
"Rio
Grande in Spring", 18.5" x 25", Watercolor - SOLD
Gene
Kloss (1903 - 1996)
When
Gene Kloss and her husband, poet-composer Phillips Kloss, made a
camping trip
to Taos in 1925, an unusual passenger in their car
was
her 60-pound etching press. Gene Kloss was a westerner. She was born in
Oakland, California, in 1903. She graduated with honors from the
University of
California in Berkeley in 1924 and did further work at the California
School of
Fine Arts in San Francisco and the College of Arts and Crafts in
Oakland.
From
1925 until the ‘40's, the Kloss' lived in Taos in the warm weather and spent winters in Berkeley. Her reputation was established on the West
Coast
in the ‘20's and‘30's when she had many one-woman shows of paintings
and
etchings in San
Francisco
and elsewhere. Her reputation spread through her participation in
group shows across the nation, resulting in frequent praise from
critics. In Taos she responded to the landscape of mountains
and
plains, snow and sun, and to the architecture of the Indians and the
Spanish.
She witnessed the ceremonies of both groups and reacted with sensitive
empathy
reached after patient hours of observation. To
make prints reflecting the tonal richness of these
subjects, Kloss
turned to aquatint. She relied on herself and E. S. Lumsden’s classic
book The Art of Etching for education in
technique. The distinctive Kloss style
in etching, drypoint and aquatint, watercolor and oil is graceful and
organized, very much like the artist was herself. Kloss created many
figurative
prints, often in a combination of etching techniques with deft value
control.
Her effort was to present her theme as an arresting formal composition
of
abstract elements underscored by an intuitive spiritual quality. From
long
association with the Taos Indians, she absorbed and shared their
reverence for nature. Her
prints of Indian dancers give the effect of activity. With line and
value she
created a rhythm that repeated the musical beat or pattern in the
dance. In a
real sense, Kloss’s print was her contribution to the ceremony, her way
of
sharing it. Every Kloss etching was
printed by the artist herself and it is only in the last several years
that she
bought a power-driven massive press built to her specifications by
Charles
Brand. Her earlier press, a geared Sturgess, was still on call in case
the
power failed. “This press,” Kloss related “was one of the original
eight made
(and) was acquired in 1934, having been brought to Taos by Ralph Pearson. It traveled from one
rental
place to another, then rested for 20 years in the studio home we built
on the
mesa east of town, where there was a magnificent view in all
directions. In
1965 it sojourned for a few years in southern Colorado, then returned to the studio, built seven
miles
north of Taos, which also had a needed vast view. I always
was
interested in the fact that one other of the original group of eight
Sturgess
presses was owned by Joseph Pennell and he raved about it in his
books’...better than any European press...” Gene
Kloss’ production never abated. Through all the many
changes of
faddish taste in art, she remained true to her own standards. In 1950
she was
elected an associate member of the National Academy of Design, and to full membership in 1972.
Her work is represented
in top collections, many of them in the East and abroad. Kloss did not
follow
her prints on their journeys. She was content to stay in the West,
where her
career of over sixty years had its source.
from: “The Legendary Artists of Taos,” Mary Carroll Nelson