Long a celebrated and beloved fixture on the Milwaukee
and Wisconsin art scenes,
Ruth Grotenrath's work is characterized by a masterful
use of color and her artistic
responses to everyday scenes and the objects that
surrounded her in the homes she
shared with her husband Schomer Lichtner. This small
exhibition of 14 works is an
appetizer for a future larger show scheduled at the MWA
and reveals the sheer delight
Grotenrath took in color and subject matter - including
her favorites: her husband
Schomer in his studio, cows, flowers and animals; in
other words the things that
surrounded her in her eastside-Milwaukee home and at
their farm near Holy Hill.
Trained at the Milwaukee State Teachers College, Ruth's
early works are very much
in-keeping with the social-realist style of the day that
concentrated on domestic,
and familiar subject matter. Under the auspices of
Federal programs during the Great
Depression she would be commissioned to execute several
Post Office murals in Hart,
Michigan; Hudson, Wisconsin and Wayzata, Minnesota. In
1945 she joined the faculty
of the Layton Art School in Milwaukee and in 1947 she
and Schomer started the Gallery
Press in their home producing hand-printed Christmas
cards of their own design.
While the Post Office commissions were very public in
concept and placement, it
is arguably Ruth's domestic still-life paintings that
are her hallmark works. She
was a true artist in her enthusiastic appreciation of
the beauty around her. Almost
every piece of fruit that came into her home had to be
painted as a still life before
she could bear to have it on the family table. "I can
hardly bear to have a bunch
of grapes or a Bartlett pear eaten," she says. "They are
so beautiful." Indeed,
the use of the term "still-life" is virtually a misnomer
as her works, instead of
falling into a "memento-mori" category, resonate with a
boldness and sense of life.
Over the course of her 60-year career in art, Ruth had
work exhibited at both theNew
York and San Francisco World's Fairs, the Metropolitan
Museum in New York, the Serigraph
Society of New York and the Art Institute of Chicago
amongst others.
Other works by both Ruth and Schomer can be seen in the
Lower-level galleries at
the MWA and a full retrospective of their work will be
on display at the MWA in
early 2011.