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Don Baum (1922–2008) was an American curator, artist and educator, most known as a key impresario and promoter of the
Chicago Imagists The Chicago Imagists are a group of representational artists associated with the School of the Art Institute of Chicago who exhibited at the Hyde Park Art Center in the late 1960s. Their work was known for grotesquerie, Surrealism and complete ind ...
, a group of artists that had an enduring impact on American art in the later twentieth century.Friedman, Anna. "Don Baum," i
''Art in Chicago 1945-1995''
Museum of Contemporary Art, ed. Lynne Warren, New York: Thames and Hudson, 1996, p. 244. Retrieved February 22, 2018.
Jensen, Trevor with Alan G. Artner
"Don Baum: 1922 – 2008,"
''Chicago Tribune'', October 31, 2008. Retrieved April 20, 2018.
Described by the
Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago The Museum of Contemporary Art (MCA) Chicago is a contemporary art museum near Water Tower Place in downtown Chicago in Cook County, Illinois, United States. The museum, which was established in 1967, is one of the world's largest contemporar ...
(MCA) as "an indispensable curator of the Chicago school," Baum was known for lively and irreverent exhibitions that offered fresh perspectives combining elements of Surrealism and Pop and that broke down barriers between schooled and untrained, or so-called outsider artists. From 1956 to 1972, Baum was exhibitions director at Chicago's Hyde Park Art Center. It was there, in the 1960s, that he became involved with a group of young artists he exhibited as "Hairy Who" that later expanded to become the Chicago Imagists. That group included
Ed Paschke Edward Francis Paschke (June 22, 1939 – November 25, 2004) was an American painter of Polish descent. His childhood interest in animation and cartoons, as well as his father's creativity in wood carving and construction, led him toward a caree ...
, Jim Nutt, Roger Brown,
Gladys Nilsson Gladys M. Nilsson (born May 6, 1940) is an American artist, and one of the original Hairy Who Chicago Imagists, a group of representational artists active during the 1960s and 1970s. She is married to fellow-artist and Hairy Who member Jim N ...
, and Karl Wirsum. Baum mounted two major shows at the MCA that featured the emerging artists in their first museum exhibitions: "Don Baum Sez: 'Chicago Needs Famous Artists'" (1969) and "Made in Chicago" (1973), which shaped a vision of Chicago's art world as a place of meticulous craftsmanship and vernacular inspiration.Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago
Don-Baum-In-Memoriam
Exhibitions, Chicago. Retrieved April 21, 2018.
Baum's curatorial and artistic work was widely covered in publications including: ''Artforum'',Kirschner, Judith Russi. "Don Baum, Betsy Rosenfield Gallery," ''Artforum'', 23, January 1985: 94.Kozloff, Max. "Inwardness: Chicago Art since 1945," ''Artforum'', 11, October 1972): 51-52. ''Art in America'',Upshaw, Reagan. "Don Baum at Betsy Rosenfield," ''Art in America'', 69, February 1981: 154-55. ''ARTnews'',Kind, Joshua. "Chicago." ''ARTNews'', 64 (April 1965): 52. ''Art Magazine'',Gedo, Mary M. "Don Baum," ''Art Magazine'', 56 (January 1982):9. ''Time'',Hughes, Robert. "Midwestern Eccentrics." ''Time'', June 12, 1972, pp. 56-59. ''Newsweek'',Davis, Douglas. "Monsters of Chicago." ''Newsweek'', June 12, 1972, p. 109. ''New Art Examiner'',Forwalter, John. "Dolls! Dolls! Dolls!" ''New Art Examiner'', 4 (January 1977): 19. ''Chicago Tribune'',Allen, Jane and Derek Guthrie. "Camp Chicago Art: 'It Hurts When I Laugh,'" ''Chicago Tribune'', June 4, 1972.Artner, Alan G. "Baum Show Gives New Hyde Park Center Fine Start." ''Chicago Tribune'', November 1, 1981. ''Chicago Sun-Times'',Granger, William. "The Chicago School," ''Chicago Sun-Times'', May 14, 1972. ''Chicago Daily News'',Haas, Joseph. "Man Behind the Big Show," ''Chicago Daily News'', March 22, 1969. and the ''New York Times''.Shay, Steve. "Artistic Vision of Home Sweet Home," ''New York Times'', February 14, 1991. His own art work is part of major public collections, including
National Museum of American Art The Smithsonian American Art Museum (commonly known as SAAM, and formerly the National Museum of American Art) is a museum in Washington, D.C., part of the Smithsonian Institution. Together with its branch museum, the Renwick Gallery, SAAM holds ...
,
The Art Institute of Chicago The Art Institute of Chicago in Chicago's Grant Park (Chicago), Grant Park, founded in 1879, is one of the oldest and list of largest art museums, largest art museums in the world. Recognized for its curatorial efforts and popularity among visit ...
, and the Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago, among many. In addition to his curatorial work and artistic production, Baum was a longtime educator at several Chicago institutions, notably
Roosevelt University Roosevelt University is a private university with campuses in Chicago and Schaumburg, Illinois. Founded in 1945, the university was named in honor of United States President Franklin Delano Roosevelt and First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt. The unive ...
(1948–1984).Don Baum page, Carl Hammer Gallery
Retrieved April 20, 2018.


Life and career

Baum was born Charles Donald Baum in Escanaba, Michigan. He attended Michigan State College before coming to Chicago in the early 1940s to pursue his interest in art, initially at the
School of the Art Institute of Chicago The School of the Art Institute of Chicago (SAIC) is a private art school associated with the Art Institute of Chicago (AIC) in Chicago, Illinois. Tracing its history to an art students' cooperative founded in 1866, which grew into the museum and ...
and then at the
University of Chicago The University of Chicago (UChicago, Chicago, U of C, or UChi) is a private university, private research university in Chicago, Illinois. Its main campus is located in Chicago's Hyde Park, Chicago, Hyde Park neighborhood. The University of Chic ...
where he studied art history and earned a PhD in 1947.''New City''
"Portrait of the Artist: Don Baum"
December 30, 2008. Retrieved April 20, 2018.
As a young artist, Baum participated in the influential Art Institute of Chicago (AIC) student-led Momentum Exhibits of the late 1940s and early 1950s; his work was also chosen for more than ten of AIC's prestigious "Chicago and Vicinity" surveys, beginning in 1946, and later included in the traveling show "Twenty-Five Chicago Artists" (1963). In the 1950s, Baum was teaching at Roosevelt University and the Hyde Park Art Center, where he was named exhibitions director in 1956. It was here that he became increasingly visible in the 1960s and 1970s as a promoter of a figurative "Chicago School" of art that ran counter to the prevailing abstract current of New York City. Critic Franz Schulze would later say, "He became a little empire to himself...not so much an artist as an impresario."Don Baum, "Monster Roster" exhibition
2016. Retrieved April 20, 2018.
Camper, Fred
"A Hairy Who's Who,"
''Chicago Reader''. Retrieved April 20, 2018.
During that time, Baum's influence expanded as he served on the board of trustees of the MCA in Chicago (1974-1986) and as chairman of its Exhibitions Committee (1974–79). Throughout this time, Baum continued to develop his own art, which he exhibited extensively. Baum died in Evanston, Illinois, in October 2008 at the age of 86.


The Hairy Who and Chicago Imagists

In 1964, Baum was approached at the Hyde Park Art Center by artists Jim Nutt, Gladys Nilsson and James Falconer about a group exhibit. They put together a show that also included Art Green, Suellen Rocca and Karl Wirsum, titled "Hairy Who" (1966), an off-handed inside joke about local art critic, Harry Bouras.Newman, Christine. "When Jim Met Gladys", ''Chicago Magazine'', Vol. 60 No. 2, February 2011, pp. 78-81,92,146-148,164. The six artists showed there together twice more (1967 and 1968). The informal group, and Baum, received national attention, with subsequent shows at the San Francisco Art Institute, the
School of Visual Arts The School of Visual Arts New York City (SVA NYC) is a private for-profit art school in New York City. It was founded in 1947 and is a member of the Association of Independent Colleges of Art and Design. History This school was started by ...
in New York, and the
Corcoran Gallery of Art The Corcoran Gallery of Art was an art museum in Washington, D.C., United States, that is now the location of the Corcoran School of the Arts and Design, a part of the George Washington University. Overview The Corcoran School of the Arts & Design ...
in Washington, DC. Baum continued to organize notable shows there such as "Nonplussed Some" and "False Image" (1968), and "Marriage, Chicago Style" (1970), with an expanded group of artists. By the early 1970s, the Hairy Who artists came to be known collectively as the Chicago Imagists, a name critic Franz Schulze is also credited with coining. Their work was generally figurative, quirky and personal, and shared an interest in the surreal, the grotesque, the fantastical, and "low," folk, or outsider culture.Johnson, Ken. "Art in Review; Ray Yoshida," ''New York Times'', September 17, 1999. Members of this (also informal) "group" included Ed Paschke, Roger Brown,
Christina Ramberg Christina Ramberg (21 August 1946–1995) was an American painter associated with the Chicago Imagists, a group of representational artists who attended the School of the Art Institute of Chicago in the late 1960s. The Imagists took their cues from ...
, Barbara Rossi,
Irving Petlin Irving Petlin (December 17, 1934 – September 1, 2018) was an American artist and painter renowned for his mastery of the pastel medium and collaborations with other artists (including Mark di Suvero and Leon Golub) and for his work in the "seri ...
, Kerig Pope, and
Ray Yoshida Raymond "Ray" Kakuo Yoshida (October 3, 1930 – January 10, 2009) was an American artist known for his paintings and collages, and for his contributions as a teacher at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago from 1959 to 2005. He was an import ...
, among others. The group was the subject of a 2014 documentary by director Leslie Buchbinder, ''Hairy Who and the Chicago Imagists''.Edward M
"Chicago Imagists: Art History's Overlooked Chapter, Now on Film,"
''Hyperallergic'', May 17, 2014. Retrieved April 21, 2018.


Art

As an artist, Baum initially focused on painting, but turned to assemblage art, using doll parts and other found objects, in work that was often overtly political, particularly during the 1960s. In his later years, he focused on crafting small houses out of old paint-by-number pictures and other pieces. Baum's work fits in with the Chicago Imagists, as well as the so-called " Monster Roster" of the 1950s and 1960s, an influential precursor group to the Imagists in Chicago.Corbett, John. "Bleak House: Chicago's Monster Artists," in ''Monster Roster: Existentialist Art in Postwar Chicago,'' John Corbett, Jim Dempsey, Jessica Moss, and Richard A. Born, University of Chicago Press: Smart Museum of Art, 2016. The Monster Roster was given its name in 1959 by Franz Schulze due to their existentialist, sometimes gruesome, semi-mystical figurative work.Richard Vine, "Where the Wild Things Were", ''Art in America'', May 1997, pp. 98-111. Many of them were influenced by psychoanalysis, Baum included: "My dependence on intuition, the sort of experimentation which led to discovering my images...came directly out of that kind of psychoanalytic experience." The Monster Roster was recognized in a major exhibition and book by the Smart Museum of Art, which examined its history and impact on the development of American art.Monster Roster: Existentialist Art in Postwar Chicago, exhibition description
2016. Retrieved March 31, 2018.
Along with Baum, artists in the group included Leon Golub,
Cosmo Campoli Cosmo Campoli (March 21, 1922 – December 15, 1997) was a Chicago-based sculptor, known for his figurative work centered on the themes of birth and death, and for his use of bold, surreal bird and egg imagery.Corbett, John. "Bleak House: Chicago' ...
,
George Cohen George Reginald Cohen (22 October 1939 – 23 December 2022) was an English professional footballer who played as a right-back. He spent his entire professional career with Fulham, and won the 1966 World Cup with England. He was inducted int ...
, Theodore Halkin,
June Leaf June Leaf (born 1929) is an American artist known for her abstract allegorical paintings and drawings; she also works in modernist kinetic sculpture. She is based in New York City and Mabou, Nova Scotia. Biography June Leaf was born in 1929 ...
,
Arthur Lerner Arthur Lerner (born 1929) is an American artist, known for his atmospheric figurative paintings and drawings, landscapes, and still lifes. He is sometimes described as a realist, but most critics observe that his work is more subjective than desc ...
,
Seymour Rosofsky Seymour Rosofsky (b. 1924 – d. 1981) was an American artist, who has been described as one of the key figures in twentieth-century Chicago art.Corbett, John and Jim Dempsey, Jessica Moss, and Richard A. Born''Monster Roster: Existentialist Art i ...
,
Nancy Spero Nancy Spero (August 24, 1926 – October 18, 2009) was an American visual artist. Born in Cleveland, Ohio, Spero lived for much of her life in New York City. She married and collaborated with artist Leon Golub. As both artist and activist, Nancy ...
, and H. C. Westermann, among others. Baum first gained notice for disturbing assemblage works featuring bones and cast-off dolls and doll parts, such as ''The Babies of della Robbia'' (1965), now part of the MCA's permanent collection. The work references 15th-century Italian sculptor Andrea della Robbia's architectural decorations in relief finished, substituting broken dolls for the putti typical of his work. Baum participated in exhibitions in the 1960s that criticized and protested the Vietnam War, with works such as his disturbing portrait of then-President Lyndon Baines Johnson, ''L.B.J.'' (1967–68). In 1979, after a period of artistic inactivity, Baum began creating new works after seeing photographs of thatched structures built by boat people from Southeast Asia.Smithsonian American Art Museum
Don Baum
Retrieved April 20, 2018.
The series, his last key one, called ''Domus'', featured small houses made from disparate elements such as cutting boards, Chinese-checker sets, and paintings of Jesus. Baum exhibited his work in solo exhibitions at the John L. Hunt (1965), Betsy Rosenfield (several, 1980–1992) and Carl Hammer (1999) galleries in Chicago, Galerie Darthea Speyer (1985) in Paris, and at institutions including the Hyde Park Art Center (1961, 1981),
Madison Art Center The Madison Museum of Contemporary Art (MMoCA), formerly known as the Madison Art Center, is an independent, non-profit art museum located in downtown Madison, Wisconsin. MMoCA is dedicated to exhibiting, collecting, and preserving modern and co ...
,
Illinois State Museum The Illinois State Museum features the life, land, people and art of the State of Illinois. The headquarters museum is located on Spring and Edwards Streets, one block southwest of the Illinois State Capitol, in Springfield. There are three satell ...
, and
Krannert Art Museum The Krannert Art Museum (KAM) is a fine art museum located at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign in Champaign, Illinois, United States. It has of space devoted to all periods of art, dating from ancient Egypt to contemporary photography ...
(all 1988), among others.


Education career

Baum served at many Chicago educational institutions over an education career of more than 45 years. He began as a Professor of Art at Roosevelt University in 1948, where he continued teaching until 1984. He served there as Chairman of the Art Department (1970–84). Baum also taught painting at the Hyde Park Art Center (1955–1965), and taught painting and drawing at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago (1993–6).


Collections

Baum's art is represented in numerous public and private collections, including those of: The Art Institute of Chicago,
Brauer Museum of Art The Brauer Museum of Art is home to a collection of 19th- and 20th-century American art, world religious art, and Midwestern regional art. It is located in the Valparaiso University Center for the Arts (VUCA) on the campus of Valparaiso University ...
, Fonds National d'Art Contemporain (Paris), Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago, Hallmark Cards (Kansas City), Illinois Collections (State of Illinois Center),
Illinois State Museum The Illinois State Museum features the life, land, people and art of the State of Illinois. The headquarters museum is located on Spring and Edwards Streets, one block southwest of the Illinois State Capitol, in Springfield. There are three satell ...
,
Madison Art Center The Madison Museum of Contemporary Art (MMoCA), formerly known as the Madison Art Center, is an independent, non-profit art museum located in downtown Madison, Wisconsin. MMoCA is dedicated to exhibiting, collecting, and preserving modern and co ...
,
Milwaukee Art Museum The Milwaukee Art Museum (MAM) is an art museum in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. Its collection contains nearly 25,000 works of art. Location and Visit Located on the lakefront of Lake Michigan, the Milwaukee Art Museum is one of the largest art museu ...
,
National Museum of American Art The Smithsonian American Art Museum (commonly known as SAAM, and formerly the National Museum of American Art) is a museum in Washington, D.C., part of the Smithsonian Institution. Together with its branch museum, the Renwick Gallery, SAAM holds ...
, Smart Museum of Art,
Weatherspoon Art Museum The Weatherspoon Art Museum is located at the University of North Carolina at Greensboro and is one of the largest collections of modern and contemporary art in the southeast with a focus on American art. Its programming includes fifteen or more ...
, and
Racine Art Museum The Racine Art Museum (RAM) and RAM's Charles A. Wustum Museum of Fine Arts are located in Racine, Wisconsin, U.S. The museum holds the largest and most significant contemporary craft collection in North America, with more than 9,500 objects fro ...
.


Legacy

Baum launched the careers of many artists who became nationally and internationally known, and helped establish the notion of a Chicago counter-narrative to the privileged art narratives of his time. Art world figures in Chicago noted Baum's lasting significance at his passing. Chuck Thurow, executive director of the Hyde Park Art Center at the time, said, "He had an amazing eye for innovative, new artists that other people hadn't seen." The MCA called him a vital part of Chicago's art community for over fifty years. Tony Jones, Chancellor at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago, said, "Don really believed that Chicago had a vibrant art culture, that there were terrific artists in Chicago and that people should stay here." According to gallery owner Carl Hammer., who showed Baum's work, "He was one of the best promoters of Chicago art that Chicago has seen."


References


External links


Archives of American Art, Don Baum oral history interview, 1986.

Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago, Don-Baum-In-Memoriam
{{DEFAULTSORT:Baum, Don Artists from Chicago 20th-century American artists Artists from Illinois University of Chicago alumni School of the Art Institute of Chicago alumni 20th-century American educators 1922 births 2008 deaths Educators from Illinois