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33 of 34 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Grant Wood: the public and private
Most Americans know Grant Wood by only one painting...his famous "American Gothic", which is one of the most recognizable and parodied paintings in history. In this wonderful retrospective of the artist from Iowa, R. Tripp Evans has given the reader a warm, honest and comprehensive look at Wood's life...both public and private. It's an extraordinary offering...
Published 16 months ago by Jon Hunt

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10 of 17 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars Was That All There Was?
I agree with the other readers here. I am reading this currently on my Kindle and wish that I hadn't paid for it in digital format, the only benefit being that it truly doesn't deserve taking up literal space in my house. If this had been published about 30 years ago the author's constant thumping over and over on the labored point of Wood's repressed sexuality may have...
Published 12 months ago by Bradley


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33 of 34 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Grant Wood: the public and private, October 20, 2010
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This review is from: Grant Wood: A Life (Hardcover)
Most Americans know Grant Wood by only one painting...his famous "American Gothic", which is one of the most recognizable and parodied paintings in history. In this wonderful retrospective of the artist from Iowa, R. Tripp Evans has given the reader a warm, honest and comprehensive look at Wood's life...both public and private. It's an extraordinary offering.

Grant Wood was a rare artist in one sense...that his main output of known works occurred in one decade...the 1930s. This decade was known for its "regionalism" and featured the works of Wood, Thomas Hart Benton and John Stueart Curry...three men from the midwest who knew each other in varying levels of admiration and disapproval. A core of Evans's book centers around Wood's homosexuality which was hinted at for years but now has fully come to life in this book. Evans treats Wood with tremendous respect and proffers an understanding of the difficulties of living a closeted life during that time and how it affected his work and his relationships. The author is particularly good at weaving these people into Wood's personal life...his headstrong father, his closely attached mother and, especially after the artist's death, his legend-keeping sister.

The surprise to the reader, and to those who knew Wood at his time, was that Wood decided to get married and then endured a brief, rocky partnership. Yet, the fascination of this aspect of "Grant Wood: A Life" is his friendships with men. As best as one can assume, Wood was somewhat asexual, though his attractions (especially to younger men as a caregiver or provider) are nicely handled by the author.

Evans is a natural teacher and the inclusion of color plates of Wood's paintings make up the richest part of the book. It's like going to art class with the author as teacher. As a knowledgeable art historian, Evans takes us through many paintings in detail, explaining aspects that the lay person would easily miss. It's a terrific way to view Wood through his work.

I highly recommend "Grant Wood: A Life". It's a consummate and easily readable narrative presenting an overall view that Grant Wood loomed as an art giant of his age and though his paintings are "of an age", they are timeless.
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29 of 31 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars From Gay City News (NYC), October 28, 2010
This review is from: Grant Wood: A Life (Hardcover)
Grant Wood's "American Gothic" is the most recognizable American painting.

Of all the paintings in the world, only the Mona Lisa has been more parodied. As Tripp Evans notes in his groundbreaking new biography of the artist, when it was first exhibited in Chicago in 1930, it made an instant global celebrity out of Wood: "Never in the history of American art had a single work captured such immediate and international recognition; by the end of 1930, the painting had been reproduced in newspapers around the globe... Never before, either, had a painting generated such widespread curiosity about its artist."

"American Gothic" was considered by most critics of that day as something of a national self-portrait, and it made Wood the icon of a new native American, regionalist art. The New Yorker wrote at the time, "As a symbol Wood stands for the corn-fed Middle West against the anemic East, starving aesthetically upon warmed-over entrees dished up by Spanish chefs in Paris kitchens. He stands for an independent American art against the colonialism and cosmopolitanism of New York."

Wood, who was born in the small town of Anamosa, Iowa, in 1898 and spent nearly all his life painting in the Hawkeye State, depicting its countryside and inhabitants, was said to stand for the flinty, manly virtues of heartland America. The New York Times proclaimed that Wood, who styled himself a "farmer-painter," had earned his "toga virilis" for, as Evans summarizes it, "ending Americans' perilous fascination with impressionism."

Wood himself encouraged this anti-intellectual, quintessentially American, and rigorously heterosexual version of his persona and the origins of his art. He famously declared in a newspaper interview, "All the really good ideas I've ever had came to me while I was milking a cow," adding, "You don't get panicky about some `-ism' or other while you have Bossy by the business end. Your thoughts are realistic and direct."

The public image Wood constructed of himself even extended to the way he dressed. As one prominent critic eulogized him on his death in 1942, "In past years artists adopted smocks for their own... the working attire of French peasants. Grant Wood wore the work clothes of his own country when he painted, overalls such as a farmer or mechanic would choose."

But all of this was an elaborate charade. As Evans, an openly gay art history professor at Wheaton College in Illinois, reveals in this meticulously researched biography, Wood had made a careful study of impressionism during four extended trips to Europe and had been a student for two years at the prestigious Académie Julian in Paris, where he steeped himself in the impressionist and post-impressionist masters.

Although he spent his earliest years on the family farm, he spent most of his boyhood time hidden away in a dark basement, his refuge where he could draw and paint, sequestered from the disapproval of his distant and authoritarian father, who considered such artistic proclivities "sissified."

His father died when he was quite young, and he then moved to the bustling metropolis of Cedar Rapids with his mother and sister, with whom he lived there for most of the rest of his life until, as part of his camouflage, he contracted a loveless, unconsummated, unhappy, and brief marriage.

Far from being inspired by milking cows -- an activity he only engaged in occasionally in his young boyhood -- Wood told his wife that he felt "disgusted and dirty" by the act. She would recount, "He told me how embarrassed he was at the time because he was sure that no matter how much he bathed, he must carry with him the smell of the manure which permeated his clothes from working around livestock."

And as a young man Wood wouldn't have been caught dead in overalls -- he was, in fact, something of a dandy, as photographs in this copiously illustrated volume from Wood's "bohemian," European period clearly show. His earliest vocations activities were not in farming but as a jewelry designer, interior decorator, and in theatrical production. One friend described the shy Wood's voice as sounding "like the fragrance of violets made audible."

Wood's previous biographers have turned a blind eye to the demonstrable fact that he was a deeply closeted homosexual. Evans documents the always-chubby Wood's infatuations (many of them apparently unrequited and sublimated into parental role-playing) with an unending series of slim, dark-haired young men who were his students, protégés, and secretaries. As the bartender in a famous Cedar Rapids watering hole Wood favored put it, "Wood was only gay when he was drunk."

Evans has even unearthed numerous oblique but unmistakable references to Wood's sexual orientation in the Iowa newspapers of the 1920s. As he writes, "Given the later insistence upon Wood's sturdy masculinity and embodiment of Midwestern morality, it is surprising to note the frequency and candor of these early references to his homosexuality."

To take just one example, Wood's friend MacKinlay Kantor (who won later fame as a Pulitzer Prize-winning novelist and screenwriter) wrote in his gossip column for the Des Moines Tribune-Capital, emphasizing Wood's bachelorhood: "Pink of face and plump of figure, he was most nearly in character one night when he appeared at a costume party dressed as an angel -- wings, pink flannel nightie, pink toes, and even a halo, supported by a stick thrusting up his back."

Not only did Kantor link Wood's costume to common stereotypes of the "fairy," but after comparing Wood to Snow White, who lay imprisoned in a glass coffin awaiting her prince's kiss, Kantor wrote: "The front door of his apartment is made of glass, but it's a coffin lid. OOOOOOoooooh!" Kantor then exhorted the "boys" among his readers to "look [Wood] over." The meaning of all this is quite evident, unless one doesn't want to see.

The fact that things like this had appeared in print drove Wood even further into his closet in the late 1920s, leading him to adopt the overalls and "farmer-painter" pose to bolster its locked door. It was also at this time that he turned away from his early painting style, indisputably marked by his study of impressionists, to the gothic realism that, as Evans demonstrates, bore the imprint of the Dutch and German masters he had absorbed while studying in Germany.

Evans is brilliant in documenting how gender assignments were made to various artistic styles, and how impressionism was considered a "feminine" art form. Moreover, the new school of regionalist, "authentic" American art of "US scene" painting, of which Wood became a symbol in the 1930s after the stunning success of "American Gothic" -- and which was launched as a media fetish with a 1934 Time magazine cover story written on orders of its conservative nationalist publisher Henry Luce -- was impregnated with an explicitly xenophobic, anti-modernist, and extremely homophobic ideology.

Thus, Wood's famous comrade-in-arms in this movement, the painter Thomas Hart Benton, wrote a 1935 essay entitled "Farewell to New York," which Evans rightly describes as a "homophobic diatribe." In it, Benton roared that the city had "lost its masculinity" since the start of the Depression, because it had been polluted by "the concentrated flow of aesthetic-minded homosexuals into the various fields of artistic practice... far be it from me to raise any hands in moral horror over the ways and tastes of individuals. If young gentlemen, or old ones either, wish to wear women's underwear and cultivate extraordinary manners it is all right with me. But it is not all right with the art which they affect and cultivate. It is not all right when, by ingratiation or subtle connivance, precious fairies get into positions of power and judge, buy, and exhibit American pictures on a base of nervous whim and under the sway of those overdelicate refinements of taste characteristic of their kind." To cover himself, Wood endorsed Benton's queer-bashing declaration.

The movement's most ardent advocate among art critics -- one might even call him its ideologue -- Thomas Craven, in his 1934 book "Modern Art: The Men, the Movement, the Meaning," had earlier blown the same trumpet. "The artist is losing his masculinity," Craven growled. "The tendency of the Parisian system is to disestablish sexual characteristics, to merge the two sexes in an androgynous third, containing all that is offensive in both. Once [male artists] contract la vérole Montparnasse -- the pox of the Quarter -- they become jaded and perverse...They found magazines in which their insecurity is attested by the continual insulting of America, hymns to homosexuality and miscegenation... It is this sort of life that captures American youth and emasculates American art."

Not only was homosexuality illegal and known homosexuals jailed or condemned to horrific "treatments" by psychiatric ghouls in mental hospitals, but the very art movement that had made Wood a central figure was unrelenting in its condemnation of same-sex orientation. Wood's exposure would have threatened not only his reputation but his income as well.

It was in this context that in 1935 he contracted a marriage with a former actress, Sarah Moxon, to the great surprise of his friends and family. But he soon alienated Sara by falling in love with her handsome, 20-something son from a previous marriage, installing this rather louche and exploitative if decorative young chap in their home, and lavishing money and attention on him, even considering adopting him at one point.

At the same time, Wood also kept a secretary, Paul Rinard, another in the series of slightly-built, dark-haired young men with whom the painter surrounded himself, and with whom he was also in love -- albeit unrequited. All these boys under one roof eventually were too much for Sara, and the brief marriage ended in acrimony.

There were several points in Woods' life at which exposure of his homosexuality seemed imminent. In the late 1920s, he was blackmailed by a young man over their relations. And though he piled layers of protective cover on his public image, Wood was stifling in his closet, and from time to time this was reflected in his painting.

In 1937, he produced for sale by mail a lithograph, "Sultry Night," that showed a handsome, full frontal nude man beside an outdoor bathtub pouring a bucket of water in a slow cascade over his head. Declaring the work to be an example of pornography, the censors at the US Postal Service barred its publisher from distributing it or featuring the image in its catalogues (although not banning the many female nudes the publisher carried).

Wood was forced to publicly defend the "innocence" of the work as a recalled scene from his boyhood, something Evans demonstrates was more than unlikely.

Evans' book is much more than a biography -- it is also a lesson in looking and seeing. Evans is blessed with a felicitous gift of description that makes his dissections and deconstructions of Wood's art not only enlightening but also enjoyable. And as an openly gay man, Evans is not blind to the multitude of clues in Wood's paintings that signal the artist's queer sensibility and even homoerotic sentiments that most previous critics have ignored.

Even those not steeped in the arcanae of art criticism will find Evans' descriptions of what the paintings mean an engrossing read, all the more so because these works are included among the book's many illustrations. Readers may judge for themselves whether or not his interpretations are on track -- as I think they are.

Wood's reputation fell with the rise of abstract art in the post-World War II period, but a revival of interest in him began in 1983 with an exhibition that, as Evans notes, "coincided nicely with the dawn of the Reagan era. In Wood's sunny, presumably uncomplicated imagery, conservative art critics could have found no more perfect illustration of President Reagan's relentless optimism and call to `traditional American values.'"

But in "Grant Wood: A Life," Evans reveals the dark ironies in Wood's portrayals of heartland America and its culture that he traces back to Wood's love of H. L. Mencken, whose contempt for that backwater culture and its "booboisie" he shared. It is evident in Wood's work for those who wish to see it, and Evans is a reliable guide.

In the book's epilogue, Evans pays tribute to Paul Rinard, Wood's last secretary, who entered politics after serving in the navy in World War II. Rinard became a powerful backroom policy broker, first with Iowa's liberal governor Harold Hughes in the 1960s, then joining the staff of Senator John Culver, who at Rinard's funeral in 2000 called him "the intellectual godfather of Iowa's progressive agenda for half a century."

From the 1970s on, Rinard was "a defender of gay and lesbian civil rights -- a courageous stance that struck even Culver's younger staffers as radical... It would be difficult to explain Rinard's commitment to this issue," writes Evans, "especially during a period when its advocates were so scarce, without taking into account his profound loyalty to Wood. The artist might have led a far happier life, Rinard believed, had he been able to live in a more authentic way -- safeguarded from the fear of losing his job, his reputation, or both, for being exposed as a homosexual."

Gay activist friends of mine from Iowa who knew and greatly appreciated Rinard tell me that Evans paean to him is not misplaced.

Tripp Evans' book is not only sure to change the way the art world looks at Grant Wood and his work, it is also a valuable contribution to this country's cultural history, and one that shows the insidious homophobia that has often shaped that history. This is a splendid, beautifully written book. -- Reviewed by DOUG IRELAND in Gay City News,October 27,2010
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18 of 18 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars An amazing work of insight into an artist, October 25, 2010
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This review is from: Grant Wood: A Life (Hardcover)
As a big fan of Grant's work and an artist myself I have always been interested in and searched for what inspires artists and how that influences their work. When I mention Grant to people they often look blank until you say "The painting of the man and woman with a pitchfork" and then all becomes clear. Evan's with his new book about Grant opens up a whole world of Grant and not only what influenced this man to produce an amazing piece of history in his painting "American Gothic" but a side of Grant we have never been able to know about as a man. In the past searching for information about Grant Wood I was never able to find anything that really felt more than superficial and at a distance about Grant Wood the man. This is the book that finally fills in all the gaps with not only heart but a true love for Grant Wood. If you have ever wondered what makes an artist and artist and how his life influences what he or she produces then this book will amaze you. Even if you have ever thought you were not a big fan of artists and art I think this book will move you just to understand the story of a man and his internal struggle to be himself and how he expressed that in his art.
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13 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Grant Wood a Life by R. Tripp Evans, November 7, 2010
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This review is from: Grant Wood: A Life (Hardcover)
The biography, "Grant Wood a Life" by R. Tripp Evans is highly detailed about the public and private life of the famous Iowa artist. We learn more about the psychological reasons why Wood painted each of the few things he produced in his lifetime. I would highly recommend this book to anyone who is interested in the lives of artists/painters It is an easy and comprehensive read. TomT
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Whole New Wood, January 10, 2011
This review is from: Grant Wood: A Life (Hardcover)
Is it just me, or did any other readers of this well-written book feel profound sadness and a desire to protect Grant Wood from the hard knocks of his life? It's not often that I feel downright sorry for someone, but there was such an undercurrent of misfortune and downright meaness directed at the artist. Probably the saddest part of the story is that if Wood had stayed in Europe or a large American city, he might have lived as a gay man openly. But it's doubtful that his masterpieces could have been created anywhere but in his native Iowa.
In addition to being the meticulously researched and documented work of a scholar, Mr. Tripp's in-depth analysis of Wood's work was a joy to read. To view the art in the context of Wood's life made me see familiar paintings in a whole new way. Well done!
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Extensive, detailed, and packed with artistic and personal revelations, January 17, 2011
This review is from: Grant Wood: A Life (Hardcover)
Grant Wood: A Life charts the life and influences of one of America's most famous regionalist painters. It probes the realities of the man and his image, considering his classical training, bohemian lifestyle, and his early influence on American painting. Any who have enjoyed his work and wished to know more about his life will find this biography extensive, detailed, and packed with artistic and personal revelations.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The new standard for Grant Wood info, February 15, 2012
This review is from: Grant Wood: A Life (Hardcover)
Very enjoyable, well-written book. It does seem to swing a bit political at times but it seems to be well-researched and written by a respectable author. This has certainly become the new standard for Grant Wood lovers.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Insightful and surprising study of Grant Wood, June 6, 2011
This review is from: Grant Wood: A Life (Hardcover)
This book was a delightful surprise! I am neither artist nor historian, and yet I found this account of this talented, troubled and trapped American artist to be fascinating. I loved Dr. Evans' intelligent and fluid writing style, his in-depth reporting of the artist's life and circumstances, and the eye-opening analyses of his art. On a logistic level, I appreciated the placement of the images under discussion that allowed for easy, repeated reference and the beautiful color plates that brought the most important works alive. More importantly, I appreciated the story of an artist trapped between who he was and the culture in which he lived. The understanding of the cultural trends of the time and the acceptable bigotry, (if you'll forgive me) paints a picture of someone forced - especially as his fame grew - to hide who he was, in particular, his homosexuality. The story of Grant Wood demonstrates how a culture can contort a celebrity into whatever it wants him to be (patriot! masculine! stoic!). The fact that during his life and for decades after his death, the story of Grant Wood's homosexuality has not been addressed and to this day is denied, is a reflection of our own deep discomfort with revealing our authenticity for fear of rejection. And yet, as the author takes us through the symbolics of Wood's paintings, we see how the expression of the true self cannot be hidden. Dr. Evans' detailed and fascinating readings of Wood's work were insightful, surprising and sometimes incredible (old lady's necklace as cock ring? really?) looks into the deeper workings of the artist's psyche. And yet, the author addresses my concern by admitting that some interpretations "elicit, no doubt, both alarm and disbelief." He goes on to say in reference to his reading of Parson Weems' Fable:
Surely the interpretation goes too far -- destroying the innocence of the artist's intentions,
and perverting the blameless devotion of a loving son. In defending this reading, however -- and
indeed, those that precede it in this book -- I would argue that such a reaction only highlights
our conscious resistance to the psyche's raw and anarchic operations. My readings attempt to
record what I perceive in Wood's mind's eye -- a process fraught, certainly, with great difficulty.
Not only will we never know the full extent of the artist's unconscious motivations, but as
author and reader we inevitably bring our own psychological histories and perspectives to these
images. The potential yield in the case of Wood's work, however, is simply too valuable to leave
these images unmined. Our tools may be coarse or impaired, but the work can and should be done.
(pp 277-278)

I am neither artist nor historian, and this book underscored the power of art to help us understand the person who created it, the culture in which it was born and in fact, ourselves. For who of us has never hidden a part of us for fear of rejection only to have it emerge unbidden?
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10 of 17 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars Was That All There Was?, February 17, 2011
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This review is from: Grant Wood: A Life (Hardcover)
I agree with the other readers here. I am reading this currently on my Kindle and wish that I hadn't paid for it in digital format, the only benefit being that it truly doesn't deserve taking up literal space in my house. If this had been published about 30 years ago the author's constant thumping over and over on the labored point of Wood's repressed sexuality may have served some sort of purpose. Now it just sounds like an overindulgence on that aspect of the painter's life and to me not accurately or comprehensively broad enough to address so many other details. I am an artist and I was hoping for a vivid bio on an artist whom I've long found interesting but knew little about. Instead of that I get this extended diatribe about how repressed sexuality can distort a person's life and color everything they do. Well, we know that, we really do. What else is interesting about Grant Wood? Too often biographers seem to channel their own issues or have an ax to grind and that's what we get inside these words. This is too narrow.
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1 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Soooooo Duuuuulllllll .... zzzzzz, May 30, 2011
This review is from: Grant Wood: A Life (Hardcover)
This is an exceedingly dull book -- not sure if that is because Wood was a dull man or Evans' writing is just too laboriously detailed. The discussion of the art is interesting, but other reviewers are correct that it really has no basis in other critiques.
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Grant Wood: A Life
Grant Wood: A Life by R. Tripp Evans (Hardcover - October 5, 2010)
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