Age, Biography and Wiki

Jake Berthot (John Alex Berthot) was born on 30 March, 1939 in Niagara Falls, N.Y., Pennsylvania, is an American painter. Discover Jake Berthot's Biography, Age, Height, Physical Stats, Dating/Affairs, Family and career updates. Learn How rich is he in this year and how he spends money? Also learn how he earned most of networth at the age of 75 years old?

Popular As John Alex Berthot
Occupation N/A
Age 75 years old
Zodiac Sign Aries
Born 30 March, 1939
Birthday 30 March
Birthplace Niagara Falls, N.Y., Pennsylvania
Date of death 30 December, 2014
Died Place N/A
Nationality United States

We recommend you to check the complete list of Famous People born on 30 March. He is a member of famous Artist with the age 75 years old group.

Jake Berthot Height, Weight & Measurements

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Jake Berthot Net Worth

His net worth has been growing significantly in 2023-2024. So, how much is Jake Berthot worth at the age of 75 years old? Jake Berthot’s income source is mostly from being a successful Artist. He is from United States. We have estimated Jake Berthot's net worth, money, salary, income, and assets.

Net Worth in 2024 $1 Million - $5 Million
Salary in 2024 Under Review
Net Worth in 2023 Pending
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Source of Income Artist

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Timeline

1939

Jake Berthot (1939–2014) was an American artist whose abstract paintings contained elements of both the minimalist and expressionist styles.

During the first 36 years of his career his paintings were entirely non-figurative.

Berthot was born on March 30, 1939, in Niagara Falls, New York, and, from age two, was raised on a truck farm in Clearfield, Pennsylvania, 175 miles to the south.

As a child, he received his first drawing lessons from his maternal grandmother who was also his primary caregiver.

1959

Apart from a brief period spent in Maine, Berthot had lived in New York City from the time he moved there in 1959 until the day in 1994 when he moved his home and studio about 100 miles north of the city to a rural spot in Ulster County along the Hudson Valley in the foothills of the Catskill Mountains.

1960

Having completed his education at local public schools, he briefly enrolled in a commercial art school in Pittsburgh before moving on to New York where, from 1960 to 1962, he attended evening classes at Pratt Institute and from 1960 to 1961 at the New School for Social Research.

Berthot later credited a Pratt instructor, Hank Raleigh, with getting him a start as a professional painter.

The classes he took gave him relatively little grounding in the technique or history of art, but he learned much from hours spent in museums.

He also learned much from other artists, particularly Milton Resnick who, as he later said, took him under his wing and through his friendship and guidance I became more aware of the real possibility of painting."

Berthot began his career making abstract paintings in the minimalist tradition.

He would apply a thick painterly surface to large shaped canvases that were seen to employ the reductive means of minimalism, but expressing instead of restraining emotion.

Despite its simplicity of means, his work was said to deal "more in feelings than in analysis."

1969

Painted in 1969, "Lovella's Thing" is a good example of his style at this time.

Shortly before his death, Berthot explained the way in which it evolved: "With Lovella's Thing I originally thought of painting the middle a flat, blank color, but when I got into it, putting down a lot of acrylic washes, I just started to paint it in a more felt way. So it became a kind of dialect between something very concrete and something very felt. I liked the blunt presence the shape had on the wall and then penetrating the surface in the middle in what I suppose could be called a Rothkoesque kind of way."

1970

In the mid-1970s Berthot's style evolved.

His work continued to have a painterly, lyrical quality, but he added bright colors to the muted palette of earlier work and introduced rectangular bars and ovals into canvases that were now simple rectangles.

Regarding the bars, he later said that he worked to uncover the tension points, or focal points, that were inherent in the vertical and horizontal axes of a grid.

He said he sought "a balance between the object and the opening," and thereby "to gradually achieve balance between my two influences: the systemic and the felt."

1975

Another well-known painting from this period, "Walken's Ridge," 1975-1976, is somewhat unusual.

Although a pure abstraction, it has the size and shape of Monet's Water Lily paintings—14 feet wide in two equal sections— and has, as Berthot said, the feel of a landscape.

1977

"Yellow Bar With Red," of 1977 is typical of paintings in this period.

1980

During the 1980s Berthot began to exhibit etchings and drawings along with his paintings.

The drawings were often graphite on a background of a gray enamel.

The lines frequently formed ovoid shapes and were accompanied by quasi-calligraphic markings.

A critic said this work contained a "poetic lyricism" that could be accessed "not at a cognitive level but at a more elemental, intuitive one."

Berthot later told an interviewer that in it "gradually feeling began to predominate."

The paintings of this period continued to employ ovals and rectangles in canvases on which the "materiality of pigment," as one critic noted, produced "a highly tactile surface."

Another critic wrote that "the shimmering, encrusted surfaces of the 'ovals' are reminiscent of Claude Monet's late Waterlilies. The use of gold with deep reds and bright blues recall Medieval icons."

Of his work at this time, Berthot said: "I try to break the code of painting and let it take on its own life without any code."

His "Hard Line" of 1980-83 is an early example of this approach, showing a rectangle in a muted background having bright accents that a critic said were and unexpected fiery flame.

1981

He received a Guggenheim Fellowship in 1981 and a National Endowment for the Arts grant in 1983.

1990

During the early 1990s, Berthot continued to employ bars and ovals in paintings.

Of this period in his career, Berthot later said, "I reached another point where the idea was closing in on itself, there was too much idea; the paintings started to feel too literal, too much like a figure in space. I wanted something more organic, more felt."

He said that he wanted to "make the painting something you experience rather than just see."

1994

In 1994, Pepe Karmel, writing in the New York Times, said of works like these: "Despite the lack of recognizable imagery, the paintings seem haunted by a nostalgia for representation."

The oval shape appears as well in Berthot's drawings and etchings of this period some of which had representational content, including most often an ovoid skull.

1995

His style changed in 1995 when he moved his studio from New York City to a rural community in upstate New York.

While continuing to be abstract his paintings thereafter contained figurative elements and were seen to have greater emotional content.

Throughout his career his work frequently appeared in solo and group exhibitions in both commercial and public galleries.

It has been collected by the Museum of Modern Art, Metropolitan Museum of Art, Guggenheim Museum, National Gallery of Art, and other major American art museums.