One of the most important chapters
in the long and varied artistic career of John C. Menihan (1908-1992)
was his two-decade-long involvement with lithography. From the
early 1930s to the early 1950s, Menihan, who lived in Rochester,
New York, created more than 100 lithographs which constitute a
significant body of prints that rivals the finest work of regionalist
and American Scene printmakers.
Although
Menihan's expressive realism may draw comparisons with the work
of Grant Wood and Thomas Hart Benton, his style has distinctive
qualities that set him apart from other artists of his generation.
His fascination with rural and urban life, recreation and industry,
and people in their environments imbues his prints with an authenticity
seldom matched. And his technical knowledge of the medium gleaned
from his mentor, master lithographer Bolton Brown, is equal to
that of the period's greatest printmakers.
Menihan's
first encounter with lithography came in the late 1920s while
he was attending the University of Pennsylvania's Wharton School
of Business. Exhibitions he attended in Philadelphia galleries
by Joseph Pennell, James A. McNeill Whistler and Robert Riggs
spurred his interest in the medium.
Menihan
found his way to Brown's studio at the urging of Walter Cassebeer,
a Rochester architect who also made lithographs. Menihan had seen
an exhibition of Cassebeer's lithographs in the early 1930s and
asked him for advice on getting started in the medium. Cassebeer
recommended Brown's recently published book Lithography for Artists,
and once he acquired it, Menihan was anxious to study with its
author. Brown's name was already familiar to Menihan because he
had received a book of lithographs by George Bellows (many of
which were printed by Brown) for a graduation present.
In
Menihan's 1940 application for a National Endowment for the Arts
grant he wrote that his approach to lithography was "mainly based
on a way of thinking acquired at the feet of Bolton Brown."
"...the richness of my association with him is indescribable.
He was unsurpassed as a technician and inspiring as a man, demanding
perfection and capable of instilling his ideals in others willing
to hear him. He was truly the only important influence on my life
as an artist."
Menihan
was at the beginning of his career when he encountered Brown,
who was near the end of his. Brown (1864-1936) had been a founder
of Byrdcliffe, the artists' colony in Woodstock, NY and the printer
of more than 100 lithographs by Bellows. Although Brown was himself
an accomplished painter and lithographer, he was not adequately
recognized for his significant contributions to lithography at
the time. (Brown's work began to attract interest in the late
1970s.)
The
lack of attention to his work during his lifetime was a major
source of Brown's bitterness about the art world in 1934 when
Menihan became his last student. Brown had witnessed the ascent
of men like Joseph Pennell, who knew very little about the complex
process of lithography, while his own career languished. He nevertheless
created hundreds of delicate, technically unsurpassed lithographs.
He also undertook more experimentation in the chemistry of lithography
and the making of lithographic crayons than anyone in the history
of the medium. When Menihan studied with Brown in 1934 and 1935,
it is no exaggeration to say that he was under the tutelage of
the world's foremost expert in lithography.
By
the mid 1930s, however, Brown was practically destitute. His modest
home, on Zena Road, two miles from Woodstock, had no electricity
or running water, and his studio, located behind the house, was
heated by a wood-burning stove. Brown was suffering from cancer
at the time, but he refused to go to a hospital, preferring instead
to spend his last years in familiar surroundings.
Brown
sat in a fan-back wicker chair and instructed Menihan through
chapter after chapter of his book. While Menihan worked stones,
Brown, whose quest for knowledge was undiminshed, read Hacklet's
Vogages, a history of the world composed of original documents.
A sign hanging in Brown's studio proclaimed, "Into the making
of a perfect work, time is an element that does not enter."
Menihan
learned how to make his own grease crayons, a skill few lithographers
possessed, and he learned the intricacies of etching and printing
stones. He also learned, in no uncertain terms, the meaning of
the sign hanging in the studio.
One
summer, when Menihan had finished his work, Brown asked him to
separate his lithographs into three piles: best, medium and discards.
After discussing the quality of the work, Brown asked Menihan
what he planned to do with the prints, and Menihan said he guessed
he would take them home. Brown struggled up out of his chair,
hobbled over to the prints, picked up the "discard" pile and,
tossing the prints into the flames of the wood-burning stove,
said "This is what you do with work that's not perfect." He then
picked up the "medium" pile and tossed them, too, into the stove,
leaving only the two perfect prints.
Menihan
obivously learned his lesson well because his lithographs were
meticulously executed. Over the next two decades (1935-1955) Menihan
produced more than 100 lithographs, each of them beautifully drawn
and flawlessly printed. At a time when many artists merely drew
images on stone and hired professionals to make the prints, Menihan
did it all himself. Consequently, his lithographs exemplify a
wonderful union of content and technique.
Brown's
influence is evident in Menihan's early lithographs. In several
of them, Menihan outlined the composition with an unruled line
in a manner characteristic of Brown's work. In early prints, he
also used the expressive, autographic strokes that were all hallmark
of Brown's landscapes. As Menihan grew more confident in his own
style, these characteristics gave way to a subtle, continuous-tone
shading in combination with a strong line.
After
Brown's death, Menihan, who had studied business in college, helped
Brown's family with his artistic estate. Apparently in appreciation
for his help, Brown's family sent several packages of prints to
Menihan in the months that followed. In 1988 he and his wife,
Margaret, donated their collection of more that 50 of Brown's
lithographs to Rochester's art museum, the Memorial Art Gallery,
endowing the gallery with one of the most significant collections
of Brown's prints in the United States.
Menihan's
NEA grant application also sheds light on his motivation and the
aesthetic ideals behind his lithographic career. His goal, he
writes, was to "produce a group of lithographs which would interpret
the life and thinking of the Northeastern section of the United
States."
At
a time when many artistis of his generation were turning to the
various forms of abstraction in vogue in the 1940's, Menihan wrote
of his impluse to deal in a representational manner with subjects
"...intermixed with the course of my life, factories in which
I worked as a boy, cities in which I've studied, lake freighters,
county fairs, summer resorts, farm houses, tenements, and country
clubs."
He
did not see his work as "photographic" documents but, rather as
expressions of character. One of the reasons he gives for employing
a print-making medium is the ability to "disperse among laymen
the benefits derived from possession of works of art."
Menihan's
characteristic modesty is apparent when he deals with the "presumable
significance" of his work:
"It
can only be said that I bring to the project honesty, energy,
a degree of skill and love of my work...Whether or not the world
will choose to consider the result "significant art" is a matter
I cannot here decide."
Through
his long involvement with the Rochester Print Club, Menihan also
met and became friends with such printmakers as Albert Winslow
Barker and Norman Kent. Barker, who had also studied with Brown,
shared his lithographic technical research with Menihan in Rochester
and at his home in Moylan, Pennsylvania.
Kent
wrote about Menihan's lithographs in a 1945 article in American
Artist magazine, quoting the artist extensively during the peak
of his lithographic activity. In the article, Menihan discussed
the unique properties of the lithographic drawing.
"Experience
has shown me that because of the distinctive qualities of lithographic
stone as a drawing medium it is almost useless to develop final
drawings on paper, simply because no paper will provide the same
surface for work as a lithograhic stone. The stone itself is an
inspiration; it provides many effects which are especially "lithographic."
Therefore, I adopted the practice of drawing the large preliminary
sketch right on stone, and pulling a proof or two, with the idea
of graining another stone for the final rendering."
He
also discussed the reason he preferred to print his own stones
at a time when many artists simply drew on the stone and had a
professional printer pull the prints: "The service of these several
excellent lithographic printers are available, but to me drawing
on a stone and having someone else do the printing is comparable
to owning a new bathing suit, and have friends wear it in swimming."
Menihan's
knowledge of the crayon formulas, gleaned from Brown and Barker,
was especially helpful in making his lithographs distinctive.
"Graphite
(as an ingredient in the crayon) is Albert Barker's idea and he
should have full credit for working it out. It has meant the difference
between nothing and a whole new technique to me, inasmuch as I
have made big chunks of crayon which do beautiful "grays" with
one fell swoop."
Menihan's
enthusiasm for the vocabulary of lithography is indicative of
an artist who embraced a given medium and extracted from it all
the particular properties it was capable of yielding. The lithograhic
oeuvre of John Menihan embodies the ideal of art as a part of
everyday life, a chronicle of the perceptions and reactions of
the artist to the world around him.
JCM
Watercolors
l
Essay
on Watercolors

JCM Lithographs
l
Essay
on Lithographs

JCM Biography
l
JCM
Chronology

Collections Holding JCM
artwork

Giclee
Prints of JCM
