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Jessie Arms Botke
Peacock Tapestry
Oil and Gold Leaf on
Board, 44 x 50 inches
Jessie Arms Botke -
Biography
Jessie Arms Botke
was characterized in 1931 by Los Angeles Times art critic Arthur Miller as “ample,
warm, motherly; her mind vigorous as a well-rooted oak, [with] Rabelasian
chuckles in her throat,” and the critical press in succeeding decades
perceived the artist as the greatest decorative painter of the West.
Most active in a period when the art world was almost an exclusive
enclave of male artists, Jessie Botke gained extraordinary recognition
through a strong work ethic and a talent that flowered rather late in
her painting career. Her predilection for white birds – pelicans,
geese, ducks, cockatoos, and white peacocks – inspired her to a high
level of artistry.

Magnolias
Oil and Gold Leaf on
Board, 16 x 20 inches
A
review of Botke’s life and artistic accomplishments
reveals the portrait of
a hardworking artist,
irreverent in many respects, yet close to her Christian Science Church and its message –
that we are “entitled to express energy, vitality, and joy.” She
was forever prodding, pushing, and exploring in her attempt to gain full
nourishment from life itself.
Botke’s agenda constantly overflowed with her own projects and ideas, although she
sought and provoked the thoughts of those around her. Apparently she required
little sleep and seemed to be nourished and refreshed by her work – painting six
days a week, sketching on Sundays, as well as picking,pruning, pickling,
canning, reading current novels, traveling, and writing weekly to her family.
For her time,
Botke was outspoken on the role of women in society and would be considered to day
in the avant-garde of women’s liberation. In 1911 and again in 1912, while
working for Herter Looms in New York City, she marched up Fifth Avenue from
Washington Square to Central Park in the suffragette parade, shouting and demonstrating
in her own inimitable fashion. Her husband, Cornelis, an artist who gained
special recognition for his etchings, was usually cast in a supporting role. He often
stinted on his own work to assist her with her major works, although she sometimes
reciprocated by helping with his commissions. “Artist teams are much more common now
than they were when we were married [in 1915],” she pointed out, adding
without hesitation that “they work… Cornelis and I lean heavily on each other for advice,
criticism, and encouragement.”
Jessie Hazel Arms was born
in Chicago on May 27, 1883, to Martha Cornell and William Aldis Arms. Both parents were of English stock and the family tree
dates to 1630, when her father’s ancestors came to Massachusetts from
the Channel Islands.
Jessie graduated from
Lincoln Elementary School in Chicago in 1897 and from Lake View High School in 1902; during her elementary and high-school
years she spent much of her leisure time sketching and
painting. In 1897 and 1898 she also enrolled in intermediate classes at
the School of the Art Institute of Chicago. After graduation from high school, at her mother’s urging, she decided against college and
elected to pursue her career as a painter, enrolling as a full-time student at the Art Institute. Family financial reverses and the counseling and support of her mother seem to
have been important factors in arriving at this decision.

The Black Swan
Oil on
Board, 22 x 24 inches
At this time the School of
the Art Institute was patterned on the Paris ateliers.
Small in size, it provided little or no discipline or regimentation.
After qualifying for life drawing, students selected their
own teachers and classes; they were responsible for setting
their own goals and objectives as well. In this freewheeling atmosphere
the only criterion was the quality of an individual’s work. “Practice,
practice, practice,” Botke noted, was the basic
curriculum, with little or not emphasis on craftsmanship. In later years, she complained of this important lack in the school’s
instruction, noting that students learned about
artists’ materials and techniques through trial and error.
While she was enrolled at
the Art Institute, Jessie made productive use of her summer vacations.
At Saugatuck, Michigan, in 1903, under the school’s auspices, she
attended classes in outdoor painting conducted by John C. Johansen, who
was newly returned from European residence, and favorably reviewed in
the Chicago press. The following summer she studied with Charles
Woodbury at Ogunquit, Maine. As a result of these intensified
studies, her work was exhibited at the Art Institute’s American Annual
in 1904.

Peacocks, Grapes, and Flowers
Oil
and Gold leaf on
Board, 30 x 25 inches
After leaving the Art
Institute, wall decoration and book illustration became
Jessie’s source of income for several years. Botke commented: “I had no
training in anything but art, and so far I had no
style of my own, I was completely dominated by the teachers whose work I admired so much… I kept working, and gradually
my real talent began to come out, a
strong feeling for decoration, two dimensional, flat pattern.”
During the next 4 years
she continued to hone her skills as a decorative artist.
In 1906 she made use of her entrepreneurial skills as well by bartering
several paintings for a round trip
ticket on the Atchison, Topeka, and Santa Fe Railway to Arizona and
California. In 1907 she enrolled in the summer class at the Art
Institute and exhibited her
California paintings in the museum’s annual.
In 1909 she decided to
join fellow student Dudley Crafts Watson, who was
leading a party to Europe on the grand tour: Jessie’s mother agreed to
accompany them as
well. The trip was all encompassing, with visits to Gibraltar, to
Spain, France, Switzerland, Belgium, and finally to England. They
visited galleries and museums, studying both the Old Masters and the moderns.

Tropical Fish
Oil
and silver leaf on
Board, 24 x 30 inches
In September, Jessie was
back at work in Chicago designing friezes with a new
vitality stimulated by her European experiences. In 1911, after
attending a night class in
architecture at the Art Institute, she moved to New York, where she
immersed herself in the artistic climate
of the city.
In New York she worked
for Herter Looms as a designer. Her work was not
confined to tapestry cartoons but included a range of decoration for
interiors, including painted panels. This led to Jessie’s specialization
in painting birds. When a commission was received to decorate Billie Burke’s house at Hastings-on-the-Hudson,
Jessie wrote, “Mr. Herter came to me with the
scheme for the dining room, it was to be in shades of blue and green and he wanted a peacock frieze using the same colors,
with white peacocks as notes of accent. I
didn’t even know there was such a thing as a white peacock and went up to the Bronx Zoo to find out, and they had one. It
was love at first sight and
has been ever since.” Asked about her love for birds in later years,
she responded: “My interest in birds was not sentimental, it was always
what sort of pattern they made, and the white peacock was so appealing
because it was a simple, but beautiful white form to be silhouetted against dark background, and the
texture and pattern of the lacy tail broke the
harshness of the white mass without losing the simplicity of the pattern. For a long time I couldn’t get away from white and near
white birds, geese, ducks, and finally
cockatoos.”
In 1912 Jessie was asked
to help design a series of twenty-one tapestries
woven by sixty Aubusson-trained weavers brought from France depicting
events in New York City. In 1913 The Saint Francis
Hotel in San Francisco commissioned Albert Herter at Herter Looms to create a series of decorations for seven wall spaces
in the hotel’s great dining hall.
The murals, “Gifts of the Old World”, were designed to show the cultural contributions of other areas of the world to California, and
each panel had an appropriate border for birds, fruits, and flowers.
Jessie Botke painted many birds for this commission, including flamingos, peacocks, and cockatoos.

White Peacocks and Golden Pool
Oil
and gold leaf on
Board, 45 x 32 inches
After returning to Chicago
in October 1914, she met Cornelis Botke for the first time, although the two young artists had heard of each other often from
mutual friends. Critic Arthur Miller wrote that Cornelis “was making a
living as an architectural renderer and dreaming of the day when he could paint all the time. Jessie’s
style, however, was the more definitely
formed and showed the more immediate promise of bringing financial
reward, so they agreed that he should stay at his job until her work
brought in an income and then Jessie would earn the bread
while Cornelis got on his artistic feet.” They were married in Leonia,
New Jersey on April 15th, 1915. In April 1916, their son,
William Arms Botke was born in Chicago.
Despite the recognition
the Botkes were receiving, they had become restless and considered moving to California, as had many of their friends.
Hoping to broaden their
careers, they left in spring 1918 for a trip to the West, arriving first
in Manitou Springs, Colorado. Later in the year
they traveled to San Francisco, a favorite place for Jessie. Both fell in love with California, and especially with
Carmel, “the little jewel of a artist’s village in its Mediterranean-like setting.” Even
Chicago’s advantages as an art center
could not compete with such an aesthetically pleasing environment, and
they made deposits on two lots in
Carmel in 1919. Indeed, the years 1918 and 1919 were bountiful: she
exhibited in the prestigious annuals of the National Academy of Design, the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, and the Art Institute of
Chicago. In 1919 they packed up and moved
to Carmel to build a studio-residence.
The Botkes were a
positive addition to the Carmel scene with its thriving art colony – a haven for artists, writers, musicians, cartoonists,
botanists, and many other distinguished personalities. Botke’s
paintings were receiving favorable critical reviews,
and they were selling well. One of her more spectacular paintings of
this period, “Peacock on
Gold”, completed in 1921, underscores her increased use of gold leaf in
backgrounds, a technique learned at the Herter studio and later adopted
as her own “signature”.
After a long and
successful period in Carmel, the Botkes relocated to Los
Angeles in 1928. In 1929, they moved to Wheeler Canyon, just east of
Ventura and bought ten acres of ranch
property. Jessie loved the ranch and with Cornelis she was able to
combine fine art with farming. Botke’s artistic output
and sales during the difficult years of the 1930’s resulted largely from her productivity
during her residence in
Carmel and Los Angeles. She had made invaluable contacts with old-line, well established galleries through her exhibitions, and she worked
closely with interior decorators and designers. She received numerous
awards during the thirties, including the First Prize at the Los Angeles
County Fair and first prize for “Chanticleer” in the decoration category
at the California State fair in Sacramento in 1934. From the early plein-air
paintings, made while Botke was a student, to the graphic style of her
decorative friezes and bird paintings with their fanciful landscapes,
exhibited in the teens and twenties, she arrived at her fully developed
style of the thirties.

Flamingos
Oil
and gold leaf on
Board, 10 x 8 inches
In 1947 Botke began to
paint small watercolor pictures, which were well received. Throughout
the early fifties Botke participated in a significant number of
exhibitions, and her work continued to be
represented at the Grand Central Art Galleries, the Biltmore Art
Gallery, the Artists’ Barn, and Gump’s Galleries. In 1951 Botke also
began to compose many still lifes,
undoubtedly influenced by demand and the accolades received for her prize-winning watercolor “Avocados”. 1954 was a watershed year, a year
of special recognition, continuous demand for the small oils and
watercolors, and a heavy exhibition schedule, but also a year of
devastating loss for Jessie when her husband, Cornelis, died in September as a result of acute Diabetes.
Throughout the 1950’s and
early 60’s she continued to paint and widely exhibit
her works. In 1967 Jessie Botke suffered the stroke that ended her
ability to paint. Four years
later, on October 2, 1971, she died at the age of eighty-eight. The indomitable Jessie Botke was one of the most celebrated decorative
painters of the twentieth century. From her early plein-air
landscapes to her decorative friezes and imaginary scenes, she arrived
at a richly intricate mature style in the 1930’s. That her work was accepted in the teens and twenties and yet remained relevant in
the sixties is a testament to her staying power and the sheer beauty of
her paintings.
From “Birds,
Boughs, and Blossoms” by Patricia Trenton and Deborah Epstein Solon
c. 1995 By
William A. Karges Fine Art, Produced by Whitney Ganz |