back to article Big Eyes falls short on the big question of popular art

The ingredients are all there for an Oscar-winning film in Big Eyes. Multiple Academy Award nominee Amy Adams and one-time winner Christoph Waltz play Walter and Margaret Keane in a flick based on a true story about pop culture and high art in the 1960s. Margaret ships up in San Francisco in the late 1950s, a single mother and …

  1. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    Reliving trauma over and over and...

    Hollywood has turned into a divorcee. It cannot get over its past marriage even to save itself. It cannot forget the past. Hollywood, enough of the old trauma. It is time to be happy and live again. Find us another Shirley Temple or, better yet, another Jimmy Stewart. Find someone we can admire and then tell stories suited to people like them.

  2. Ole Juul

    Nice review. I imagine the movie does pull the right strings and I won't argue with the value of that. However, looking at the clips it looks like garbage otherwise. The Margaret Keane story is a very interesting one, but not one that Holywood can tell. Not without looking at itself - and that's not going to happen.

  3. hammarbtyp

    I love the way Wikipedia provides two different viewpoints

    Margret Keane

    and

    Walter Keane

  4. SolidSquid

    In fairness the art establishment took pretty much the same perspective to Jack Vettriano's work. There's a degree of "if it's popular it's not really art" snobbishness within the art world which still exists today

  5. KEANE Family

    Press Release: Official Statement by Susan Hale Keane, Daughter of Walter Stanley Keane

    Despite our best efforts, the Keane Family has been unsuccessful in opening a dialogue with the creators of the film "Big Eyes". All of our communications to date have gone unanswered. We are here to dispel the myths perpetuated by the media.

    FULL STATEMENT AT http://bigeyesmovie.com/

    Saturday, 20 December 2014

    Press Release: Official Statement by Susan Hale Keane, Daughter of Walter Stanley Keane

    Born in 1947, I am Susan Keane, daughter of Barbara and Walter Keane.

    Following the traumatic death of my brother Stanley, and a highly successful joint venture in real estate, throughout the late 40s and early 50s, my parents and I lived in post WW2 Europe, while maintaining a home in Berkeley, California, designed by Julia Morgan, built in 1906.

    During that time, my mother, in pursuit of a PhD, studied cooking at Le Cordon Bleu, fashion design with couturiers including Edwar Sene, and Universität Heidelberg, while my father studied painting at École des Beaux-Arts and L'Académie de la Grand Chaumière in Paris.

    Initially speaking an amalgamation of 5 languages, I learned to draw and paint alongside my father from an early age.

    During 1949, in the ballroom of our Berkeley mansion "Elmwood House", I watched my parents create, "Susie Keane's Puppeteens", "big eyed" wooden puppets, hand painted by Walter, with clothing designed and sewn by Barbara. Adorned in an ornately illustrated box, accompanied by a book and language record set, these sold in San Francisco, New York and London, at high end department and toy stores including Neiman Marcus, Saks Fifth Avenue, I Magnin and FAO Schwartz, as seen in this 1951 edition of UK's House & Garden magazine.

    In 1950 my mother Barbara became department head of dress design at UC Berkeley, while Walter painted full time. I observed my father's friendship with Berkeley painter Robert Watson to be a profound influence on both my own and Walter's evolving style, as he shifted his early focus from street scenes and nudes, to ominous ethereal imagery of exaggerated perspective.

    After my parents filed for divorce in 1953, my father and I met Peggy (Margaret Doris Hawkins Ulbrich), during an exhibition of Walter's paintings.

    At that time, Mrs Ulbrich, a former New York baby furniture factory worker, made her living painting names on neckties, in cooperation with her husband Frank, supplemented by quick realistic portrait sketches of passers by at street fairs. None of her work to date had "big eyes".

    Soon, Mrs Ulbrich moved in with my father, and he took her on as his "Eliza Doolittle" and artistic apprentice.

    Later, Mrs Ulbrich filed for a divorce from her husband Frank, and swiftly married my father in 1955. Her daughter Jane moved in, and she and Margaret learned to paint under my father's tutelage. I witnessed the evolution of their artistic process.

    Walter encouraged Margaret to develop a style beyond realism, educating and immersing her in the works of old masters for inspiration. She was a slim brunette, wearing a blonde wig. Her initial art consisted of idealized self portraits of slender ladies exclusively featuring small almond shaped eyes, like her own.

    My father would often impart to us, his vast knowledge of color, perspective, texture, artistic techniques, art history, etc, repeatedly impressing upon us, the vital impact of "the eyes". His guidance made a strong impression on me as my own work evolved.

    My father was an avid photographer, using a cutting edge Hasselblad. A very large opaque projector was purchased for Margaret, set up in a dark room adjoined to the sunny painting studio. With this tool, a highly detailed image could be projected on canvas from a photograph. A skilled illustrator, Margaret was able to trace a portrait in 15 minutes. This projection method has frequently been utilised in art forgery, as it facilitates replication of fine brush strokes.

    Though her initial paintings were primitive, Margaret demonstrated a remarkable aptitude for mimicry, and quickly learned to paint with exceptional precision.

    While her execution was flawless, Margaret never showed any aptitude for originality, and her main body of work consisted of Modigliani pastiches blended with other borrowed influences, supplemented by a series of commissioned photorealistic portraits.

    My father, beginning with his established bar scene series, occasionally engaged her new found skills to assist him on paintings entirely of his own concept, design and creative authorship. He openly publicised her contributions to his works, proudly promoting her name. Their artist/assistant relationship was never a secret during the years they worked together, their early collaborative works signed "Margaret and Walter KEANE" and MW KEANE, with independent works signed W KEANE and KEANE, M Keane and MDH Keane.

    Margaret used very soft sable brushes, along with a sable fan brush to blend her colours. This results in a very thin layer of paint (no texture) which takes only few days to dry. From early on, it was disclosed to the press that Margaret added supplementary brush strokes to the figures of some of Walter's paintings.

    Over time, she adopted his "big eye" motif, gradually incorporating it into her own Modigliani-style work.

    As a professional fine oil painter, intimately familiar with the historic body of work for both artists, and a first hand witness to the creation and evolution of these works, I am uniquely qualified to offer an artistic analysis of the autonomous and collaborative elements of the works of Margaret McGuire and Walter Keane. I also had the opportunity to examine Walter's work in great detail while performing an archival restoration of "Alone" in the late 80s.

    Much of Walter's work predominantly features rough textured brush strokes and imperfections, often using a palette knife, a conscious and deliberate use of contrasting cool and warm colour scheme, exaggerated perspective that stretches on to infinity, sparse asymmetrical balanced composition with clean silhouettes emphasizing negative space, the background frames the subject and draws the viewer's eye using leading lines, use of strong shadow and highlight.

    Margaret's work features smooth blended precision brush strokes, a rainbow of primary colors, flat two dimensional backgrounds, crowded symmetrical composition, the subjects are homogenous with the background, the dense background interrupts competes and merges with the overlapping subjects, monotone lighting, understated or void of shadows.

    Walter's work is also structurally and stylistically distinct from Margaret's later homages attempting to approximate his art.

    More importantly however, it is vital to mention that Walter was not a violent man, nor a bully. If anything, he was the most joyful and gentle person I've known. Margaret's depiction of death threats, discord and abuse are entirely fictitious. Though, I have no doubt my father's philandering was a high price for her to pay for fame and affluence.

    Towards the end of Walter and Margaret's marriage, my father met Joan on a United Airlines flight to New York.

    Upon learning of his courtship, a woman scorned, Margaret promptly moved to Hawaii in 1964 with married father of 10, publicist/reporter Dan McGuire. The next year, 1965, Walter and Margaret divorced. Following Dan's divorce, Margaret remarried in 1966.

    In 1969 Walter married Joan. I had been exceptionally close to my father up to that point. I heard little from him thereafter. Their daughter Chantal was born in 1970, followed by the birth of their son Sascha in 1973. My heartbreak over this abrupt transition led to our estrangement, which lasted the majority of his remaining years. I can only imagine Margaret's false claims stem from a similar bitter heartbreak, financial distress, or both.

    Regardless of their personal differences, compelling each to later discredit the other, Walter, was indeed the one to initially conceive and create "big eye" art, long before he met Margaret. First and foremost, he was an ideas man. From his crude beginnings, Margaret's blossoming technical skills contributed to an evolved quality that celebrated his vision, and together they manifested a result which commercially exceeded a level of success greater than what either artist was able to achieve on their own, before or since.

    Though uncelebrated, Walter had a diverse body of work that expanded well beyond the confines of his "waif" theme.

    1. Bleu

      Re: Press Release: Official Statement by Susan Hale Keane, Daughter of Walter Stanley Keane

      Susan Hale Keane,

      That is a great post. I hope you are also heard in the many papers and regular news sites that have been running pre-publicity for the movie.

      I look forward to reading your full statement in the next couple of days, perhaps even tonight.

  6. BigEyesMovie.com

    BIG EYES documentary

    For anyone able to conduct a forensic analysis of the works of Walter Keane and Margaret McGuire:

    In addition to an artistic analysis, Susan Keane has provided a highly detailed account of the materials, tools and techniques used by Walter and Margaret, witnessed by Susan throughout the 40s, 50s, and 60s. Although for brevity sake, we have not currently included this information, Susan has also given many examples of how these methods contrast with her own.

    "I believe my choice of examples is accurate. While artists do change their media, paints, pallets, etc over the years, as they desire, most artists stick to a formatted plan of paints, brushes, etc..." - Susan Keane

    Susan's description can be viewed via an in-progress documentary at http://BigEyesMovie.com

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