GLR September-October 2023
Design for Living, Living for Design
T HE SQUARE CLAY tiles depict bucolic scenes in colored glazes: landscapes, billowing clouds, boats on a bay. The composi tions are stunning, but the quality is terri ble. Who made these items? In The Splendid Disarray of Beauty , Richard D. Mohr, a professor emeritus of philosophy and the classics at the University of Illi nois Urbana-Champaign, combs through a collection of several decorative art tiles some of the most beguiling, beautiful,
In the school s second year, the Boys began teaching tile-making while the kiln was still being built. Despite the tech nical know-how of the school s ceramic engineer, Albert Louis Solon (1887 1949), they were clearly figuring things out as they went along. The output of the carved and molded tile work is a marriage of beautiful design (evocative pastoral scenes, stylized perspectives) and bad technique (warping, cracking, glazes falling off). the large crack it sustained during fir ing, while one portraying the pendu lous flowered branches of a bleeding heart is warped, another example of good design being defeated by tech nical incompetence. Yet, despite Mohr s grumblings about Cathedral Oaks production problems, his admi ration for the Boys legacy shines through. The school was short-lived, with no apparent heritage or artistic suc cessors, although it did lead to the cre ation of three other art schools in northern California. Five years into theBoys relationship, their house and studio burnt to the ground. By then, they d moved on to more glitzy ca reers, including a stint as interior de signers, later creating the Ambassador Hotel s famed Coconut Grove night club, in 1920, among other lavish in stallations. The Boys 55-year relationship is at the heart of The Splendid Disarray of Beauty , and it s what readers of
M ICHAEL Q UINN
THE SPLENDID DISARRAY OFBEAUTY The Boys, the Tiles, the Joy of Cathedral Oaks AStudy in Arts and Cra ft s Community by Richard D. Mohr RIT Press, 156 pages, $75.
The most impressive thing about the book is how much Mohr knows about tile-making. Detailed photo captions con vey his thorough understanding of its technical complexities and his frequent exasperation over preventable errors. Glazes are underfired and lifeless. One tile depicting a moodily ambiguous coastline is labeled another glorious failure for
and mysterious tiles ever made in America for clues. Like an archaeologist reconstructing an ancient relic from a few shards of pottery, the decorative arts scholar uses the only sur viving artwork from an early 20th-century, summers-only art school to piece together its past, to acknowledge its contribu tion to the American Arts and Crafts movement, and to explore its significance for gay history. The Cathedral Oaks School of Art
(1911 1914), set on 150 wooded acres in the foothills of California s Santa Cruz Mountains, was founded by George Austin Dennison (1873 1966) and Charles Frank Ingerson (1879 1968) shortly after they met to fulfill their shared ideals: To create beauty, to live through beauty, and to be sur rounded by beauty. Partners in busi ness and life, the men shared a Midwestern background, a can-do atti tude, and a love of hats, cats, and smoking. Their open lifestyle didn t seem to raise too many eyebrows. Lo cals affectionately referred to them as the Boys, while a profile in their local paper called them as ordinary as a pair of old shoes. The school was the men s honey moon project. Dennison drew on a marketing background and acted as the school s manager. Ingerson, trained in the arts, served as principal instructor. Employing a small staff,
George Austin Dennison and Charles Frank Ingerson.
these pages may find most fascinating. Mohr makes the bold claim that they were America s first gay couple (while ac knowledging that the book is a work of art history, not a bi ography). He includes several photographs of the pair looking cozy at home, one where they re cuddling up to Hollywood actress Olivia de Havilland (she and her sister Joan Fontaine considered the men their uncles), and a reproduction of the Boys joint Christmas card from 1952. But the book s fore square focus as its large square shape aptly suggests is on the tiles.
they enthusiastically pitched classes in things like painting, printmaking, and jewelry-making. All of the students were women, almost all of them middle-aged, and most of them teachers and arts administrators from California, Washington, and Utah. During the six-week sessions, they could all lean into their artistic identities in an Arcadian environment. Michael Quinn writes about books in a monthly column for the Brook lyn newspaper The Red Hook Star-Revue and on his website, master michaelquinn.com. September October 2023
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