Frederick
Sommer: A Brief & Incomplete Chronology
Based
on:
Frederick
Sommer, by Luiz Carlos Felizardo
Venus, Jupiter & Mars—The Photographs of Frederick
Sommer (VJM), ed. John Weiss, Delaware
Art Museum, 1980; “Chronology” by Barbara Wendel and
Charles Metzger, with Ed Mitchell.
Note:
I have noted a few discrepancies throughout this chronology. Although
Fred might have said something to me that was different from what
is in the VJM, that is no reason to assume that the VJM is inaccurate.
Fred
loved to tell stories, and he was a great story teller, often it
seemed that hints of an accent would reappear. I’ve tried
to add a few throughout the chronology.
If you have any Fred stories, note mistakes or missing information,
please contact Sommer.
1905
On
September 7, in Angre, Italy, Frederick Sommer is born. Called Fritz
Sommer, he is the first child born to Carlos and Julia Bertold Sommer
while they are living in Italy. Carlos Sommer is German, ca. 1875-1938.
Julia Sommer was born in the Uster, Switzerland, 1868 -1962. It
is through his mother that he is related to Paracelsus.
1913
The
family move to São Paulo, Brasil, because of Carlos’
interest in tropical plants. Under the name of Frederico Sommer,
he begins his formal education in “Deutsche Schule zu Vila
Mariana.”
1916
The
family moves to Rio de Janeiro, where Carlos opens a flower store
and an office where he contracts landscaping projects for gardens.
His greenhouse is in Sit, Mines Gears, then a district of Barbican.
Frederico works with his father, and assists him in doing architectural
renderings.
1920
Transfers
to Ginásiode São Bento; their registers still show
the name of Frederico Carlos Sommer, enrolled for 1920 through 1922.
He does not graduate. In his first year at Ginásiode São
Bento, he receives honorable mention for drawing..
1921
During
summer vacation, Frederico apprentices at Escritório Técnico
Heitor de Mello, the office of the architects Archimedes Memória
and Francisco Cuchet. He receives second place in a national architectural
contest to design a park and recreation area in Rio de Janeiro.
1923
Sommer
begins to take private commissions for landscape projects; and publishes
an essay in a literary magazine.
1924
William
Gratwick, an American businessman, who knows of Carlos’s greenhouse,
meets Frederico. Impressed with him, he invites Frederico to the
United States to learn what is happening in the States with landscape
architecture.
1925
Travels
to the United States where me meets Edward Gorton Davis, architect
and Director of the Landscape Architecture Department of Cornell
University. He works in Davis’ office, and begin to audit
classes at Cornell.
1926
Enrolls
at Cornell University as a graduate student. Because he hadn’t
graduated from Ginásiode São Bento, he obtains a letter
of certification in architecture and fine arts from Brazilian Ministry
of Education. His Master’s thesis is done under guidance of
Professors Gorton Davis, Edward Lawson and W. H. Suchardt. He meets
his future wife, Frances Watson, at a party at Davis’ house.
She is a Cornell student doing graduate work in education.
1927
Receives
a Master in Landscape Architecture degree with his thesis “Villa
Alba, a Residential Property.” Marries Frances on August 23.
Frederico and Francis moves to Rio to work with his father.
1928
- 1930
As
a consultant, he works on various projects in the towns of Rio de
Janeiro and São Paulo. In Rio, he collaborates in the organization
of the IV Pan-American Congress of Architects—by whom he is
awarded a gold medal
1930
On
May 23, while talking with some friends in a cafe, Frederico has
a coughing fit. He is diagnosed as suffering from tuberculosis.
With Frances, he leaves Brasil in June to recuperate in Arosa, Switzerland.
He never returns to Brazil, or to the practice of architecture.
He
takes pictures in and around Arosa. These very small prints are
put in a photograph album which he keeps throughout his life, and
is currently in the archives of the Frederick & Frances Sommer
Foundation.
Frances
had several photograph albums of pictures she had taken with here
family at Lake Geneva, Wisconsin, around her family home in Aledo,
Illinois, and Knox Collage, Galesburg, Illinois, where Frances received
her undergraduate degree. Fred used to joke that because Frances
took photographs first and, early in their marriage, did the cooking,
she had taught him photography and cooking. Her nightscapes around
the lake were quite elegant.
1931
He
and Frances travel through France and Italy, before returning to
the United States. They go to Aeldo; but the winter is harsh and
they decide to move west. In VJM, it says that they decided to go
to California and, while visiting friends in Tucson, decided to
stay there.
The story that Fred told me many times, however, was that the
doctors in Arosa advised him to move to someplace dry and hot, like
Tucson. He mentioned this once when his close friend Dr. Lloyd Owen
was visiting, and it led to a long discussion about the actual irrelevance
of such advice for someone recovering from tuberculosis.
He
meets Lucy Marlow, a painter, and together they set up a studio
for private art classes. Fred teaches design, watercolor, and drawing
1933
Fred
goes to Chicago and meets Increase Robinson, who agrees to show
his work. She shows him Edward Weston’s first book of photographs,
published by Merle Armitage.
1934
Fred
has a show of his watercolors at Increase Robinson Gallery.
He
spends half a year with Frances in Los Angeles. There he discovers
musical notation, leading to his making musical
scores.
VJM
says that he saw the scores at the Los Angeles Fine Arts Library.
When Fred used to tell the story, he merely said that he had seen
them at an art museum; and when Fred reviewed my text for the CD
and said that it was accurate.
He
seeks out and became friends with Merle Armitage.
1935
Fred
and Frances move to Prescott, Arizona.
He
sends Alfred Steiglitz, at An American Place, watercolors. Steiglitz
encourages him. Towards the end of the year, Fred went to New York.
For a week, he visits Steiglitz and meets Georgia O’Keefe.
O’Keefe thinks that Steiglitz should show Fred, but Steiglitz
says that he can’t take on any new artists.
1936
Fred
goes to California for two weeks. He visits Merle Armitage, and
through him, meets Edward Weston. They exchange drawings for prints.
Weston encourages Fred’s budding interest in photography as
art. Weston introduces Fred to Howard Putzel, a gallery owner.
1937
Has
a one-person show of watercolors at Howard Putzel Gallery, Hollywood,
CA. Most of these works are in the archives of the Frederick &
Frances Sommer Foundation, still wrapped in the package as it was
returned from the show.
Howard
Putzel later moves to New York, where he meets Jackson Pollock in
1942. As Guggenheim’s gallery director, he encourages showing
Pollack’s work. I mention this because many of Fred’s
drawings from the late 1930’s-early 1940’s are quite
similar to Pollock’s from this period. Later Fred’s
distemper and oil paintings, ca. 1946-1949, also look remarkably
like Pollock’s from the same period. I have no idea whether
Fred had seen Pollack’s work, or whether Pollack had seen
Fred’s: however the nexus with Putzel is intriguing. Fred
never mentioned anything about Pollack’s work that would have
suggested any connection.
That
Fred never mentioned someone is significant, but as to whether that
meant he knew or did not know someone it was not a reliable indicator.
If Fred mentioned his brother to me more than three times in thirty
years I would be surprised, in fact might never have mentioned him
to me. Frances talked about him, as did Luiz Felizardo, who met
him in the early 1990’s.
Begins
to explore glue-color: powdered color pigment mixed with rabbit-hide
glue, which he most often applied to black paper.
1938
Encouraged
by Weston, Fred buys a 8 X 10 Century Universal camera.
1939
A
doctor friend brings him, also a photographer, brings Fred an amputated
foot.
While
Fred still has the foot, he keeps it wrapped up, in the ice box.
He invites a local poet to lunch. The poet is someone who boasts
a bit too much for Fred’s tastes about being avant-garde and
shocking. After lunch, Fred says he has a special treat, and brings
to the table the wrapped foot. He unwraps it, and, apparently the
poet was not beyond being shocked.
Photographs
chicken heads and entrails, including one of his classic images
from this time, Eight
Young Roosters.
Fred
visited his doctor friend as his office, to show him Eight Young
Roosters. The nurse, who is a little prim and proper, is shown the
print, which she finds repulsive. A few days later, Fred sees her
approaching on the side walk. As she passes him, she pulls her hips
forward. This loses something in the telling, but Fred loved to
demonstrate how she walked as she passed him.
VJM
says that Fred draws his first musical score this year; however,
as noted above, he said often that it was in 1934, and confirmed
that when he reviewed the text I had written
Fred
becomes a naturalized US citizen.
1940
Visits
Charles Sheeler in Connecticut.
1941
Begins
a series of horizonless landscapes.
Fred’s
prints made from 8 X 10 negatives are all contact prints—if
you imagine a picture frame with the art removed: the negative is
placed on the glass, with the emulsion facing up, away from the
glass, a sheet of photographic paper is placed over the negative,
it’s emulsion against the film’s, and a folding wood
back is inserted over the paper and inside the frame; usually a
spring clip holds everything tightly together. He had troubles with
the sky, as he told the story, with one negative: it appears wavy.
He sent the film back to Kodak and was later informed that this
was due to unevenness in the emulsion. The emulsion is applied to
large sheets of film which go through a series of calendars. Sometimes
thin areas or even voids occur in the emulsion. Kodak suggested
cutting off the top of the negative, removing the sky altogether.
Fred says that after that he avoided including sky in his landscapes.
I had a similar experience with on sheet of 8 X 10 film, which,
no matter where it was placed in the print frame nor how much clamping
pressure was applied, one small area always prints out of focus.
When shimmed in the print frame, or projected in an 8 X 10 enlarger
or looked at through a loupe, it is absolutely in focus. This is
not a common problem; and because most people enlarge, the problem
of being out of focus is greatly reduced.
In California, Fred is invited to show some of his photographs to
a group of Surrealists, including Man Ray, Max Ernst and Andre Breton.
Man Ray and Max Ernst “fight” over which of them appreciated
the prints first.
During
his visit, Fred said that while they were all chatting, Breton,
left the room. On the table was Breton’s address book. Ernst
picked it up, and thumbing through is it, says “Girls, girls,
girls, nothing but girls.”
Faurest
Davis, a musician friend, tries playing the scores. “The results
confirm his [Sommer’s] contention that the relative position
of something is more important that its assigned value. This intensifies
his developing awareness of the relationship between distribution
and content—‘position’ and ‘occupier’”
(VJM, pg 61).
1943
While
visiting Fred in Prescott, Ernst selects work for the Surrealist
magazine, VVV.
1946
Fred
has his a solo show of photographs at the Santa Barbara Museum of
Art.
Fred
told the story that at his first show (this one?) everyone said
to him that he should photograph more like Weston. But at a show
of the ‘same prints to the same people’ ten years later,
after he had begun to develop a reputation, ‘these same people’
said that his work was too derivative of Weston’s, and that
he should find his own style.
1947
Meets
Charles Egan, a New York art dealer, who becomes Fred’s dealer.
Sends
prints to Edward Steichen at the Museum of Modern Art.
1949
Has
a solo show of photographs and drawings at Eagan Gallery.
Eagan
recommends that Aaron Siskind meet Fred on a visit west. Siskind
rents a cabin near Fred’s and stays three months.
Fred
has sixteen photographs shown at the Museum of Modern Art. MoMa
buys a photograph.
1951
Meets
Yves Tanguy. Tanguy is staying with Ernst and Dorothea Tanning in
Sedona, Arizona.
Fred participate in the first Aspen Conference on photography.
Several
of Fred’s pen and ink drawings from around this time resemble
pen and ink drawings of Tanguy’s, also from around this time.
I have no idea who influenced whom, if, in fact, either did.
Ernst
and Tanning lived in a small house in Sedona. A few years later,
Vladimir Nabokov was in Sedona, butterfly hunting and writing. In
a letter to his wife, he remarks that he is renting a cabin that
apparently had been lived in by the Surrealist Max Ernst.
Fred
told the story about going with Ernst to judge an art competition.
Ernst kept nudging Fred, saying that that particular artist was
very good. It happened enough for Fred to realize that it might
have more to do with how attractive she was. When they finally met,
she was introduced as Dorothea tanning.
Participates
in the first Aspen Conference on photography. (See
photo for a small photograph of the participants taken at the
Hotel Jerome, Aspen, Co., or Original
Sources: Art and Archives at the Center for Creative Photography,
page 16)
Fred
said that he was a very popular speaker with the younger people
attending the conference, he suggested, perhaps too popular. Between
that and some of his images of chicken parts, etc., he apparently
earned the disdain of not a few of his fellow participants. There
are very few references Fred in books on photography written from
approximately 1955-1980. He claimed that it was because of Beaumont
and Nancy Newhall, who, he said, did not like him at all. Perhaps
his reputation for being “Difficult, obscure, reclusive, arrogant,
and hard to get along with,” started there.
1952
Has
a show at the Museum of Modern Art.
1953
Has
work shown at the National Museum of Modern Art, Tokyo.
1956
Has
work shown at the Musée d’Art Moderne, Paris.
1957
Lectures
at the Institute of Design, in Chicago, replacing Harry Callahan.
Lives with Siskind.
Fred
and Siskind were very good friends, and Fred stayed there a number
of times. Not unlike Fred’s house, Siskind’s apartment
had lots of “photo gray” walls. Fred liked Siskinds
work, but once, while visiting, he took me by the hand and led me
to the bathroom. Pointing at the bathtub, he said, still somewhat
horrified, “He washes his prints in his tub.”
1960
Travels
to Europe.
Makes
his first photographs of Lee Nevin.
1961
Starts
a series of smoke on cellophane prints. These are similar to cliché
verre, however, soot from glass is transferred to greased cellophane,
which is used as a negative.
1962
Aperture
10:4, Frederick Sommer, 1939-1962 is published.
Makes
his first cut paper image.
Begins
a series of smoke on glass, cliché verre, images.
1963
Has
a solo show at the Art Institute of Chicago.
Lectures
at the Institute of Design.
1964
Represented
in a show at George Eastman House.
Has
thirty-two prints in a show at the Cleveland Museum of Art.
A
few weeks before I met Fred, he received a check for $500, from
the Cleveland Museum of Art. He had just developed an 8 X 10 negative
of the check, which he proudly showed me. He said he had photographed
the first, but I never saw it. The Center for Creative Photography
has Fred’s correspondence and papers regarding this incident:
When
the thirty-two prints were returned, the top two were out-of-focus
nudes of Lee Nevin. Someone had scribbled with ballpoint pen over
the pubic areas. The Cleveland Museum suggested that he check with
his insurance agent. The agent said that his company would certainly
pay to have prints made, and all he had to do was submit the bill
from the ‘drugstore.’ Back to the Museum, and they denied
that this could have happened, Fred must have done it himself. Fred
insisted that someone in the curatorial or shipping department must
have done it. The Museum insisted that it was done by someone walking
through the show. But, they were framed and behind glass. The argument
raged. He got a check for $500, the price he was selling at then,
but they said that should cover both. He kept fighting, and the
second check arrived in the fall of 1967.
The negative(s) are in the archives at the Center.
In
the early 1970’s, with Frances, we went several times to the
Museum. He always seemed to tiptoe when we walked past the offices.
1965
Has
a show at the Washington Gallery of Modern Art, Washington, D.C.
1966
Becomes
Coordinator of Fine Art Studies at Prescott College, Prescott, Arizona.
1967
Teaches
a workshop at San Francisco Art Institute.
Lectures
at Rhode Island School of Design, Providence, Rhode Island. Meets
Emmet Gowin.
1968
Show
of 125 photographs at Philadelphia College of Art, which travels
to San Francisco Museum of Art, Rhode Island School of Design, and
the Institute of Design, Chicago. Has a major catalogue.
1969
Spend
six months in Japan with Frances.
1971
Is
represented by Light Gallery, New York, Harold Jones, director.
1972
Publishes
The Poetic Logic of Art and Aesthetics.
Lectures
at Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
Teaches
at Apeiron, Millerton, New York.
1973
Alex
Jamison works with Fred, as darkroom assistant, printer, etc.
1974
Receives
a Guggenheim Fellowship for photography.
Travels
to England, Italy, Morocco, Greece, and Yugoslavia.
1976
Is
interviewed for George Eastman House “Oral History Project.”
1977
Has
a two-person show at The Arizona Bank Galleria, with Ansel Adams.
Fred
swore that after this show, he would not permit his work to be shown
with any other photographer’s work. They had hung Adams’
prints on one side of the room, and his on the other. He said that
he watched people come in and move ‘like moths to a flame’
to Adams’ work and then leave. We were part of a three-person
show in 1991 at Turner-Krull Gallery in Los Angeles. I asked him
later about his oath, “We’ll I like your work.”
Goes to New Zealand.
1978
Tom
Carabasi replaces Alex Jamison, working with Fred.
1980
Has
a large show, curated by Leland Rice, at California State University,
Long Beach, California. Has a major catalogue.
1984
Supervises
Luiz Carlos Felizardo, recipient of a Fulbright Commission.
1987
Has
a show at the Denver Art Museum. Has a major catalogue.
1991
Has
a show of his collages at Turner-Krull Gallery in Los Angeles, CA
Has
a show of collages and photographs at George Eastman House, Rochester,
New York.
1992
Nazraeli
Press publishes All Children are Ambassadors.
Lumiere
Press publishes The Constellations That Surround Us, surveyed
and edited by Michael Torosaian
1993
Keven
Begos Publishing publishes The Birth of Venus, a portfolio
of five dust grain gravures of five collages; the project is dated
1991-1993.
When
I first met Fred, he talked about how beautiful platinum prints
were, and he thought that if someone were to do a portfolio of his
photographs they should be printed as platinum prints. One thing
that these gravure in The
Birth of Venus have in common with platinum prints is the dull
and soft sheen of the image, that seems to both float on the paper
and be a part of it. He made several prints on paper that had a
reticulation in the gelatin surfice, giving it a matte finish (some
people have thought that this finish was from Fred waxing his prints,
something platinum printers sometimes did: it was not). He loved
the finish, and he loved telling about how it was mistake by Kodak.
But by this time in his life, he was devoted to the glossy, gelatin
silver surface. It was a difficult time for Kevin, because Fred
often seemed disappointed in the prints as the project developed.
Also, the entire process of proofing, position proofs, etc. were
things that confused Fred, who had been used to press proofs.
1994
Nazraeli
Press publishes The Box.
The
Getty acquires 107 Sommer photographs.
1995
The
Getty acquires an additional 17 photographs, 30 graphic art objects
and 10 collages.
1996
Nazraeli
Press publishes Son of the Box.
1999
On
January 23, Frederick Sommer dies, at his home in Prescott, Arizona.
New
York Times,
February 1, 1999, obituary by
Margarett Loke
©
1996-2003 Walton Mendelson
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