Theodore Haupt

Theodore Haupt
Born Theodore Gilbert Haupt
October 11, 1902
St. Paul, Minnesota
Died 13 June 1990(1990-06-13) (aged 87)
Indianapolis, Indiana
Education Minneapolis School of Art, Académie Julian in Paris, André L'Hote
Known for Painting, drawing, graphic design
Movement Cubist, Surrealist

Theodore Gilbert Haupt (1902-1990), was an American Modernist painter, sculptor and muralist who melded Cubist with Surrealist elements. As a graphic designer, he achieved recognition for his New Yorker magazine covers.

Early life

Original Painting for cover of New Yorker Magazine, January 9, 1932 Gouache on board, 14 1/2" X 11"

Theodore Haupt was youngest of three children born to an Episcopalian Minister, Reverend Charles Edgar Haupt and Alexandria Dougon, in St. Paul Minnesota on October 11, 1902. Reverend Haupt’s father was General Herman Haupt who supervised the railroads, built bridges for the Union Army during the Civil War and became an outspoken voice in President Lincoln’s White House during that troubled time.[1][2]

Haupt’s early gifts for drawing and painting were noted but not encouraged by his family. Nonetheless, he persevered and was further inspired when, at age twenty-one, his paintings received highly favorable reviews in a large exhibition mounted by The Beard Gallery in Minneapolis. Haupt attended the Minneapolis School of Art, studying with Anthony Angarola, recipient of a Guggenheim Fellowship and an acclaimed Chicago modernist.[3] A critical turning point came for Haupt in 1923, when he won a scholarship to the Académie Julian in Paris. Haupt remained in Europe for two years, studying with the sculptor and painter, André L’Hote in Paris, Vienna and Gratz.[4]

Graphic designer career

In 1927 Haupt moved to New York, renting an apartment on East 10th Street in Manhattan. For five years Haupt supported his studio art with graphic design assignments for The New Yorker, Charm and Vanity Fair magazines; his debut cover for The New Yorker being produced almost immediately in September of that first year. Between 1927 and 1933, Haupt turned out a staggering forty-five covers for The New Yorker presenting a gamut of subjects from;

The 1930s

Barbara in Plume Hat 1933 Oil on Canvas, 22" X 18"

Haupt’s modernist paintings were being exhibited in New York art galleries and at museums around the country. Two of his paintings were selected for The Art Institute of Chicago’s 45th Annual Exhibition (October 24-December 8, 1935), Sea Beach (#91) and Shadow Lane (#92).[5] Haupt’s works were shown at a number of museums, among them The Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Art; The Minneapolis Institute of Art; and The Whitney Museum of American Art, New York.

Haupt continued turning out paintings and executing art for public spaces including work for the Whitney Museum and a mural for the Central Park Zoo, which was destroyed in a restoration of the zoo. Along with many other artists during the depression, Haupt was active in the period’s government sponsored WPA Art Programs, an experience that encouraged an open-minded and experimental attitude in his art practice for the remainder of his life. Haupt recalled the sculptor Louise Nevelson’s lively “rent parties” which he attended with other WPA artists including Ivan Albright and Moses Soyer.[6]

A new direction

The Duchess 1946 (Miriam Haupt) Oil on Board, 24" X 20"

In 1942, Haupt married a school teacher, Miriam Diehl. Her steady employment sustained the couple financially. Haupt and his wife purchased a house in Peekskill, New York in 1941 and in 1948 moved to San Miguel de Allende, an artist’s community in Mexico. Haupt became increasingly engrossed in that country’s cultural contrasts, an interest that expressed itself in paintings and sculptures of this period. While in Mexico the couple built a house and adopted two children, Gloria and Maricella. After Miriam’s unfortunate early death, her pension continued to sustain the artist as the demand for illustration lessened.

Now in a financial position to walk away from the machinations of the art market, Haupt embarked upon an extended period of renewed investigation and experimentation, working his way through abstract, color-drenched, non-representational painting styles and developing a series of Surrealist-inspired canvases. Haupt later investigated chromatic vibrations and dynamic optical effects in a series of compelling Op Art canvases. His career began as a realistic portrait painter and he often returned to that subject matter, reinterpreting the process each time in light of his stylistic investigations.

Last years

When his wife died in the 1960s, the artist moved to Hawaii with his children, later resettling in New York in the Westbeth Artist’s Community in Greenwich Village. Returning briefly to Hawaii in 1968, he connected with a lifelong supporter, Dan Wall, at the University of Hawaii. Theodore Haupt died at the age of 87, in Indianapolis, June 13, 1990.

Museum collections

Beach Scene (1937) Oil on Canvas, 30" X 42"

Theodore Haupt’s works are in the permanent collections of:

References

  1. Bailey Harris, Diane (May 25, 2012). "Rules for the Road". New York Times Opinionator.
  2. "The Generals and Admirals". Mr Lincoln's White House. The Lehrman Institute. Retrieved July 21, 2014.
  3. Haupt, Richard; Poore, Connie; Dryer, Joel. Anthony Angarola. The Illinois Historical Project.
  4. Crump, Robert (2009). Minnesota Prints and Printmakers, 1900-1945. New York Public LIbrary, Schwartzman Building: Minneasota Historical Society.
  5. "American Paintings and Sculpture, Forty-Sixth Annual Exhibition". Art Institute of Chicago Catalog. October 24 – December 8, 1935.
  6. The reference for family dates and Theodore Haupt’s personal history and recollections are those of his niece, Sally Pleet, also an artist, to whom Haupt left many of his surviving paintings and papers. Additional documents are on file with the Archives of American Art, New York.
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