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Shaping the art world.


Byline: Bob Keefer The Register-Guard

YOU'VE PROBABLY never heard of Jan Zach Jan Zach (November 13, 1699 – May 24, 1773) was a Czech composer, violinist and organist.

Zach applied for the position of music director at St. Vitus Cathedral in Prague.
. He never became a national art celebrity, and unless you paid attention to local and regional art 20 years ago, it's unlikely you know the name of Eugene's most profoundly influential sculptor.

Two exhibits that opened this month - the larger at the Hallie Ford Museum of Art The Hallie Ford Museum of Art is the art museum of Willamette University in Salem, Oregon, United States. It is the third largest art museum in Oregon.[1] History
Hallie Ford Museum of Art officially opened in 1998.
 at Willamette University Willamette’s College of Liberal Arts is the undergraduate school on campus. The oldest of the graduate programs is the College of Law, founded in 1883 and located in the Truman Wesley Collins Legal Center.  in Salem, and the smaller at the Karin Clarke Gallery in Eugene - offer the first comprehensive look at Zach's work and career since the artist's death in 1986.

Zach is one of those figures so original and odd that, if a television movie were made about him, people might dismiss the plot as unbelievable.

Born in Prague, Czechoslovakia, Zach (his full name, by the way, is pronounced "yon zock') was already a budding art star by the time he came as a student to New York New York, state, United States
New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of
 in 1938 to work on the Czech pavilion at the New York World's Fair There have been two World's Fairs in New York City:

  • 1939 New York World's Fair (1939-1940) at Flushing Meadows in Queens gave us Futurama, the Trylon, and Perisphere.
.

When Hitler invaded Czechoslovakia in 1939 and Zach couldn't return home, the young artist headed for Brazil, where he lived the romantic life of an artist in exile in and around Rio de Janeiro Rio de Janeiro, city, Brazil
Rio de Janeiro (rē`ō də zhänā`rō, Port. rē` thĭ zhənĕē`r
, surrounded by other artistic emigres.

Alexander Calder Noun 1. Alexander Calder - United States sculptor who first created mobiles and stabiles (1898-1976)
Calder
 opened one of Zach's exhibitions for him in Rio. Gore Vidal Noun 1. Gore Vidal - United States writer (born in 1925)
Eugene Luther Vidal, Vidal
 signed the guest book at another show.

In Brazil, Zach met a Canadian woman, courted her in their only common language, Portuguese, married her, and moved to Victoria, B.C.

There, he was introduced to the sensuous Northwest landscape that would inform his greatest work.

Finally, in 1958, he came to the University of Oregon The University of Oregon is a public university located in Eugene, Oregon. The university was founded in 1876, graduating its first class two years later. The University of Oregon is one of 60 members of the Association of American Universities. , spending three decades teaching and making art here.

Working feverishly at the university and at a large home studio outside Elmira, Zach grafted mid-century European modernism onto the subtly organic textures of Northwest regional art.

It was an odd marriage, combining the polished glint of industrial steel with the random soft forms of coastal driftwood. But this cross-pollinated art grew with hybrid fervor, producing an amazing body of work.

Zach created 17 pieces for Eugene City Hall alone. He made sculptures for the UO and the Lane County Courthouse, for the state Capitol and for a savings and loan savings and loan n. a banking and lending institution, chartered either by a state or the Federal government. Savings and loans only make loans secured by real property from deposits, upon which they pay interest slightly higher than that paid by most banks.  in Roseburg.

His greatest work was destroyed. In a terribly clueless clue·less  
adj.
Lacking understanding or knowledge.


clueless
Adjective

Slang helpless or stupid

Adj. 1.
 move, a graceful, 50-foot, rotating steel sculpture titled "Can-Can" was scrapped during remodeling remodeling /re·mod·el·ing/ (re-mod´el-ing) reorganization or renovation of an old structure.

bone remodeling
 by the Eugene department store that had commissioned it 20 years before.

"Zach's work is very individualistic and very original," said Roger Hull, an art historian at Willamette University and curator of the Hallie Ford show.

"It has these roots in earlier modernism and even baroque sculpture. In his hands, it becomes distinctly his own work."

Baroque sculpture?

"What really struck him when he got to Canada was these huge beach logs," Hull said. "Which reminded him of the baroque sculpture he remembered from Prague. Big voluptuous forms. Dramatic expressive gestures. He got looking at those logs and saw the movement in them, the implied flow of energy that runs through them."

The Hallie Ford exhibit offers a detailed look at Zach's career, from his earliest drawings and paintings to the monumental sculptures that he created at the end of his life.

Zach's early works included oil paintings and pastels of great richness and expression; one of the most interesting is a youthful self portrait in oil, showing an intense young face below the kind of soft workman's cap in vogue in the 1930s.

The Salem exhibit even has a handful of book covers - pure commercial art - that he created during his stay in Rio.

The sculpture is primarily in two mediums: sheets of stainless steel stainless steel: see steel.
stainless steel

Any of a family of alloy steels usually containing 10–30% chromium. The presence of chromium, together with low carbon content, gives remarkable resistance to corrosion and heat.
, which Zach worked into large, reflective, flowerlike shapes; and laminated wood laminated wood: see plywood. , which he later used to make large, abstract creations reminiscent of the driftwood that inspired them.

Many of the stainless steel pieces are titled "Flower of Freedom," honoring the Prague Spring Prague Spring: see Prague and Czechoslovakia.
Prague Spring

(1968) Brief period of liberalization in Czechoslovakia under Alexander Dubcek.
 rebellion of 1968, an artistic and political outpouring quickly crushed by the Communists.

The giant wood pieces include the totally abstract, such as the 1973 "Ondine," a 14-foot-long, horizontal chunk of laminated pine, carefully carved into a graceful shape, painted and then abraded to look aged.

But others represent more recognizable figures, such as his giant "Marching Women," a series of 10-foot-tall heroic female figures, also done in laminated wood.

The doomed "Can-Can," now seen only in photographs, was commissioned by the Meier & Frank department store for its Eugene store at Valley River Center Valley River Center is a shopping mall located in Eugene, Oregon. As the largest shopping center south of Portland and north of San Francisco, this mall comprises over 130 local and national stores and restaurants. , where it hung in a rotunda rotunda

In Classical and Neoclassical architecture, a building or room that is circular in plan and covered with a dome. The Pantheon is a Classical Roman rotunda. The Villa Rotonda at Vicenza, designed by Andrea Palladio, is an Italian Renaissance example.
.

Hull calls it the artist's "biggest and most triumphant and most feted piece ... his greatest single accomplishment."

Fifty feet tall and rotating on a vertical axis, "Can-Can" was indeed the culmination of Zach's interest in stainless steel, with its combination of strength and beauty and the brilliant interplay of light and reflection.

Hull is disappointed but philosophic about the piece's destruction in a store remodeling.

"A commercial setting is by nature a changing and dynamic and unpredictable one," he said.

"And you buy into that if you're going to have your art in the middle of a store. It's not like putting it into a museum. Still, in the history of Oregon art, it's too bad that it's gone."

The much smaller exhibit at the Karin Clarke Gallery offers a narrower collection of Zach's work for Eugene viewers. A handful of smaller stainless steel works are joined by a few in wood. In addition, the gallery is showing some delightful early pastels and several paper models of larger sculptures.

The gallery show was selected from a wide range of work still stored in Zach's studio in Elmira. His widow, Judith Zach, had already donated the pieces in the museum show to the Hallie Ford.

Unlike the museum show, the gallery pieces are for sale. Tommy Griffin Tommy Griffin is an Irish Gaelic football player for Kerry and An Daingean. Playing career
Tommy has won four all-Ireland titles with Kerry in 2000,2004,2006 and in 2007 . He was also on Kerrys 1998 all-Ireland U21 winning side.
, a former student of Zach's who has acted as artistic executor executor n. the person appointed to administer the estate of a person who has died leaving a will which nominates that person. Unless there is a valid objection, the judge will appoint the person named in the will to be executor.  for the artist's estate, said he deliberately set prices low for the gallery show so the work could be owned by Eugene art lovers.

"I really want to see that work go to people in Eugene," Griffin said.

"I really hope that people who respect Jan will be able to acquire one of those pieces. I don't want to return the work to the studio if I can help it. It needs to be out there."

Besides his work as a sculptor, Zach was also a passionate teacher. New York sculptor Olinka Broadfoot, another Czech immigrant to the United States United States, officially United States of America, republic (2005 est. pop. 295,734,000), 3,539,227 sq mi (9,166,598 sq km), North America. The United States is the world's third largest country in population and the fourth largest country in area. , used to live outside Eugene while she was beginning to sort out her artistic career.

Now an artist in residence on Long Island, Broadfoot recalled her first meeting with Zach, then a complete stranger to her, as an act of desperation on her part, and kindness on his.

"I was working in a vacuum," she said. "I had four kids, bringing them up in Fall Creek Fall Creek is the name of several places in the United States:
  • Fall Creek, Wisconsin, a town
  • Fall Creek neighborhood in Ithaca, New York
  • Fall Creek, a stream in New York
  • Fall Creek, a stream in Indiana
  • Fall Creek, Oregon, a town
, not very much money. When my father died, I went into a tailspin tail·spin  
n.
1. The rapid descent of an aircraft in a steep, spiral spin.

2. Informal A loss of emotional control sometimes resulting in emotional collapse.
. I called Jan up out of the blue. He didn't know me. I wasn't a student or anything. I said, `You're from Czechoslovakia. I am, too.' '

Zach and his wife went out and had dinner with Broadfoot at her home, beginning a friendship that would inspire and direct her both personally and professionally.

Broadfoot also had dinner with Zach and his wife the night before he died in 1986. She asked him that night for advice.

"We were having this big dinner," she said. "He was sitting at the head of the table. He said you need three things to be an artist. One, the ability to see the thing that's just out of sight, around the corner. Two, persistence and hard work. And three, luck."

The next day, Zach and his wife and his elderly sister went to Crater Lake Crater Lake

Lake, Cascade Range, southwestern Oregon, U.S. The lake is in a huge volcanic caldera 6 mi (10 km) in diameter and 1,932 ft (589 m) deep. It is the remnant of a mountain destroyed in an eruption more than 6,000 years ago.
 Lodge. During the night, a prankster pulled the fire alarm at the lodge. Zach helped his sister to the parking lot, where he had a heart attack and died. He was 72.

"He raised the bar of consciousness here in the arts, in general, and sculpture in particular," Griffin said.

"Jan always said the artist was the messenger of his time. He was clearly the messenger of his time, in the most beautiful way, expressing the Northwest quality of landscape."

"Intersections: The Art of Jan Zach" continues at the Hallie Ford Museum, 700 State St., Salem, through March 29. Museum hours are 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Tuesday through Saturday.

Admission is $3 for adults and $2 for seniors and students. Children under 12 are free, and Tuesday is a free day.

"Jan Zach: Works From the Estate" continues at the Karin Clarke Gallery, 760 Willamette St., through March 1. Hours are 10 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Tuesday through Saturday.

Bob Keefer can be reached at 338-2325 or bkeefer@guardnet. com.

INTERSECTIONS: THE ART OF JAN ZACH

When: 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Tuesday through Saturday (through March 29)

Where: Hallie Ford Museum, 700 State St., Salem

How much: $3 for adults; $2 for seniors and students; children younger than 12 free; Tuesday is a free day

JAN ZACH: WORKS FROM THE ESTATE

When: 10 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Tuesday through Saturday (through March 1)

Where: Karin Clarke Gallery,

760 Willamette St.

CAPTION(S):

"Resistance" is a 1955, 6-foot-tall alder piece on display in Salem. Above: Jan Zach's early works included this self-portrait in oil, circa 1945. Left: Zach's "Can-Can" filled a rotunda at Meier & Frank in Valley River Center until it was destroyed in 1989.
COPYRIGHT 2003 The Register Guard
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2003, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Title Annotation:Though his greatest work was destroyed, Jan Zach greatly influenced Northwest sculpture; Arts & Literature
Publication:The Register-Guard (Eugene, OR)
Date:Feb 23, 2003
Words:1593
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