most of her long and productive life, is a figure of
profound interest to Casey, who also lives in the area and is clearly well
versed in the art history of the time.
As much meditation as biography, My Dear Girl takes as its task
not just the reconstructing of one particular life but also, in a way, its
conjuring: In fashioning her biography,
Casey seems to walk through Hosmer’s life as a kind of kindred spirit,
hand-in-hand.
Florence Armes Hosmer (1880-1978), lived through huge
changes in her world – women’s suffrage, two world wars, the great Depression,
and struggles for Civil rights and equal rights – and on a more personal level
endured nearly constant financial obstacles and crises of confidence. Born into a large and supportive family and
educated at the Normal Art School in Boston, she went through her adult life
unmarried, with “no protective partner or spouse, no mentor in the shadows who
took her part for her; no agent,” under constant strain to make ends meet. Acclaimed at one time as one of the more
prominent of Boston portraitists, she “fell off almost all the charts of
American women artists of the early 20th century.” She was not “a path-breaking painter,” writes
Casey, “but she was a good one,” and never gave up on “her commitment to the
creation of beauty.” She was simply a
woman on her own with the desire and training to paint in a world and a time
which made such goals particularly challenging.
In tracing the outlines of Hosmer’s life, Casey opts for a
free-form approach, sorting through the “jumble of detritus waiting to be
deciphered” (Hosmer’s letters, notebooks, possessions, artwork, etc) and
shifting always backward and forward in time.
It is a tack which works well for her.
Casey is an astute observer, and there is a method to her
meanderings. Through repeated and often
seemingly incidental appearances of those most intimately involved in Hosmer’s
life and work, Casey draws us gradually into her inner circle, developing
Hosmer’s persona Rashomon-style, from
a multiplicity of angles.
As Casey frames it, the heart of the Florence Hosmer story
is really the heart of every artist’s struggle, regardless the medium. “The subjects here that interest me are
twinned,” she writes, “—obscurity and accomplishment.” What she seeks to explore is the question of
whether some alliance between artist and audience is necessary, “some sign of
confirmation that a thing is so.” In Florence
Hosmer’s case – as with most artists, it could be argued – the signs were
intermittent and often contradictory, though they never stopped her from doing
what she loved despite the hardships that that implied. Her art was her way of assimilating her world
and, as such, essential to her.
In many ways, Casey
argues, Hosmer’s life serves as a kind of allegory: no matter the costs,
Florence Hosmer – as so many before and after her – “could not choose not to
paint,” and ultimately that became its own victory:
The creation of even one beautiful, unforgettable work is enough. One painting. One poem. One short story. One novel.
One quilt. One equation. One theory.
One musical composition. One work
of the imagination that won’t let go of us, that gets under our skin, that
haunts us because it has everything right.
Florence Armes Hosmer left us hundreds of paintings. Not all of them are memorable. But the memorable work is breathtaking.
**** Kim Triedman is a managing editor for Ibbetson Street and a widely published poet.
Thank you to Kim Triedman for an incisive, interesting, and well-written review of a lovely book about an artist and her times. Helen Marie Casey has perfectly captured Florence Hosmer's compelling life story, including many joys and challenges as she pursues her calling as an artist at a time when women were not expected or encouraged in this career choice.
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