Gray Foy
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Gray Foy (August 10, 1922 – November 23, 2012) was an American artist who created a visionary body of drawings from 1941 to 1975. His drawings are generally divided into two phases. First, from 1941 to 1948, the artist drew figurative
Surrealist Surrealism is an art movement, art and cultural movement that developed in Europe in the aftermath of World War I in which artists aimed to allow the unconscious mind to express itself, often resulting in the depiction of illogical or dreamlike s ...
landscapes and interiors. Then beginning in the late 1940s, he concentrated on botanical subject matter, both naturalistic and imagined.


Education and personal life

Born on August 10, 1922, in
Dallas, Texas Dallas () is a city in the U.S. state of Texas and the most populous city in the Dallas–Fort Worth metroplex, the List of Texas metropolitan areas, most populous metropolitan area in Texas and the Metropolitan statistical area, fourth-most ...
, Foy spent his youth in
Los Angeles Los Angeles, often referred to by its initials L.A., is the List of municipalities in California, most populous city in the U.S. state of California, and the commercial, Financial District, Los Angeles, financial, and Culture of Los Angeles, ...
and attended
Los Angeles City College Los Angeles City College (LACC) is a public community college in East Hollywood, California. A part of the Los Angeles Community College District, it is located on Vermont Avenue south of Santa Monica Boulevard on the former campus of the U ...
studying art and theater design. In the spring of 1946 he moved back to Dallas and enrolled at
Southern Methodist University Southern Methodist University (SMU) is a Private university, private research university in Dallas, Texas, United States, with a satellite campus in Taos County, New Mexico. SMU was founded on April 17, 1911, by the Methodist Episcopal Church, ...
(SMU) for a year, then transferred in Spring of 1947 to
Columbia University Columbia University in the City of New York, commonly referred to as Columbia University, is a Private university, private Ivy League research university in New York City. Established in 1754 as King's College on the grounds of Trinity Churc ...
. In 1948, he met writer and editor
Leo Lerman Leo Lerman (May 23, 1914 – August 22, 1994) was an American writer and editor who worked for Condé Nast Publications for more than 50 years.Grimes, William (August 23, 1994). Leo Lerman, 80, Editor at Conde Nast Magazines. ''The New York Times ...
, whom he married. Foy and Lerman both were immersed in the literary, visual, and performing arts and became fixtures of the New York City cognoscenti. Lerman died in 1994. In 2011, less than a month after gay marriages became legal in New York State, Foy, then 90, married Joel Kaye, then 69, the son of the founder of the
Russian Tea Room The Russian Tea Room is an Art Deco Russo-Continental restaurant, located at 150 West 57th Street (between Sixth Avenue and Seventh Avenue), between Carnegie Hall Tower and Metropolitan Tower, in the New York City borough of Manhattan. ...
.


Early career

When Foy first painted seriously in the early 1940s—just after entering college—his opaque watercolors and oils were patterned after such Surrealists as
Max Ernst Max Ernst (; 2 April 1891 – 1 April 1976) was a German-born painter, sculptor, printmaker, graphic artist, and poet. A prolific artist, Ernst was a primary pioneer of the Dada movement and surrealism in Europe. He had no formal artistic trai ...
and
Salvador Dalí Salvador Domingo Felipe Jacinto Dalí i Domènech, Marquess of Dalí of Púbol (11 May 190423 January 1989), known as Salvador Dalí ( ; ; ), was a Spanish Surrealism, surrealist artist renowned for his technical skill, precise draftsmanship, ...
. In compressed perspectives, stagelike scenes of deserted cityscapes evoke a sense of dislocation and menace. Beginning in 1943, Foy worked as a shipping expediter at the defense plant Lockheed
Vega Aircraft Corporation The Vega Aircraft Corporation was a subsidiary of the Lockheed Aircraft Company in Burbank, California responsible for much of its parent company's production in World War II. History The company was first formed in August 1937 as the AiRove ...
in Burbank, California. Using standard-issue No. 2 pencils, he drew on procurement forms, depicting humanoid figures that emerge from rocky outcroppings and are coincident with the carnage of WWII. Late in WWII, Foy began making larger format drawings. These hallucinatory scenes became his first cohesive visions. After atomic bombs were dropped on Japan, Foy responded by depicting human and animal inhabitants that reveal the instability of their molecular basis. In his largest drawing of this period, ''Dimensions'' (c. 1945–1946, Museum of Modern Art, New York), disparate figures and body parts, interior furnishings, vegetation, and geometric shapes pulsate through a dense three-dimensional space where the spatial trickery evokes that of
M. C. Escher Maurits Cornelis Escher (; ; 17 June 1898 – 27 March 1972) was a Dutch graphic artist who made woodcuts, lithography, lithographs, and mezzotints, many of which were Mathematics and art, inspired by mathematics. Despite wide popular int ...
. When exhibited in 2008, the ''New York Times'' wrote of ''Dimensions'' that "A pencil drawing by Gray Foy, a little-known American artist born in 1923, is ... a scrambled, congested, Dalí-like composition of body parts, still-life, architecture, and landscape made with unbelievable refinement and microscopic detailing." In Foy's midcentury universe, when humans seek the comfort of familiar spaces they discover instead amorphousness, velocity, and weightlessness. The pictures also reflect an affinity with the work of
American Realist American realism was a movement in art, music and literature that depicted contemporary social realities and the lives and everyday activities of ordinary people. The movement began in literature in the mid-19th century, and became an importan ...
s such as Thomas Hart Benton and
John Steuart Curry John Steuart Curry (November 14, 1897 – August 29, 1946) was an American painter whose career spanned the years from 1924 until his death. He was noted for his paintings depicting rural life in his home state, Kansas. Along with Thomas Hart B ...
, whose tropes include the overlapping vignettes of mural painting, often populated by figures whose bodies are contoured or distorted to mimic their immediate setting. Foy himself referred to his imagery as "hyper-realism," stating in 1948 "I may turn out to be a realist. After all, hyper-realism actually becomes the supernatural." A realist direction was fostered when his wartime employment ended and he moved back to Dallas to renew his art studies at Southern Methodist with his teachers
Jerry Bywaters Williamson Gerald Bywaters (1906–1989), known as Jerry Bywaters, was an American artist, university professor, museum director, art critic and a historian of the Texas region. Based in Dallas, Bywaters worked to elevate the quality of Texas ar ...
and Otis Dozier, both referred to as Lone Star Regionalists. The ''Dallas Morning News'' said Foy's "provocative Surrealist pencil drawings are the sensation of the current year-end exhibit at SMU." In September 1946, on his first trip to New York, the twenty-four-year-old Foy took his portfolio to the influential art and literary publication ''View'' magazine. In the fall of 1946, ''View'' published ''Untitled ourtyard with Morphing Figures' (1946), a seamless mix of the marvelous and the monstrous and its appearance launched Foy's career. Foy moved to New York in spring 1947, enrolling at Columbia University to study studio art and art history, as well as anatomy and botany, two fields that underpin much of his imagery. Soon, as in
Pavel Tchelitchew Pavel Fyodorovich Tchelitchew ( ; ) ( – 31 July 1957) was a Russian-born surrealism, surrealist painter, set designer and costume designer. Early life Tchelitchew was born to an aristocratic family of landowners and was educated by private ...
’s work, Foy began his own explorations merging plant life with human features. Foy sought gallery representation, and R. Kirk Askew became his first and only dealer at Durlacher Bros. on 57th Street. Reviewers noted the rigor of Foy’s scrutiny, describing his "microscopic vision" and "infinitesimal details glossed over by the average vision." But by the time of his first one-person exhibition at Durlacher's in April 1951, Foy had nearly abandoned Surrealist imagery and began concentrating instead on the depiction of botanical organisms undergoing transitional states. The ''New York Times'' critic Stuart Preston wrote: "Foy's pencil and brush spin out a tissue of delicacy and transparency, light enough to seem to have settled on the paper like frost, strong enough to have netted in its gossamer texture enough visual data about the plant forms to astound a botanist."


Mature work

At his second one-person exhibition at Durlacher's in 1957, his observations of nature had matured, as evidenced by the intricate biological invention in such works as ''Uprooted Plants'' (1955, Whitney Museum of American Art). As his work evolved through the 1950s, the artist developed an understanding of constant change in nature and honed his ability to depict such metamorphosis. In the three decades Foy was active, he found a way to convey his fertile awareness of nature's disorder as well as its order by refining his technical prowess. Achieved by a delicate feathering technique, the edges of the depicted organic matter gradually disappear as lighter and lighter pencil pressure traverses the sheet. About 1957 Foy began a series of related still lifes that involve leaves or branches wrapped by human hands into clusters or sheaves, or assembled by birds into nests. With its inner pinkish radiance and veined leaf surfaces, ''Cluster of Leaves'' (ca. 1957), for example, quivers with the power of an incubating egg. These drawings are metaphors for efforts to control the untamed sprawl of natural vegetation. In one group of works, Foy developed an additional illustrative mechanism, preparing the drawing paper with a teeming texture, introducing earthy tones and chlorophyll-like colorations. The activated surfaces simulate organic matter such as soil incrustation, moldy walls, lichen-covered rocks, or pond scum. In his book ''The Language of Ornament'', art historian James Trilling described the effect: "Gray Foy’s drawing evokes the richness of a living coral reef, or the cheerfully haunted rocks that provide a background to some of the finest Persian miniatures." After receiving a career-affirming John Simon Guggenheim grant in 1961, Foy concentrated on his largest drawing, ''The Third Kingdom'' (1961–62), in which monochromatic greenish-umber tones convey the pro-longed activity of organic upheaval. Working on fibrous Japanese paper, Foy spent a year trying to illustrate elemental rock forms. Such mature drawings focus on botanical and geological forms in the act of transformation. They presage a modern-day concentration on ecological concerns by excavating the progression of natural processes. Curator Stephen C. Wicks explained: "The rich array of textures serves as a seductive skin beneath which the artist’s plant forms appear to germinate, writhe, and wither. The resulting effect underscores Gray Foy’s ability to create surrealist compositions of uncommon craftsmanship and visionary form."


References


Selected exhibitions


Solo exhibitions

* "Gray Foy," Durlacher Bros., New York, April 24–May 19, 1951. * "Gray Foy," Durlacher Bros., New York, March 26–April 20, 1957.


Group exhibitions

* "Texas Contemporary Artists," M. Knoedler & Co., New York, June 1952. * "American Watercolors, Drawings, and Prints, 1952," Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, December 5, 1952 – January 25, 1953. * "1956 Annual Exhibition of Contemporary American Sculpture, Paintings, Watercolors, and Drawings," Whitney Museum of American Art, New York, November 14, 1956 – January 6, 1957. * "Celebration of Creativity: Three Centuries of American Masterworks on Paper," Columbus Museum, Georgia, May 11–August 31, 2003. * "Glossolalia: Languages of Drawing," The Museum of Modern Art, New York, March 26–July 7, 2008.


Selected illustrations


Book jackets

* Vollmoeller, Karl. ''The Last Miracle''. Sloan and Pearce, 1949. * Boros, Eva. ''The Mermaids''. Farrar, Straus & Cudahy, 1956. * Gary, Romain. ''Lady L''. Simon and Schuster, 1958. * Salamanca, J. R. ''Lilith''. Simon and Schuster, 1961. * Bradbury, Ray. ''Something Wicked This Way Comes''. Simon and Schuster, 1962.


Long-playing record album covers

* Brahms, Johannes. ''Symphony No. 2 in D Major, Op. 73''. Columbia Masterworks, ML 4827, 1953. * Stravinsky, Igor. ''Pulcinella''. Columbia Masterworks, ML 4830, 1953. * Schubert, Franz. ''Die Winterreise (The Winter Journey)''. Epic, LC 3154, 1955. * Smetana, Bedřich. ''The Bartered Bride''. Epic, SC 6020, 1956. * Dukas, Paul. ''The Sorcerer’s Apprentice''. Columbia Masterworks, ML 5198, 1957. * Gluck, Christoph Willibald. ''Orpheus and Eurydice''. Epic, SC 6019, 1957. * Haydn, Joseph. ''Lo speziale''. Epic, LC 3739, 1957. * Stravinsky, Igor. ''Persephone''. Columbia Masterworks, ML 5196, 1957. * Stravinsky, Igor. ''Le sacre du printemps''. Columbia Masterworks, MS 6010, 1958. * Capote, Truman. Truman Capote Reading His "A Christmas Memory," from ''Breakfast at Tiffany’s''. United Artists, UAL 9001, 1959.


External links


Gray Foy site

Art Institute of Chicago collection

The Columbus Museum, Georgia, collection

Museum of Modern Art, New York, collection

Whitney Museum of American Art collection

Gray Foy Papers, Columbia University

Gray Foy, a Master Precisionist Who Presided Over Legendary Salons, Gets a Turn in the Spotlight
by Laura Regensdorf at Vogue.com {{DEFAULTSORT:Foy, Gray 1922 births 2012 deaths American botanical illustrators American illustrators 20th-century American artists Magic realist artists American surrealist artists American gay artists Artists from Texas Artists from New York City