Monday, June 2, 2025

Will Barnet

Will Barnet
Self Portrait
ca. 1940
drypoint
National Portrait Gallery, Washington DC


Alfred Gescheidt
Will Barnet teaching
at the Art Students' League, New York

ca. 1950
gelatin silver print
Archives of American Art, Washington DC

Will Barnet
Indian Summer
1951
lithograph
Cooper-Hewitt Smithsonian Design Museum, New York

Will Barnet
Sketch for Meadow Wood
1952
watercolor on paper
Hirshhorn Museum, Washington DC

Will Barnet
Janus and the White Vertebra
1955
oil on canvas
Smithsonian American Art Museum, Washington DC

Will Barnet
Abstract Still Life
1957
color woodblock print
Cooper-Hewitt Smithsonian Design Museum, New York

Will Barnet
Woman and Cats
1962
color woodblock print
Smithsonian American Art Museum, Washington DC

Will Barnet
Study for Summer
ca. 1968
charcoal on vellum
Smithsonian American Art Museum, Washington DC

Will Barnet
Silent Seasons: Winter
1968
lithograph
Smithsonian American Art Museum, Washington DC

Will Barnet
The Book
1975
lithograph
(from portfolio, Bicentennial Prints)
Cooper-Hewitt Smithsonian Design Museum, New York

Will Barnet
Fifth Season
1977
lithograph
Smithsonian American Art Museum, Washington DC

Will Barnet
Animals & Art
1979
lithograph (poster)
Cooper-Hewitt Smithsonian Design Museum, New York

Will Barnet
Self Portrait with Crow
1980
oil on canvas
National Portrait Gallery, Washington DC

Will Barnet
Study for Three Muses
ca. 1980-85
charcoal and oil-stick on paper
Smithsonian American Art Museum, Washington DC

Will Barnet
Study for Self Portrait
1983
charcoal on vellum
Smithsonian American Art Museum, Washington DC

Will Barnet
The Blue Thread
1984
oil on canvas
Smithsonian American Art Museum, Washington DC

Will Barnet
Big Grey
1987
lithograph
(from American Abstract Artists Print Portfolio)
Smithsonian American Art Museum, Washington DC

from Up and Down

2 / The Emerald

Hearing that on Sunday I would leave,
My mother asked if we might drive downtown.
Why certainly – off with my dressing gown!
The weather had turned fair. We were alive.

Only the gentle General she married
Late, for both an old way out of harm's,
Fought for breath, surrendered in her arms,
With military honors now lay buried.

That week the arcana of his medicine chest
Had been disposed of, and his clothes. Gold belt
Buckle and the letter from President Roosevelt
Went to an unknown grandchild in the West.

Downtown, his widow raised her parasol
Against the Lenten sun's not yet detectable
Malignant atomies which an electric needle
Unfreckles from her soft white skin each fall.

Hence too her chiffon scarf, pale violet,
And spangle-paste dark glasses. Each spring we number
The new dead. Above ground, who can remember
Her as she once was? Even I forget,

Fail to attend her, seem impervious . . .
Meanwhile we have made through a dense shimmy
Of parked cars burnished by the midday chamois
For Mutual Trust. Here cool gloom welcomes us,

And all, director, guard, quite palpably
Adore her. Spinster tellers one by one
Darting from cages, sniffling to meet her son.
Think of her having a son – ! She holds the key

Whereby palatial bronze gates shut like jaws
On our descent into this inmost vault.
The keeper bends his baldness to consult,
Brings a tin box painted mud-brown, withdraws.

She opens it. Security. Will. Deed.
Rummages further. Rustle of tissue, a sprung
Lid. Her face gone queerly lit, fair, young,
Like faces of our dear ones who have died.

No rhinestone now, no dilute amethyst,
But of the first water, linking star to pang,
Teardrop to fire, my father's kisses hang
In lipless concentration round her wrist. 

Gray are these temple-drummers who once more
Would rouse her, girl-bride jeweled in his grave.
Instead, she next picks out a ring. "He gave
Me this when you were born. Here, take it for –

For when you marry. For your bride. It's yours."
A den of greenest light, it grows, shrinks, glows,
Hermetic stanza bedded in the prose
Of the last thirty semiprecious years. 

I do not tell her, it would sound theatrical,
Indeed this green room's mine, my very life.
We are each other's; there will be no wife;
The little feet that patter here are metrical.

But onto her worn knuckle slip the ring.
Wear it for me, I silently entreat,
Until –until the time comes. Our eyes meet.
The world beneath the world is brightening.

– James Merrill (1972)