A 53-minute documentary film by Jeffrey Wolf, produced by the Foundation for Self-Taught American Artists,
portrays James Castle's life and creative process, as told by family members, art historians, curators,
artists, collectors, and members of the deaf community.
A true case of triumph of the spirit, Castle's inspirational story is one of monumental achievement.
Major funding for James Castle: Portrait of an Artist has been provided by the following:
- H. F. (Gerry) & Marguerite Lenfest
- Anonymous fund at The Philadelphia Foundation
- Dolfinger-McMahon Foundation
- Christian R. & Mary F. Lindback Foundation
- Duane Morris LLP
The Foundation also wishes to extend special thanks to the following funders:
- The Suzanne F. & Ralph J. Roberts Foundation
- Aileen Roberts & Brian Roberts Foundation
- Christina & Lance Funston
- The Judith Rothschild Foundation
- Idaho Humanities Council
- Pennsylvania Council on the Arts
- Lois & Julian Brodsky
- Brian & Dolly Higgins
- Cathy Kaufman Iger
- Victor Keen
- Mary Ann & Stephen Phillips
- Poor Richard's Charitable Trust
- Leon C. Sunstein, Jr.
- Sally Walker & Tom Gilmore
- The Lubert Family Foundation
- Lynne Honickman
- Frank Seidman
- Jane & R. L. Stine
- Allan & Joyce Cohen
- Thomas Isenberg
- Leslie & Barbara Kaplan
- Paul Pincus
Joe F. Beach, Jr.; Geraldine E. Garrow; William A. Graham, IV; David S. Joseph;
Marianne & Sheldon B. Lubar; Marcia Makadon; David G. Marshall; Salli & Stephen Mickelberg; Jan Petry; Bryan & Margie Weingarten; Judie & Bennett Weinstock; Francis H. Williams
Didi & David Barrett; Margaret R. Brogan; Nancy & Robert Claster;
The Charles Edlin Family Charitable Trusts; Terri Dillion & Michael Cordell;
Lorraine W. Hilleman; Dona B. Jensen; Karen Lennox Gallery
Richard Levy; Judith Lile; Helen "Len" Howell Neely; Ruth Perlmutter;
Selig Sacks; Claudia & Kevin Silverang; Louise Strawbridge; Kathy & Jack Sullivan; Katharine C. Wodell
Born in 1899 in rural Garden Valley, Idaho—only nine years after that frontier territory was admitted
to the Union—James Castle mined the local landscape of his family’s homesteads and mapped his deeply
private domestic world to produce a remarkable body of drawings, collages, and constructions.
The singularity of Castle’s communicative impulse and prolific creative practice can be traced to his experiential focus. Profoundly deaf since birth, he never learned how to sign, read, or write in a conventional manner, but instead communicated through the eloquent vehicle of his art. Over the course of a life lived on his family’s three successive farms, he amassed thousands of works on and in paper—his parents’ role as postmasters likely providing much of this ephemera—appropriating fugitive scraps of printed matter and packaging materials for use as surfaces, collage elements, and source material to draw from memory. The bulk of Castle’s work can be classified as drawings, rendered in his preferred medium (chosen over orthodox materials) of stove-soot in saliva—and sometimes a mysterious “color of an unknown origin,” probably pigment extracted from paper-pulp—applied with a sharpened stick as stylus. Known initially for his expressionistic representational landscapes and interior—sensitively drawn, usually monochromatically, from observed rural life and fantasy—Castle has come to be recognized in recent years for the full breadth of his work, which encompasses an important (though perhaps less accessible) body of abstract drawings, color meditations, loosely representational constructions, collages, and text drawings. Working exclusively with humble available materials and always in an intimate scale, Castle epitomizes the bricoleur’s method, particularly in his complex reconfigurations, dissections, and inventions of typeface in his text appropriation drawings and collages. He garnered some local acclaim during his lifetime (including 1963 and 1976 exhibitions at the Boise Gallery of Art) but only achieved international recognition decades after his death in 1977. James Castle's work is now included in major museum collections throughout the U.S., including the American Folk Art Museum, the Museum of Modern Art, and the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York; the Philadelphia Museum of Art; the High Museum in Atlanta, Georgia; the Boise Art Museum; and the Art Institute of Chicago. —Brendan Greaves Above: Portrait of James Castle, 1974, (c) H. Clare Wiser.