Brader Perspectives
By Tom Wachunas
“The
Canton Museum’s goal with this exhibition is to give more depth and
understanding to Brader’s importance in capturing a snapshot in time of our
local and regional history…His skill at depicting minute details weave together
an amazing story of the late 1800s in Northeast Ohio and Pennsylvania – and
illuminate Brader’s importance as an artist and chronicler of the time and
place…”
- Max Barton,
Executive Director, Canton Museum of Art
EXHIBIT: The Legacy Of Ferdinand A. Brader: 19th Century Drawings
of the Ohio and Pennsylvania Landscape, on view at the Canton Museum of
Art (CMA) THROUGH MARCH 15, 2015 / 1001 Market Avenue North, Canton / (330)
453-7666 www.cantonart.org ALSO SEE > www.braderexhibit.com
Companion Exhibits: at the Little Art
Gallery, located in the North Canton Public Library, 185 North Main Street,
North Canton, THROUGH JANUARY 8, 2015 (330) 499-4712 x312 / AND at The McKinley
Presidential Library and Museum, 800 McKinley Monument Drive NW, Canton,
THROUGH DECEMBER 24, (330) 455-7043
Among my fondest
early childhood memories are summer Sunday drives through rural Stark County. I
never tired of our casual family ceremony of piling into Dad’s two-tone ’54
Pontiac for no reason other than to venture beyond our small hometown of
Alliance and enjoy the country. It never seemed to really matter where or even
if we stopped for the always-promised ice cream cone (Minerva? Sebring? Homeworth?).
It was the ride that was sweet. We
cruised through miles of manicured farmlands dotted by slate-roofed houses with
their deep covered porches, stately barns, towering silos and grazing horses,
cows, and sheep. It was another world to me. At once mysterious and inviting,
simple and…exotic.
This CMA exhibit
of more than 40 large (30”x40” and larger) graphite pencil drawings by Ferdinand
A. Brader (1833-1901), guest-curated by eminent Brader scholar Kathleen
Wieschaus-Voss, is a potent evocation of that world, even if it is from the
late 19th century. Between 1879 and 1896, Brader, an itinerant Swiss
folk artist, made more than 600 extraordinarily detailed drawings (in his
lifetime output numbering at least 980) that constitute a wholly impressive
chronicle of family businesses and farms in various counties of Pennsylvania
and northeast Ohio. Viewed as a record of local and regional family livelihoods
and heritage, the beautifully mounted exhibit is a veritable gem of historical
information.
Likewise, as folk
art, Brader’s drawings of rural residences and properties are meticulously,
even lovingly rendered and panoramic in scope. His pencil technique was so
exacting and controlled that his pictures often suggest the minute linear
textures of embroidered tapestries.
Evidently, Brader
was not an academically trained artist. This might arguably explain the quirky mixed
viewpoints apparent in many of the drawings. A consistent vantage point for
Brader was clearly aerial in nature. Yet he seems to have broken the formal
rules of relative scale and multiple-point linear perspective so that the illusion
of spatial accuracy is somewhat skewed. Call it a gentle awkwardness. For
example, we might be looking down at
a structure while simultaneously seeing its surrounds at eye-level. That said,
such inconsistencies, while a bit technically naïve, actually bring a
mesmerizing charm to the scenes.
Brader’s capacity for capturing naturalistic
likenesses was nonetheless substantial enough, and no doubt the result of his
background as a mold carver for his family bakery in Switzerland. In the manual
discipline required to make raised relief decorations for baked goods, I think
it reasonable to assume he acquired a sort of muscle memory that effectively
played out in his facile repetition of human figures, animals, objects, tree
shapes and patterns that generously occupy his drawings.
Muscle memory. From
decorated Swiss pastries and cakes to elaborate, enthralling American
landscapes. All of this brings me right back to those countryside excursions of
my childhood. And like them, this exhibit is a sweet ride indeed.
PHOTOS, from top: The Property of Daniel and Sarah
Leibelsperger, 1882, exhibition catalog no. 13; The Property of Peter and Nancy Yoder, 1885, exhibition catalog
no. 20; The Property of Daniel and
Deborah De Turck, 1882, exhibition catalogue no. 12
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