Biblical Paintings
American Identity Paintings by John
Bradford
An Appreciation
“And though I cannot attain to much herein,
yet I am refreshed to have seen some glimpse
thereof (as Moses saw the Land of Canaan afar
off.) My aim and desire is to see how the words
and phrases lie in the holy text; and to discern
somewhat of the same for my own account.”
So writes Governor William Bradford in 1650
as he despaired over the travails of the Plymouth
Plantation and his struggles with the Hebrew
language. John Bradford, the painter, is descended
from this founder of the Massachusetts Bay Colony.
His forefather, Governor Bradford saw his
struggling settlement in Massachusetts through the
lens of the Bible, for him it was the Promised
Land.
That conception of creating a new and moral
society based on a Biblical vision built our
American nation. John Bradford has a unique
American perspective. He is a twentieth century
Noahite, a unique non-Jew, and brings an intimacy
and respect for the Torah that flows in his
ancestral blood and ultimately allows him amazing
freedom and creativity with the sacred text.
Bradford’s exhibition of eight large new paintings
at 55 Mercer Gallery is an example of the old
American vision, updated in two important ways.
First of all as a Noahite he is commanded
to acclaim God and His people, the Jews. This
means he treats the Torah and its commentaries as
his sacred and operative textual frame of
reference. Second, by dint of his artistic
upbringing, abstract expressionism (the consummate
American pictorial expression) is his artistic
methodology. Surface, gesture and subtlely of
color and nuance dominate and make his works
demanding aesthetic experiences. These are not
easy paintings. Rather they must be absorbed,
taken in slowly as visual poems where each
seemingly causal line or stab of paint will yield
an entire human figure and a whole personality. By
the very lack of descriptive information he forces
the viewer to pay close attention to the exact
placement of figures and objects in the shallow
pictorial space he provides. And, as always, the
Biblical text is paramount.
A perfect example of this is his Ruth,
Naomi and Orphah, over six by eight feet, that
finds a pictorial equivalent to the moment that
Ruth decides to convert and cling to her
mother-in-law, Naomi. Ruth is slung across the
divide from the surety of her former existence,
symbolized by a simple block structure on the
right attached to her crimson sister, Orphah.
Naomi, distinguished only by a subtle shift in
color from the background and a white headband
seems shocked at this rash act. Ruth and Naomi are
about to be cast adrift in the uncertain future of
the nondescript background. How will they survive,
this unlikely pair, in the hard times back in the
Land of Israel? This narrative moment, normally
seen as a paradigm of religious devotion (wither
thou goest, I will go...), is understood here as
but a prelude to the real agenda, ultimately
securing a righteous matriarch for King David.
A stark contrast is provided in Egyptian
Nights (Moses and the Rod before Pharaoh). Here
Bradford evokes in dim light and shimmering pastel
colors the fetid atmosphere of Pharaoh’s court.
The air is thick and a strange luminary hangs in
the sky. Tropical nature and mystery has suffused
everything; Pharaoh himself merges into the blue
palm trees behind him. Into this overheated
environment Moses stands apart as a slash of
crimson with just a slim triangle of a white robe
peeking beneath his garment. Moses now enters into
this mythic natural world as he thrusts the rod
toward Pharaoh and it slithers into a snake. Moses
is attempting to communicate in the magical mode
Pharaoh will understand in order to make him hear
the monotheistic message. The “cheap snake trick,”
easily matched by Pharaoh’s magicians, is now
revealed as a skillful diplomatic ploy to soften
Pharaoh’s heart.
The heart of the narrative is frequently
uncovered as Bradford works and re-works his
paintings over many months and years. The Judgment
of Solomon is a distillation of questions where
King Solomon has been pushed to the extreme left
edge of the painting and is no longer its focus.
Rather the subject has become the relationship
between the two mothers. One is upright and
subservient to the king as she appeals to his
royal wisdom. We notice that the entire lower
center of the painting is dominated by the other
mother. She holds the baby, a mere cipher of limbs
in the physical and emotion center of the canvas,
above her in supplication. Is she offering the
child to King Solomon or is she passionately
subjugating herself to the needs of the infant?
The viewer is now forced to decide as we realize
that the judgment here is not about rightful
possession, rather the heart of the story is about
the best interests of the helpless child.
Each figure, shape and gesture is carefully
weighed and placed in these paintings that are
obsessed with borders, edges and points of
contact. Bradford has self-consciously heightened
the tension of each object as it encounters a
figure and as each figure touches another. These
bounded groupings are constantly set within
wide-open spaces that are amorphous and unknown,
much like the experience of his Puritan forbearers
as they faced the New England forests.
The Golden Calf, over nine by fourteen
feet, is the largest painting in the show and
raises the most questions. The massive shape of
the mountain fills three-quarters of the surface
until it is met by a luminous yellow triangle of
sky at the right edge. A giant golden calf is set
upon an imposing pedestal as the assembled mass of
gesturing figures are glimpsed beneath the murky
mountain. There are slashes of the same yellow
light that catch an arm, a piece of clothing or
the side of an anonymous face as if the light that
emanates from the sky and illuminates the calf is
also reflecting on the Children of Israel.
Suddenly we notice an anomaly. A large figure is
standing atop the pedestal; his silhouetted form
divides the calf in half. This ‘everyman’
character gestures over the calf as the people
dance below. Is this Aaron in the final act of
completion or Moses about to destroy the idol? The
painting, which exists in the tension between
these two aspects of the narrative, overwhelms us
with a flurry of questions we must examine; is
there a parallel between creator and destroyer, is
the light, normally seen as Godly, also that which
animated the calf and the people, and finally, are
we all subject to the foibles of the Golden Calf
as we seek a divine light?
I have known John Bradford for too many
years to even attempt objectivity. We are fellow
travelers who have shared the notion that the
Biblical, as subject matter for art or as paradigm
for politics, is central to understanding our
contemporary condition. This road has been very
fruitful.
Richard McBee
December 17, 2001
John Bradford
Biblical Paintings -
American Identity
55 Mercer Gallery, 55 Mercer
Street, New York, N.Y.
(212) 226 8513
Tuesday - Saturday 10 - 6 Until January 12,
2002
Published by the Jewish Press