Clapsaddle
Jerry Clapsaddle
Jerry Clapsaddle, an American Artist, known for Pattern Painting, passed away on August 21, 2023 on Amelia Island with his beloved wife, Virginia Daughtrey, at his side.
Jerry was born on December 12, 1941, in Hastings NE, to Loretta and Jack Clapsaddle and raised on a farm in Conrad Iowa. After graduating from Drake University with a Bachelor of Fine Arts, 1964, and a Master of Fine Arts from Indiana University, 1966, he taught art for 40 years at various institutions including University of Hawaii, Indiana University, University of Maryland, State University College of New York, Rhode Island School of Design and University of Rhode Island. He completed his career as an associate professor of art at George Mason University in Virginia where he taught studio art and promoted the exhibition of student and faculty art from 1982 until 2000.
His art is well described by Paul Richard, The Washington Post, 30 August 1980 "Clapsaddle applies, in overlapping layers, some 10,000 little brush strokes-horizontals, verticals, diagonals and arcs. Were he rushed or restless, the building of these pictures, the weaving of these color-tweeds, would no doubt drive him batty. But his works are never frazzled, instead, they suggest contentment and the pace of daydreams. They are mantras for the eye. Clapsaddle repeats himself, but in certain repetitions, the weeding of a garden, the spinning of a prayer wheelâ€"are paths that lead to freedom. In time these paintings blossom: Each one seems to summon to the surface, not one grid, but many grids, overlapping rhythms and patterns that are multiplied. The mind drifts for a while, then focus on detail, then drifts again. The most surprising thing about them is how much there is to see."
In Jerry's own words "growing up amidst the constantly changing fields of Iowa, the arriving at abstraction in my work as an artist was inevitable, real and necessary." The planting, cultivating and harvesting, working with the cycles of seasons was a world complete, consuming and evolving, of nurture, sustenance and wonder. His art on canvas and paper transformed the rows of crops into vectors of patterns, phased in and out, layered and cycled like the seasons and the labored fields of tilling, planting, cultivation and harvest. Approached from near and far from various positions these are also like the horses and show cattle he trained, performing for the viewer with unfolding variety, spirit and precision. And then there is the unexpected.
Jerry was represented in Washington, DC by Max Protetch, late 70's, Nancy Drysdale Gallery from 1981-1989 and B.R Kornblatt Gallery 1989-1990. His work has also been shown been shown at Museum of Modern Art New York City, University of Maryland, George Mason University in Fairfax, Pyramid Atlantic in Silver Spring Md and Maryland Art Place. Site specific works include: The Bethesda Gateway Wall, Wisconsin Avenue Arcade and Willow Land Sidewalk 1984-86, Stuart Street/Ballston Metro Center 1989-90 and Walkway at Stuart Street/National Science Foundation at Stafford Place.
One of his paintings, Moms Remind (1979), selected for an exhibition The Best of 4 Decades of Washington, DC Art in 2014, at American University, Washington, DC, revealed a shadow of his young son with arms outstretched, as inspiration and model. His art and process was innovative, fluid, infinitely variable, adaptable to change with a bit of the unexpected.
Jerry's paintings have been purchased by many corporate, governmental, private and public collectors and institutions. He has been awarded grants from the Virginia Commission for the Arts, fellowships from universities, and two Art In Public Places grants from the National Endowment of the Arts. Reviews of his work have been published in Architecture, Art News, Art In America, Arts Magazine, Museum and Arts, New Art Examiner, The Washington Post, The Washington Times and Washington Review.
In 1997, Jerry completed an ambitious and innovative public art commission for the National Trade Center in Toronto titled Flow of Trade. Unanimously awarded through an international competition and comprised of nearly 200,000 concrete pavers it is the largest public artwork in Canada.
Some of Jerry's passions and adventures included Boy Scouts, 4H, camping, hiking, canoeing, kayaking, and bareback horse riding. He was an accomplished sailor on the Chesapeake Bay, U.S. east coast, Caribbean and Greece. His website
clapsaddleart.com contains works on paper about his sailing adventures.
Jerry is remembered by those who knew and loved him as modest, intelligent, well read, curious, contemplative, compassionate, adventurous, funny, opinionated, articulate and caring.
He is preceded in death by his parents, Jack and Loretta Clapsaddle. He leaves behind his spouse Virginia Daughtrey; son, Roy Adam Clapsaddle (PJ); sister, Karen L. Hanson (John).
In remembrance of Jerry the family requests that any charitable donations be made to the
Alzheimer's Association.
A celebration of his life is tentatively planned for fall in Florida.
Published by The Washington Post on Aug. 31, 2023.