swag外流

The Slant Step comes home for good

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Photo: The original Slant Step (cropped)
Photo: The original Slant Step (cropped)

AT A GLANCE

WHAT: Flatlanders on the Slant

WHEN: Through Aug. 17

WHERE: Nelson Gallery,

SUMMER HOURS: 11 a.m.-5 p.m. Monday-Thursday and Saturday; and Friday by appointment

CATALOG: A fully illustrated catalog is available.

By Dave Jones

Two swag外流 artists came upon it nearly 50 years ago, this odd assembly of wood covered in green linoleum, a footrest of some sort 鈥 and a slanted one at that.

It cost 50 cents at a salvage shop, but, as the old saying goes, one man鈥檚 junk is another man鈥檚 treasure, or, in this case, the art world鈥檚 treasure, an icon of the 1960s 鈥 a muse for countless other works.

It came to be called the Slant Step, made a splash in a Bay Area show, and, then, after just a few years on campus, the step was gone, off to see the world, or the East Coast, anyway, returning occasionally for exhibitions like the one this summer at the . See separate story about the show, .

The show鈥檚 opening reception July 12 included a surprise announcement: swag外流 art alumni Frank Owen (an abstract painter) and Art Schade (sculptor) had donated the Slant Step to the university鈥檚 Fine Arts Collection.

鈥淭his is a very important piece of swag外流鈥 art history, and we are so grateful to have it,鈥 Dean Jessie Ann Owens of the Division of Humanities, Arts and Cultural Studies told Dateline swag外流.

In fact, in any discussion of the swag外流 art department鈥檚 claims to fame, the Slant Step ranks right up there with the .

The Slant Step鈥檚 history as an 鈥渙bjet d鈥檃rt鈥 began in 1965 when Professor William T. Wiley and graduate student Bruce Nauman came across the seemingly useless object in a Marin County shop. Wiley paid the 50 cents and Nauman kept the step in his studio for inspiration (and footrest!).

Owen studied art at swag外流 around the same time (bachelor鈥檚 degree in 1966 and master鈥檚 in 1968) and would become the Slant Step鈥檚 caretaker for 45 years. 鈥淪omebody has got to keep the damn thing, so we 鈥 myself, Arthur Schade and a couple of other buddies 鈥 kept it,鈥 Owen said in a , out of the University of Vermont, a few months before his retirement from the art faculty.

All through his academic career, Owen used the step as his 鈥渢eaching pal鈥 鈥 in Sacramento, San Francisco, New York, Virginia, North Carolina and, finally, Vermont, asking his students to ponder its meaning (and their own).

Still, in his interview with the Vermont Quarterly, he cautioned: 鈥淲e shouldn鈥檛 take it too seriously; it鈥檚 essentially a whimsical entity. It鈥檚 just some clunky, funny, funky object that nobody knows what it鈥檚 about. And it looks so humble.鈥

Coming out party in 1966

In 1966, Wiley organized the Slant Step Show that served as a coming out party of sorts for what would become a symbol of American art of the era. The San Francisco show featured Slant Steps 鈥渕ade of bread, of colored plastic with electric lights inside, of wood and metal and silk, and probably of chewing gum, too: It鈥檚 that kind of show,鈥 according to the San Francisco Chronicle鈥檚 account.

About the aesthetic meaning of Slant Step-inspired work, Owen told the Vermont Quarterly: 鈥淚t鈥檚 so characteristic about an attitude that Bay Area artists had 鈥 well, compared to New York 鈥 at the time. ...

鈥淪o the Slant Step, I always have seen it as a San Francisco version of a Bronx cheer to all of the theoretical folk 鈥 raising the point that art is what artists make, not what theoreticians say you should make. If we want to make art about this stupid, humble, little, green linoleum object, why, we鈥檒l do it.鈥

In 1967, Owen took the step along for the first day of his first paid teaching job, advanced drawing, at California State University, Sacramento:

鈥淚 plunked it on the model stand and I unrolled a scroll on which I鈥檇 written all of these different constructions using meanings of the word to draw 鈥 drawn close, drawn against, drawn through, drawn fine 鈥 and I told the students to make drawings based on this language of this object.鈥

The next year he and his wife left for New York. 鈥淲e drove across the country in a VW beetle and the Slant Step rode in the back seat. Thus began its time in the East.鈥

Bouncer, no; patient model, yes

The legend of the Slant Step grew to include stories of a vagabond existence, with Owen recounting how the step washed dishes at a Taco Bell, worked as a bouncer at an Upper East Side brothel, and suavely dazzled society matrons and debs at the Ak-Sar-Ben (that鈥檚 Nebraska spelled backward) ball in Omaha.

鈥淏ut, alas, it would not be true,鈥 Owen wrote in an e-mail to Dateline swag外流. 鈥淭he poor little thing didn鈥檛 get to have any of those adventures. But as it was in my loft in the new neighborhood of Soho in Manhattan in the 1970s, it did have a deal of fun. It met all kinds of art luminaries and sat around with them while they ate my chili and drank beer. It was exciting.鈥

Sometimes, he would pack the step in a formidable crate and ship it off to galleries and museums for retrospective shows, but, mostly, the step resided with him. (Well, except for the time Richard Serra spirited it off to New York, and someone else spirited it back.)

Owen joined the Vermont faculty in 1991, and, on the day he retired, in December 2010, he gave his advanced drawing class the same Slant Step assignment that he had given at Sac State in 1967.

The Slant Step which he described as 鈥減robably the shabbiest teaching tool at Vermont,鈥 retired, too.

鈥淭hroughout New England (especially Vermont) and other states, gathering dust in the garages, basements and attics of parents, are hundreds of undergraduate drawing class portfolios that include at least one drawing of the Slant Step,鈥 Owen said in an e-mail.

鈥淭his was its job 鈥 to pose on a model stand patiently (which it is very good at) and be drawn while also posing its eternal question: What is this thing, what is it for and why do we attend to it?鈥

Part of the swag外流 art story

When his teaching career ended, Owen started thinking about a new home for the Slant Step. He said he and Schade 鈥 鈥渢he active members of what was called the New York Society for the Preservation of the Slant Step鈥 鈥 chose swag外流 for a couple of reasons, among them the donors鈥 status as alumni (Schade received a Master of Fine Arts in 1970).

Other factors: The Nelson Gallery already holds a rich collection of step-inspired works, and the university plans to build a museum where Northern California art will be a focus.

鈥淭he Slant Step is certainly part of that story,鈥 Professor Owen said.

鈥淔inally, I had enjoyed the companionship of the Slant Step for 45 years and thought it time that it could frolic happily on the shores of Putah Creek.鈥

The Slant Step, when Owen shipped it around the country, carried an insurance valuation of $250,000. But don鈥檛 think for a minute that he and Schade are splitting that amount for tax deductions.

鈥淭he valuation for the purpose of making this gift is 50 cents,鈥 Owen said. 鈥淭hat is the amount that legend has it that Bill Wiley paid at the Mount Carmel salvage shop in Mill Valley way back when.

鈥淪o, if I or Art Schade are to benefit financially from this donation, it will be in the Schedule A tax-deductible amount of two bits.鈥

Reach Dateline UC Davis Editor Dave Jones at (530) 752-6556 or dljones@ucdavis.edu.

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Dave Jones, Dateline, 530-752-6556, dljones@ucdavis.edu

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