## mail vom 21.10.04 weitergeleitet/fwd by LPA Berlin [lpa@free.de]
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FERMIN ROCKER DIED ON MONDAY 18TH OF OCTOBER 2004 IN LONDON
For some time Fermin Rocker had been tired. His eyes were not as good as
they were, and walking the few yards to the studio with its north light - at
the back of his top-floor flat in Tufnell Park - was becoming difficult. It
was even possible that the private view would be his last or penultimate
excursion from the flat, for even with the help of his devoted son and
amanuensis, Philip, going down all those mansion-block stairs presented
formidable problems. But, after a 48-hour flu, the 96-year-old Rocker died
in his bed on Monday. There had always been a good chance he would die brush
in hand, but it was not to be.
The possibility that the private view - to which Mick Jagger has lent his
classic Rocker painting of a refugee scene - might have been the artist's
penultimate sortie refers to an event that will be taking place in December
at Toynbee Hall: the publication of a new edition by Five Leaves Press of
his father Rudolf Rocker's 1956 autobiography, The London Years. This event
will surely want to celebrate the son as well as the father he adored.
Fermin Rocker was born in 1907 in the old East End, the son of Milly Witkop,
immigrant Yiddish-speaking radical daughter of, for that generation,
untypically tolerant orthodox Jews, and of Rudolf Rocker, the legendary
anarchist theoretician and practitioner and a German Catholic. Rudolf taught
himself Yiddish and English and became the recognised leader of the Jewish
sweated workers in the East End, as well as editor of the Yiddish anarchist
weekly, the Arbeiter Fraint. Fermin's father was a disciple of Prince Peter
Kropotkin and it is possible that the boy, who sat on Kropotkin's lap, was
the last living person who had met the great man.
Fermin himself wrote an enchanting account of his early childhood in Stepney
at 33 Dunstan Houses, an anarchist commune. Appropriately published by the
anarchist house Freedom Press, The East End Years (1998), which contains the
author's characteristic illustrations and some rare photographs, picks up on
the title of his dad's memoir and is far better written.
Rocker pere wrote many books, some of which are still read by anarchists and
the larger number of students of the movement, but he was a man of action,
whose memorial is his life as a radical political activist - described in a
famous and influential book, William J. Fishman's East End Jewish Radicals
(1975).
Fermin, the only child of Rudolf's second marriage, would not become a man
of action, in the father's sense at least. The shy and self-effacing boy was
a precociously gifted draughtsman, and was taught drawing and watercolour by
his half-brother. Rudolf took his young son to parks, museums and historical
places, but it was the busy Port of London - the Heathrow of its day - that
most enthralled the boy and it was there that he did his first drawings on
visits with his father:
In an age which held that children should be seen and not heard, he treated
me with exemplary kindness and tolerance . . . In later years my father
would look back at it with nostalgia and regret. It was a time, he insisted,
that still had aspirations and ideals, that still had visions of a better
future, of a world more just and humane.
After the First World War - during which Rudolf was incarcerated in a
detention camp at Alexandra Palace - the family went to Berlin, where the
young Fermin went to art and print schools and associated with leading
artists and politicians of the Weimar Republic. But he always said that the
only artist who made a real impression on him was Kathe Kollwitz.
The family settled in New York in 1929. Fermin worked as a freelance
commercial artist, illustrator and printmaker, and made animated films. From
1937 he began to concentrate on etchings and lithographs. As a painter he
was drawn to the American realist school and the "ashcan" painters such as
John Sloan, whose paintings (one or two are in the Metropolitan Museum)
surely influenced the younger artist. He had solo exhibitions in New York in
1944 and 1961.
In 1972, retired from the commercial fray, Fermin Rocker with his editor
wife, Ruth, and young son moved to London. He continued working as a book
illustrator, but was eventually able to devote himself to painting. In the
last 20 years of his life he had 13 solo exhibitions (mainly at the Stephen
Bartley Gallery in London), which is surely some kind of record for a man of
his age, but only of real significance if the work stands up. Well, serious
critics such as William Packer, John Russell Taylor and Mel Gooding wrote in
praise of him. "The compositional deliberation gives these pictures
something of the rapt intensity of a Balthus, the dramatic presentiment of a
Hopper," wrote Gooding in Arts Review.
Rocker was duly flattered, as he should have been, by these comparisons, but
he always resisted my own references to Edward Hopper, in conversation and
in print. Some fellow painters, including Paula Rego - whom I recall
listening enthralled to his stories and who shares his particular admiration
for Goya, Daumier and Degas and who also resists exaggerated associations
with Balthus - found aspects of his work, graphic or oil and later acrylic,
to their taste.
Why do I love his work? It is because it is self-evidently rooted deep in
his psyche, like a dream or an obsession, and reiterated in a late flowering
because his very life depended on it. He continually reworked his themes
because the visual problems raised by thinking his feelings remained ongoing
but had to appear to be solved before he could progress, progress towards a
deeper interrogation of the past, a deeper interrogation of Matthew Arnold's
"land of dreams" which lies "north of the future", in Paul Celan's phrase.
His sights of memory, occasionally recognisable through their idealised
visionary topography transfiguring a prosy flatness, are in fact sites of
remembrance, which can be defined as memory laden with psychic significance,
like a ghostly treasure ship. Their space is a metaphor of time, of heroic
days recalled without nostalgia, when information technology was young, and
politics, for us or against us, was personal. His figures, his figurations,
are objective correlatives for images seen with the inner eye, their
tonalities subtly muted, without strong contrasts - the later re-workings of
his hand mirroring the workings of his mind.
One of the great pleasures of life, for me at any rate, is to visit
old-timers, usually at teatime, men and women of my parents' generation with
stories to tell and lessons to teach. In the nature of things - and as my
generation itself approaches old-timer status - their number is diminishing.
Only the other day, I visited Fermin Rocker with Bill Fishman, the writer
Peter Gilbert and the medical anthropologist and doctor Cecil Helman, who
observed that Fermin was looking very well, often the sign of a last-minute
rally and push for life.
He had painted my portrait and Helman's and he was going to paint Gilbert's.
His method was, as Paula Rego pointed out, time-honoured but now very
unusual: he would make sketches from the model, and then watercolours from
the sketches and the model, finishing with oils.
Fermin Rocker has joined his ancestors and I mourn his passing but I rejoice
that, with the support of his son and some friends, he survived so long, fit
enough in mind and body to continue making art almost to his dying day.
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22.10.2004
LPA-EN