Joseph Cornell

Director

Birthday December 24, 1903

Birth Sign Capricorn

Birthplace Nyack, New York, US

DEATH DATE 1972-12-29, New York City, US (69 years old)

Nationality United States

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1903

Joseph Cornell (December 24, 1903 – December 29, 1972) was an American visual artist and film-maker, one of the pioneers and most celebrated exponents of assemblage.

Influenced by the Surrealists, he was also an avant-garde experimental filmmaker.

He was largely self-taught in his artistic efforts, and improvised his own original style incorporating cast-off and discarded artifacts.

He lived most of his life in relative physical isolation, caring for his mother and his disabled brother at home, but remained aware of and in contact with other contemporary artists.

Joseph Cornell was born in Nyack, New York, to Joseph Cornell, a textiles industry executive, and Helen Ten Broeck Storms Cornell, who had trained as a nursery teacher.

Both parents came from socially prominent families of Dutch ancestry, long-established in New York State.

1917

Cornell's father died April 30, 1917, leaving the family in straitened circumstances.

Following the elder Cornell's death, his widow and children moved to the borough of Queens in New York City.

1921

Cornell attended Phillips Academy in Andover, Massachusetts, in the class of 1921.

Although he reached the senior year, he did not graduate.

Following this, he returned to live with his family.

Except for the three-and-a-half years he spent at Phillips, he lived for most of his life in a small, wood-frame house on Utopia Parkway in a working-class area of Flushing, along with his mother and his brother Robert, whom cerebral palsy had rendered physically disabled.

Aside from his time at Andover, Cornell never traveled beyond the New York City area.

Cornell's most characteristic art works were boxed assemblages created from found objects.

These are simple shadow boxes, usually fronted with a glass pane, in which he arranged eclectic fragments of photographs or Victorian bric-a-brac, in a way that combines the formal austerity of Constructivism with the lively fantasy of Surrealism.

Many of his boxes, such as the famous Medici Slot Machine boxes, are interactive and are meant to be handled.

Like Kurt Schwitters, Cornell could create poetry from the commonplace.

Unlike Schwitters, however, he was fascinated not by refuse, garbage, and the discarded, but by fragments of once beautiful and precious objects he found on his frequent trips to the bookshops and thrift stores of New York.

His boxes relied on the Surrealist use of irrational juxtaposition, and on the evocation of nostalgia, for their appeal.

Cornell often made series of boxed assemblages that reflected his various interests: the Soap Bubble Sets, the Medici Slot Machine series, the Pink Palace series, the Hotel series, the Observatory series, and the Space Object Boxes, among others.

Also captivated with birds, Cornell created an Aviary series of boxes, in which colorful images of various birds were mounted on wood, cut out, and set against harsh white backgrounds.

In addition to creating boxes and flat collages and making short art films, Cornell also kept a filing system of over 160 visual-documentary "dossiers" on themes that interested him; the dossiers served as repositories from which Cornell drew material and inspiration for boxes like his "Penny Arcade" portrait of Lauren Bacall.

1936

Joseph Cornell's 1936 found-film montage Rose Hobart was made entirely from splicing together existing film stock that Cornell had found in New Jersey warehouses, mostly derived from a 1931 "B" film entitled East of Borneo.

Cornell would play Nestor Amaral's record Holiday in Brazil during its rare screenings, as well as projecting the film through a deep blue glass or filter, giving the film a dreamlike effect.

Focusing mainly on the gestures and expressions made by Rose Hobart (the original film's starlet), this dreamscape of Cornell's seems to exist in a kind of suspension until the film's most arresting sequence toward the end, when footage of a solar eclipse is juxtaposed with a white ball falling into a pool of water in slow motion.

Cornell premiered the film at the Julien Levy Gallery in December 1936 during the first Surrealist exhibition at the Museum of Modern Art (MoMA) in New York.

Salvador Dalí, who was in New York to attend the MoMA opening, was present at its first screening.

During the screening, Dalí became outraged at Cornell's movie, claiming he had just had the same idea of applying collage techniques to film.

After the screening, Dalí remarked to Cornell that he should stick to making boxes and stop making films.

Traumatized by this event, the shy, retiring Cornell showed his films rarely thereafter.

1940

He had no formal training in art, although he was extremely well-read and was conversant with the New York art scene from the 1940s through to the 1960s.

His methodology is described in a monograph by Charles Simic as:

"Somewhere in the city of New York there are four or five still-unknown objects that belong together. Once together they'll make a work of art. That's Cornell's premise, his metaphysics, and his religion. ... Marcel Duchamp and John Cage use chance operation to get rid of the subjectivity of the artist. For Cornell it's the opposite. To submit to chance is to reveal the self and its obsessions."

In his later years, Cornell utilized the help of assistants to create his artworks.

These assistants included both local art students and practicing artists such as Larry Jordan and Terry Shutté.

He greatly enjoyed working with young artists and teaching them his methods and art practices.

1969

In 1969 Cornell gave a collection of both his own films and the works of others to Anthology Film Archives in New York City.

1972

Joseph Cornell continued to experiment with film until his death in 1972.

While his earlier films were often collages of found short films, his later ones montaged together footage he expressly commissioned from the professional filmmakers with whom he collaborated.

These latter films were often set in some of Cornell's favorite neighborhoods and landmarks in New York City: Mulberry Street, Bryant Park, Union Square Park, and the Third Avenue Elevated Railway, among others.