- John Canaday
John Edwin Canaday (b.
February 1 ,1907 ,Fort Scott ,Kansas - d.July 19 ,1985 ,New York City ,New York ) was an Art Critic, Author and Art Historian.Biography
John Canaday was born in Fort Scott, Kansas to Franklin and Agnes F. (Musson) Canaday. His family moved to
Dallas when Canaday was seven and later moved toSan Antonio , where he attendedMain Avenue High School . Canaday entered theUniversity of Texas in 1924 and earned a B.A. degree in French and English literature in 1929. He subsequently studied painting and art history atYale University , where he received an M.A. in 1933. He taught atWashburn University of Topeka in 1933-34; atNewcomb College ,Tulane University ,New Orleans (1934-36);Hollins College ,Roanoke ,Virginia (1936-38); and theUniversity of Virginia ,Charlottesville (1938-50). In 1943 he traveled to the Belgian Congo and acted as a French interpreter for the Bureau of Economic Welfare, and the following year he joined theUnited States Marine Corps . He served as alieutenant in the South Pacific until the end ofWorld War II , after which he returned to theUniversity of Virginia . From 1950 to 1952 Canaday headed the art school atNewcomb College inNew Orleans . He worked as chief of the educational division at thePhiladelphia Museum of Art from 1953 to 1959. During this period he wrote the text for Metropolitan Seminars in Art, a widely distributed series of twenty-four portfolios published between 1958 and 1960 by theMetropolitan Museum of Art inNew York .In 1959 Canaday began a seventeen-year career as a lead
art critic for theNew York Times . In his first column on September 6, 1959, he inflamed the art establishment by proclaiming thatAbstract Expressionism , the dominant style of the period, allowed "exceptional tolerance for incompetence and deception." Although he acknowledged the talent of the bestAbstract Expressionist 's, he noted that "we have been had" by the "freaks, the charlatans, and the misled who surround this handful of serious and talented artists." Canaday's inaugural column and subsequent articles criticizing this style provoked a much-publicized letter to theNew York Times signed by forty-nine of the nation's leading art figures, who denounced Canaday as anagitator . Other artists and critics, however, championed him as an honest and articulate observer of the art scene, which continued to provide ample targets for his barbed wit over the years.In addition to writing for the Times, Canaday published a number of influential books, notably Mainstreams of Modern Art: David to Picasso (1959), winner of the Athenaeum Award and a popular art history textbook for many years. His experiences as a critic provided the subject matter of two books, Embattled Critic: Views on Modern Art (1962) and Culture Gulch: Notes on Art and Its Public in the 1960's (1969). He also wrote Keys to Art, with Katherine H. Canaday (1963), The Lives of the Painters (1969), Baroque Painters (1972), Late Gothic to Renaissance Painters (1972), Neoclassic to Post-Impressionist Painters (1972), My Best Girls: 8 Drawings (1972), The New York Guide to Dining Out in New York (1972), The Artful Avocado (1973), Richard Estes: The Urban Landscape (1979), What is Art? An Introduction to Painting, Sculpture, and Architecture (1980), and Ben Shahn, Voices and Visions (1981). In the 1940s and 1950s, under the pen name Matthew Head, Canaday wrote seven crime novels with such titles as The Smell of Money (1943), The Congo Venus (1976), and Murder at the Flea Club (1957). Drawing in part on his experiences in the Congo, he set three of his mysteries in Africa, and they were heralded by one critic as subtly foreshadowing a time of change on the African continent.
In 1974 Canaday stepped down from his post as art critic in order to devote more time to writing books, although he continued to write restaurant reviews for the Times until his retirement in 1977. Canaday taught several courses as a guest lecturer at the
University of Texas in the spring of 1977. He continued to lecture and to write for such publications asSmithsonian Magazine, the New Republic, and theNew York Times Magazine until his death. John Canaday married Katherine S. Hoover on September 19, 1935, and they had two sons. He died ofpancreatic cancer .References
*New York Times, July 21, 1985.
*New Yorker, January 4, 1964.
*Who's Who in America, 1984-85.External links
* [http://library.syr.edu/digital/guides/c/canaday_j.htm John Canaday Papers] at Syracuse University Special Collections Research Center
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