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Frank O'Hara

Francis Russell "Frank" O'Hara (March 27, 1926 – July 25, 1966) was an American writer, poet, and art critic. A curator at the Museum of Modern Art, O'Hara became prominent in New York City's art world. O'Hara is regarded as a leading figure in the New York School, an informal group of artists, writers, and musicians who drew inspiration from jazz, surrealism, abstract expressionism, action painting, and contemporary avant-garde art movements.

Frank O'Hara
Born(1926-03-27)March 27, 1926
Baltimore, Maryland, U.S.
DiedJuly 25, 1966(1966-07-25) (aged 40)
Mastic Beach, New York, U.S.
Resting placeGreen River Cemetery, Springs, New York, U.S.
OccupationPoet, art curator
Alma materHarvard University (AB)
University of Michigan (MA)
Literary movementThe New York School
Notable worksLunch Poems

O'Hara's poetry is personal in tone and content, and has been described as sounding "like entries in a diary".[1] Poet and critic Mark Doty has said O'Hara's poetry is "urbane, ironic, sometimes genuinely celebratory and often wildly funny" containing "material and associations alien to academic verse" such as "the camp icons of movie stars of the twenties and thirties, the daily landscape of social activity in Manhattan, jazz music, telephone calls from friends".[2] O'Hara's writing sought to capture in his poetry the immediacy of life, feeling that poetry should be "between two persons instead of two pages."[1]

The Selected Poems of Frank O'Hara edited by Donald Allen (Knopf, 1971), the first of several posthumous collections, shared the 1972 National Book Award for Poetry. Brad Gooch's City Poet is the first substantial biography on O'Hara.

Early life and education Edit

Frank O'Hara, the son of Russell Joseph O'Hara and Katherine (née Broderick), was born on March 27, 1926,[3] at Maryland General Hospital, Baltimore and grew up in Grafton, Massachusetts. He attended St. John's High School. He grew up believing he had been born in June, but in fact had been born in March - his parents disguised his true date of birth because he was conceived out of wedlock.[4] He studied piano at the New England Conservatory in Boston from 1941 to 1944 and served in the U.S. Navy in the South Pacific and Japan as a sonarman on the destroyer USS Nicholas during World War II.

With the funding made available to veterans he attended Harvard University, where artist and writer Edward Gorey was his roommate.[5] O'Hara was heavily influenced by visual art and by contemporary music, which was his first love (he remained a fine piano player all his life and would shock new partners by suddenly playing music by Sergei Rachmaninoff when visiting them).[6] His favorite poets were Pierre Reverdy,[7] Arthur Rimbaud, Stéphane Mallarmé, Boris Pasternak, and Vladimir Mayakovsky.[8] While at Harvard, O'Hara met John Ashbery and began publishing poems in the Harvard Advocate. Despite his love of music, O'Hara changed his major and was graduated from Harvard in 1950 with a degree in English.

He attended graduate school at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor. While at Michigan, he won a Hopwood Award and received his master's degree in English literature in 1951.[8]

Early career Edit

In the autumn of 1951, O'Hara moved into an apartment in New York City with Joe LeSueur, who was his roommate and sometime lover for the next 11 years.[9] It was during this time that he began teaching at The New School.

 
Historic Plaque at 441 East 9th Street where Frank O'Hara lived unveiled by Greenwich Village Society for Historic Preservation on June 10, 2014

O'Hara was active in the art world, working as a reviewer for ARTnews, and in 1960 was assistant curator of painting and sculpture exhibitions for the Museum of Modern Art. He was a friend of the artists Norman Bluhm, Mike Goldberg, Grace Hartigan, Alex Katz, Willem de Kooning, Joan Mitchell, and Larry Rivers.

Poetry Edit

While O'Hara's poetry is generally autobiographical, it tends to be based on his observations of New York life rather than exploring his past. In his introduction to The Collected Poems of Frank O'Hara, Donald Allen says "that Frank O'Hara tended to think of his poems as a record of his life is apparent in much of his work."[10] O'Hara discussed this aspect of his poetry in a statement for Donald Allen's The New American Poetry:

What is happening to me, allowing for lies and exaggerations which I try to avoid, goes into my poems. I don't think my experiences are clarified or made beautiful for myself or anyone else, they are just there in whatever form I can find them. . .My formal "stance" is found at the crossroads where what I know and can't get meets what is left of that I know and can bear without hatred. . .It may be that poetry makes life's nebulous events tangible to me and restores their detail; or conversely that poetry brings forth the intangible quality of incidents which are all too concrete and circumstantial. Or each on specific occasions, or both all the time.[11]

His initial time in the Navy, during his basic training at Sampson Naval Training Center in upstate New York, along with earlier years spent at St. John's High School began to shape a distinguished style of solitary observation that would later inform his poems. Immersed in regimented daily routine, first Catholic school then the Navy, he was able to separate himself from the situation and make witty and often singular studies. Sometimes these were cataloged for use in later writing, or, perhaps more often, put into letters. This skill of scrutinizing and recording during the bustle and churn of daily life would, later, be one of the important aspects that shaped O'Hara as an urban poet writing off the cuff.[12]

Among his friends, O'Hara was known to treat poetry dismissively, as something to be done only in the moment. John Ashbery says he witnessed O'Hara "Dashing the poems off at odd moments – in his office at the Museum of Modern Art, in the street at lunchtime or even in a room full of people – he would then put them away in drawers and cartons and half forget them."[10]

In the summer of 1951, O'Hara read a manifesto in The Kenyon Review written by the poet, novelist and anarchistic social critic Paul Goodman. In the essay, Goodman argues that the postwar American "advanced guard" writers must articulate the deep-seated, personal disquiet felt across the culture but left unvoiced. The essay encouraged O'Hara to write poetry that was embarrassing in its directness, and even seen as hostile to literary standards then in place. O'Hara's poetry began to erase poetry's cautious border between what is public and what is private.[13]

In 1959, he wrote a mock manifesto (originally published in the magazine Yūgen in 1961) called Personism: A Manifesto, in which he explains his position on formal structure: "I don't ... like rhythm, assonance, all that stuff. You just go on your nerve. If someone's chasing you down the street with a knife you just run, you don't turn around and shout, 'Give it up! I was a track star for Mineola Prep.'" He says, in response to academic overemphasis on form, "As for measure and other technical apparatus, that's just common sense: if you're going to buy a pair of pants you want them to be tight enough so everyone will want to go to bed with you. There's nothing metaphysical about it." He claims that on August 27, 1959, while talking to LeRoi Jones, he founded a movement called Personism which may be "the death of literature as we know it."

He says,

It does not have to do with personality or intimacy, far from it! But to give you a vague idea, one of its minimal aspects is to address itself to one person (other than the poet himself), thus evoking overtones of love without destroying love's life-giving vulgarity, and sustaining the poet's feelings toward the poem while preventing love from distracting him into feeling about the person.[14]

His poetry shows the influence of abstract expressionism, surrealism, Russian poetry, and poets associated with French symbolism. Ashbery says, "The poetry that meant the most to him when he began writing was either French – Rimbaud, Mallarmé, the Surrealists: poets who speak the language of every day into the reader's dream – or Russian – Pasternak and especially Mayakovsky, for whom he picked up what James Schuyler has called the 'intimate yell.'"[10] As part of the New York School of poetry, O'Hara to some degree encapsulated the compositional philosophy of New York School painters.[15][16]

Ashbery says, "Frank O'Hara's concept of the poem as the chronicle of the creative act that produces it was strengthened by his intimate experience of Pollock's, Kline's, and de Kooning's great paintings of the late '40s and early '50s and of the imaginative realism of painters like Jane Freilicher and Larry Rivers."[10]

O'Hara was also influenced by William Carlos Williams, so much so that he lists Williams (along with Hart Crane and Walt Whitman) as one of three poets who were "better than the movies."[14] According to Marjorie Perloff in her book Frank O'Hara, Poet among Painters, he and Williams both use everyday language and simple statements split at irregular intervals. Perloff points out the similarities between O'Hara's "Autobiographia Literaria" and Williams's "Invocation and Conclusion". At the end of "Autobiographia Literaria", the speaker says, "And here I am, the/center of all beauty!/writing these poems!/Imagine!" Similarly, Williams at the end of "Invocation and Conclusion" says, "Now look at me!" These lines show a shared interest in the self as an individual who can only be himself in isolation. A similar idea is expressed in a line from Williams's "Danse Russe": "Who shall say I am not/ the happy genius of my household?"[17]

Personal life Edit

Frank O'Hara, who was gay,[18] met Joe LeSueur in 1951, and the two maintained a relationship until 1965, living together on and off from 1955 to 1965.[19]

From 1959 to 1963, the two lived at 441 East 9th Street in the East Village.[20] Known throughout his life for his extreme sociability, passion, and warmth, O'Hara had hundreds of friends and lovers throughout his life, many from the New York art and poetry worlds. Soon after arriving in New York, he was employed at the Museum of Modern Art, selling postcards at the admissions desk, and began to write seriously.

O'Hara met longtime partner Vincent Warren in the summer of 1959. Warren, a Canadian ballet dancer, was the inspiration for several of O'Hara's poems, including "Poem (A la Recherche d'Gertrude Stein)", "Les Luths", "Poem (So many echoes in my head)", and "Having a Coke With You". Warren died on October 25, 2017, 51 years after O'Hara's death.

Death Edit

In the early morning hours of July 24, 1966, O'Hara was struck by the driver of a jeep on the Fire Island beach, after the beach taxi in which he had been riding with a group of friends broke down in the dark.[21][22][23][24] He died the next day at age 40 of a ruptured liver at Bayview Hospital in Mastic Beach, Long Island.[25] Attempts to bring negligent homicide charges against 23-year-old driver Kenneth L. Ruzicka were unsuccessful; many of O'Hara's friends felt the local police had conducted a lax investigation to protect one of their own locals.[26] O'Hara was buried in Green River Cemetery on Long Island.[27] The painter Larry Rivers, a longtime friend and lover,[28] delivered one of the eulogies, along with Bill Berkson, Edwin Denby, and René d'Harnoncourt.[29]

In popular culture Edit

In music Edit

In First Aid Kit's song "To A Poet", there is the lyric, "But Frank put it best when he said 'you can't plan on the heart'", a reference to O'Hara's poem, "My Heart".[citation needed]

In Martha's song "1967, I Miss You, I'm Lonely", the lyric, "I look at you and I am confident that I'd rather look at you than all the portraits in existence in the world, except possibly O'Hara by Grace Hartigan,[30]" references both O'Hara's poem, "Having a Coke With You", and Grace Hartigan's portrait of O'Hara.

Rilo Kiley's 2004 album More Adventurous is titled after a line in O'Hara's poem "Meditations in an Emergency": "Each time my heart is broken it makes me feel more adventurous..."[31] The title track references the same line: "I read with every broken heart, we should become more adventurous"[32]

Frankie Cosmos's music is influenced by O'Hara's works, visible in two of her albums, Zentropy and Next Thing. Greta Kline has stated that her stage name derived from the poet.[33]

In film Edit

In the 2011 film Beastly, the lovestruck main characters read O'Hara's poem "Having a Coke with You" aloud to each other.[citation needed]

In literature Edit

O'Hara is a minor character in William Boyd's 2002 novel Any Human Heart.[citation needed]

O'Hara's Lunch Poems is the basis of Paul Legault's Lunch Poems 2.[citation needed]

In television Edit

In the season 1 episode of the HBO series Bored to Death, "The Case of the Missing Screenplay", the main character loses a screenplay written by Jim Jarmusch about the life of Frank O'Hara.[34]

In the last episode of the series Normal people, based on Sally Rooney's homonimous novel, Connell's gift for Marianne's birthday is said to be a Frank O'Hara's collection of poetry. [35]

Several episodes of Mad Men (season 2) reference O'Hara's collection of poetry, Meditations in an Emergency. The first episode shows a character reading from it over lunch in a bar (recalling O'Hara's 1964 collection Lunch Poems) as does the last episode, which uses the book's title as its episode title.[36] In the twelfth episode, Don Draper finds his copy of Meditations in an Emergency in Anna Draper's home in California.[citation needed]

In plays Edit

The poetry of Frank O'Hara features prominently in Rachel Bonds's 2017 play At the Old Place.[citation needed]

Landmarks Edit

On June 10, 2014, a plaque was unveiled outside one of O'Hara's New York City residences, at 441 East Ninth Street. Poets Tony Towle, who inherited the apartment from O'Hara, and Edmund Berrigan read his works at the event.[37]

Bibliography Edit

Books published during his lifetime Edit

  • A City Winter and Other Poems. Two Drawings by Larry Rivers. (New York: Tibor de Nagy Gallery Editions, 1951 [sic, i.e. 1952])
  • Oranges: 12 pastorals. (New York: Tibor de Nagy Gallery Editions, 1953; New York: Angel Hair Books, 1969)
  • Meditations in an Emergency. (New York: Grove Press, 1957; 1967)
  • Second Avenue. Cover drawing by Larry Rivers. (New York: Totem Press in Association with Corinth Books, 1960)
  • Odes. Prints by Michael Goldberg. (New York: Tiber Press, 1960)
  • Lunch Poems. (San Francisco, CA: City Lights Books, The Pocket Poets Series (No. 19), 1964)
  • Love Poems (Tentative Title). (New York: Tibor de Nagy Gallery Editions, 1965)

Posthumous works Edit

  • In Memory of My Feelings, commemorative volume illustrated by 30 U.S. artists and edited by Bill Berkson (New York: The Museum of Modern Art, 1967)
  • The Collected Poems of Frank O'Hara. Edited by Donald Allen with an introduction by John Ashbery (1st ed. New York: Knopf, 1971; Berkeley: University of California Press, 1995) —shared the National Book Award with Howard Moss, Selected Poems[38]
  • The Selected Poems of Frank O'Hara. Edited by Donald Allen (New York: Knopf, 1974; Vintage Books, 1974)
  • Standing Still and Walking in New York. Edited by Donald Allen (Bolinas, Calif: Grey Fox Press; Berkeley, Calif: distributed by Bookpeople, 1975)
  • Early Writing. Edited by Donald Allen (Bolinas, Calif: Grey Fox; Berkeley: distributed by Bookpeople, 1977)
  • Poems Retrieved. Edited by Donald Allen (Bolinas, Calif: Grey Fox Press; Berkeley, Calif: distributed by Bookpeople, 1977)
  • Selected Plays. Edited by Ron Padgett, Joan Simon, and Anne Waldman (1st ed. New York: Full Court Press, 1978)
  • Amorous Nightmares of Delay: Selected Plays. (Baltimore, MD: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1997)
  • Selected Poems. Edited by Mark Ford (New York: Knopf, 2008)
  • Poems Retrieved (City Lights, 2013)
  • Lunch Poems. 50th Anniversary Edition (City Lights, 2014)

Exhibitions Edit

  • Jackson Pollock. (New York: George Braziller, Inc. 1959)
  • New Spanish painting and sculpture. (New York: The Museum of Modern Art, 1960)
  • Robert Motherwell: with selections from the artist's writings. by Frank O'Hara (New York: The Museum of Modern Art, 1965)
  • Nakian. (New York: The Museum of Modern Art, 1966)
  • Art Chronicles, 1954–1966. (New York: G. Braziller, 1975)

On O'Hara Edit

  • Frank O'Hara: Poet Among Painters by Marjorie Perloff (New York: G. Braziller, 1977; 1st paperback ed. Austin: University of Texas Press, 1979; Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press, with a new introduction, 1998)
  • Frank O'Hara by Alan Feldman (Boston: Twayne Publishers, 1979 ... frontispiece photo of Frank O'Hara c. by Richard Moore)
  • Frank O'Hara: A Comprehensive Bibliography by Alexander Smith, Jr. (New York: Garland, 1979; 2nd print. corrected, 1980)
  • Homage to Frank O'Hara. edited by Bill Berkson and Joe LeSueur, cover by Jane Freilicher (originally published as Big Sky 11/12 in April, 1978; rev. ed. Berkeley: Creative Arts Book Company, 1980)
  • Art with the touch of a poet: Frank O'Hara. exhibit companion compiled by Hildegard Cummings (Storrs, Conn. : The William Benton Museum of Art, University of Connecticut, 1983 ... January 24-March 13, 1983)
  • Frank O'Hara: To Be True To A City edited by Jim Elledge (Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 1990)
  • City Poet: The Life and Times of Frank O'Hara by Brad Gooch (1st ed. New York: Knopf, 1993; New York: HarperPerennial, 1994)
  • In Memory of My Feelings: Frank O'Hara and American Art by Russell Ferguson (Los Angeles: The Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles / University of California Press, 1999)
  • Hyperscapes in the Poetry of Frank O'Hara: Difference, Homosexuality, Topography by Hazel Smith (Liverpool University Press, Liverpool, 2000)
  • Digressions on Some Poems by Frank O'Hara by Joe LeSueur (New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2003).
  • Frank O'Hara: The Poetics of Coterie by Lytle Shaw (Iowa City: University of Iowa Press, 2006)

Painting Edit

  • Alice Neel, Frank O'Hara, (1960), 85.7 x 40.6 x 2.5 cm, National Portrait Gallery, Smithsonian Institution
  • Larry Rivers, O'Hara Nude with Boots (1954), 97" x 53", Larry Rivers Foundation
  • Jasper Johns, In Memory of My Feelings - Frank O'Hara (1961), 40 1/4" x 60", MCA, Chicago
  • Wynn Chamberlain, Poets (Clothed), Poets (Naked), (1964), Earl McGrath collection.
  • Alfred Leslie, a link to The Death Cycle, (1966), - The Death of Frank O'Hara [1]
  • Grace Hartigan, Frank O'Hara, 1926-1966, (1966), 80 1/8 x 80 in. (203.4 x 203.2 cm), Smithsonian American Art Museum, Gift of Grace Hartigan.

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ a b American Council of Learned Societies. "Frank O'Hara" in American National Biography. (New York: Oxford University Press, 1999)
  2. ^ Doty, Mark in "Myers, Jack and Wojahn, David (editors). A Profile of Twentieth-Century American Poetry. (Carbondale: Southern Illinois University Press, 1991).
  3. ^ "Happy Birthday (more or less) Frank O'Hara!". 2014-03-20.
  4. ^ Brad Gooch, City Poet: the life and times of Frank O'Hara, p. 15
  5. ^ Dery, Mark (December 17, 2018). "Edward Gorey, Frank O'Hara and Harvard's Gay Undergroud". Lit Hub. Retrieved March 29, 2021.
  6. ^ Rounds, Anne Lovering (2017). "Frank O'Hara's Virtuosity". Soundings: An Interdisciplinary Journal. 100 (1): 29–53. doi:10.5325/soundings.100.1.0029. S2CID 171596564.
  7. ^ "My Heart is in my pocket it is poems by Pierre Reverdy" (in Lunch),
  8. ^ a b "Frank O'Hara". Poets.org. Retrieved March 29, 2021.
  9. ^ Padgett, Ron (2004). "Joe LeSueur & Frank O'Hara". Joe: A Memoir of Joe Brainard. Coffee House Press. p. 64. ISBN 978-1-56689-159-2.
  10. ^ a b c d Frank O'Hara. The Collected Poems of Frank O'Hara. Ed. Donald Allen. University of California Press. 1995; ISBN 0-520-20166-3
  11. ^ Frank O'Hara. The New American Poetry (edited by Donald Allen). Grove Press, 1960; ISBN 0-394-17225-6
  12. ^ "Digressions on Some Poems by Frank O'Hara" by Joe LeSueur "City Poet" by Brad Gooch
  13. ^ Keane, Tim (2 July 2014). "Into a Future of His Choice: Catching Up with Frank O'Hara". The Brooklyn Rail. Retrieved March 29, 2021.
  14. ^ a b Frank O'Hara. "Personism: A Manifesto". The Collected Poems of Frank O'Hara (edited by Donald Allen). University of California Press. 1995; ISBN 0-520-20166-3
  15. ^ William Watkin. In the process of poetry: the New York school and the avant-garde. Bucknell University Press, 2001. ISBN 0-8387-5467-8, ISBN 978-0-8387-5467-2.
  16. ^ Marjorie Perloff. Frank O'Hara: Poet Among Painters. University of Chicago Press, 1998. ISBN 0-226-66059-1, ISBN 978-0-226-66059-2
  17. ^ Perloff, pg. 45
  18. ^ Chiasson, Dan (31 March 2008). "The World of Frank O'Hara". The New Yorker.
  19. ^ "Digressions on Some Poems by Frank O'Hara".
  20. ^ "Frank O'Hara Lived Here". Village Preservation. 10 June 2014. Retrieved March 29, 2021.
  21. ^ City Poet: The Life and Times of Frank O'Hara by Brad Gooch p. 459
  22. ^ Belanger, Craig. "Frank O'Hara". Frank O'Hara (2005): 1. MasterFILE Premier. EBSCO. Web. 12 May 2011.
  23. ^ Smith, Hazel. "Frank O'Hara". Encyclopedia of Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgendered History in America. Ed. Marc Stein. Detroit: Charles Scribner's Sons, 2004. Gale Biography In Context. Web. 12 May 2011.
  24. ^ "Frank O'Hara." Contemporary Authors Online. Detroit: Gale, 2003. Gale Biography In Context. Web. 12 May 2011.
  25. ^ "Frank O'Hara, 40, Museum Curator: Exhibitions Aide at Modern Art Dies - Also A Poet". The New York Times. July 26, 1966.
  26. ^ City Poet: The Life and Times of Frank O'Hara by Brad Gooch pp. 460–1
  27. ^ Wilson, Scott. Resting Places: The Burial Sites of More Than 14,000 Famous Persons, 3d ed.: 2 (Kindle Location 35306). McFarland & Company, Inc., Publishers. Kindle Edition.
  28. ^ Cotter, Holland (September 6, 2009). "Refurbished Reputation for a Nervy Painter". The New York Times. Retrieved March 29, 2021.
  29. ^ From "A Short Chronology", in Donald Allen: The Collected Poems of Frank O'Hara.
  30. ^ "1967, I Miss You, I'm Lonely, by Martha". Bandcamp. Retrieved March 29, 2021.
  31. ^ "Meditations in an Emergency by Frank O'Hara – Poems | Academy of American Poets". Poets.org. Retrieved March 29, 2021.
  32. ^ "Rilo Kiley – More Adventurous". Genius. Retrieved March 29, 2021.
  33. ^ White, Caitlin (May 22, 2014). "Frankie Cosmos is Here to Show You Her Own Universe". Vice. Retrieved March 29, 2021. I showed him the poet Frank O'Hara, and he started calling me Frank. And then it just became my name. I played a couple solo Porches shows with him when his band was in transition, and he would introduce me as Frankie Cosmos.
  34. ^ "Bored to Death".
  35. ^ "Normal people".
  36. ^ "Mad Men: "Meditations in an Emergency"". AMC. Retrieved April 20, 2011.
  37. ^ Frank O'Hara Lived Here
  38. ^ "National Book Awards – 1972". National Book Foundation. Retrieved 2012-04-07.
    (With essay by Katie Peterson from the Awards 60-year anniversary blog.)

External links Edit

frank, hara, australian, rules, footballer, footballer, francis, russell, frank, hara, march, 1926, july, 1966, american, writer, poet, critic, curator, museum, modern, hara, became, prominent, york, city, world, hara, regarded, leading, figure, york, school, . For the Australian rules footballer see Frank O Hara footballer Francis Russell Frank O Hara March 27 1926 July 25 1966 was an American writer poet and art critic A curator at the Museum of Modern Art O Hara became prominent in New York City s art world O Hara is regarded as a leading figure in the New York School an informal group of artists writers and musicians who drew inspiration from jazz surrealism abstract expressionism action painting and contemporary avant garde art movements Frank O HaraBorn 1926 03 27 March 27 1926Baltimore Maryland U S DiedJuly 25 1966 1966 07 25 aged 40 Mastic Beach New York U S Resting placeGreen River Cemetery Springs New York U S OccupationPoet art curatorAlma materHarvard University AB University of Michigan MA Literary movementThe New York SchoolNotable worksLunch PoemsO Hara s poetry is personal in tone and content and has been described as sounding like entries in a diary 1 Poet and critic Mark Doty has said O Hara s poetry is urbane ironic sometimes genuinely celebratory and often wildly funny containing material and associations alien to academic verse such as the camp icons of movie stars of the twenties and thirties the daily landscape of social activity in Manhattan jazz music telephone calls from friends 2 O Hara s writing sought to capture in his poetry the immediacy of life feeling that poetry should be between two persons instead of two pages 1 The Selected Poems of Frank O Hara edited by Donald Allen Knopf 1971 the first of several posthumous collections shared the 1972 National Book Award for Poetry Brad Gooch s City Poet is the first substantial biography on O Hara Contents 1 Early life and education 2 Early career 3 Poetry 4 Personal life 5 Death 6 In popular culture 6 1 In music 6 2 In film 6 3 In literature 6 4 In television 6 5 In plays 6 6 Landmarks 7 Bibliography 7 1 Books published during his lifetime 7 2 Posthumous works 7 3 Exhibitions 7 4 On O Hara 8 Painting 9 See also 10 References 11 External linksEarly life and education EditFrank O Hara the son of Russell Joseph O Hara and Katherine nee Broderick was born on March 27 1926 3 at Maryland General Hospital Baltimore and grew up in Grafton Massachusetts He attended St John s High School He grew up believing he had been born in June but in fact had been born in March his parents disguised his true date of birth because he was conceived out of wedlock 4 He studied piano at the New England Conservatory in Boston from 1941 to 1944 and served in the U S Navy in the South Pacific and Japan as a sonarman on the destroyer USS Nicholas during World War II With the funding made available to veterans he attended Harvard University where artist and writer Edward Gorey was his roommate 5 O Hara was heavily influenced by visual art and by contemporary music which was his first love he remained a fine piano player all his life and would shock new partners by suddenly playing music by Sergei Rachmaninoff when visiting them 6 His favorite poets were Pierre Reverdy 7 Arthur Rimbaud Stephane Mallarme Boris Pasternak and Vladimir Mayakovsky 8 While at Harvard O Hara met John Ashbery and began publishing poems in the Harvard Advocate Despite his love of music O Hara changed his major and was graduated from Harvard in 1950 with a degree in English He attended graduate school at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor While at Michigan he won a Hopwood Award and received his master s degree in English literature in 1951 8 Early career EditIn the autumn of 1951 O Hara moved into an apartment in New York City with Joe LeSueur who was his roommate and sometime lover for the next 11 years 9 It was during this time that he began teaching at The New School nbsp Historic Plaque at 441 East 9th Street where Frank O Hara lived unveiled by Greenwich Village Society for Historic Preservation on June 10 2014O Hara was active in the art world working as a reviewer for ARTnews and in 1960 was assistant curator of painting and sculpture exhibitions for the Museum of Modern Art He was a friend of the artists Norman Bluhm Mike Goldberg Grace Hartigan Alex Katz Willem de Kooning Joan Mitchell and Larry Rivers Poetry EditWhile O Hara s poetry is generally autobiographical it tends to be based on his observations of New York life rather than exploring his past In his introduction to The Collected Poems of Frank O Hara Donald Allen says that Frank O Hara tended to think of his poems as a record of his life is apparent in much of his work 10 O Hara discussed this aspect of his poetry in a statement for Donald Allen s The New American Poetry What is happening to me allowing for lies and exaggerations which I try to avoid goes into my poems I don t think my experiences are clarified or made beautiful for myself or anyone else they are just there in whatever form I can find them My formal stance is found at the crossroads where what I know and can t get meets what is left of that I know and can bear without hatred It may be that poetry makes life s nebulous events tangible to me and restores their detail or conversely that poetry brings forth the intangible quality of incidents which are all too concrete and circumstantial Or each on specific occasions or both all the time 11 His initial time in the Navy during his basic training at Sampson Naval Training Center in upstate New York along with earlier years spent at St John s High School began to shape a distinguished style of solitary observation that would later inform his poems Immersed in regimented daily routine first Catholic school then the Navy he was able to separate himself from the situation and make witty and often singular studies Sometimes these were cataloged for use in later writing or perhaps more often put into letters This skill of scrutinizing and recording during the bustle and churn of daily life would later be one of the important aspects that shaped O Hara as an urban poet writing off the cuff 12 Among his friends O Hara was known to treat poetry dismissively as something to be done only in the moment John Ashbery says he witnessed O Hara Dashing the poems off at odd moments in his office at the Museum of Modern Art in the street at lunchtime or even in a room full of people he would then put them away in drawers and cartons and half forget them 10 In the summer of 1951 O Hara read a manifesto in The Kenyon Review written by the poet novelist and anarchistic social critic Paul Goodman In the essay Goodman argues that the postwar American advanced guard writers must articulate the deep seated personal disquiet felt across the culture but left unvoiced The essay encouraged O Hara to write poetry that was embarrassing in its directness and even seen as hostile to literary standards then in place O Hara s poetry began to erase poetry s cautious border between what is public and what is private 13 In 1959 he wrote a mock manifesto originally published in the magazine Yugen in 1961 called Personism A Manifesto in which he explains his position on formal structure I don t like rhythm assonance all that stuff You just go on your nerve If someone s chasing you down the street with a knife you just run you don t turn around and shout Give it up I was a track star for Mineola Prep He says in response to academic overemphasis on form As for measure and other technical apparatus that s just common sense if you re going to buy a pair of pants you want them to be tight enough so everyone will want to go to bed with you There s nothing metaphysical about it He claims that on August 27 1959 while talking to LeRoi Jones he founded a movement called Personism which may be the death of literature as we know it He says It does not have to do with personality or intimacy far from it But to give you a vague idea one of its minimal aspects is to address itself to one person other than the poet himself thus evoking overtones of love without destroying love s life giving vulgarity and sustaining the poet s feelings toward the poem while preventing love from distracting him into feeling about the person 14 His poetry shows the influence of abstract expressionism surrealism Russian poetry and poets associated with French symbolism Ashbery says The poetry that meant the most to him when he began writing was either French Rimbaud Mallarme the Surrealists poets who speak the language of every day into the reader s dream or Russian Pasternak and especially Mayakovsky for whom he picked up what James Schuyler has called the intimate yell 10 As part of the New York School of poetry O Hara to some degree encapsulated the compositional philosophy of New York School painters 15 16 Ashbery says Frank O Hara s concept of the poem as the chronicle of the creative act that produces it was strengthened by his intimate experience of Pollock s Kline s and de Kooning s great paintings of the late 40s and early 50s and of the imaginative realism of painters like Jane Freilicher and Larry Rivers 10 O Hara was also influenced by William Carlos Williams so much so that he lists Williams along with Hart Crane and Walt Whitman as one of three poets who were better than the movies 14 According to Marjorie Perloff in her book Frank O Hara Poet among Painters he and Williams both use everyday language and simple statements split at irregular intervals Perloff points out the similarities between O Hara s Autobiographia Literaria and Williams s Invocation and Conclusion At the end of Autobiographia Literaria the speaker says And here I am the center of all beauty writing these poems Imagine Similarly Williams at the end of Invocation and Conclusion says Now look at me These lines show a shared interest in the self as an individual who can only be himself in isolation A similar idea is expressed in a line from Williams s Danse Russe Who shall say I am not the happy genius of my household 17 Personal life EditFrank O Hara who was gay 18 met Joe LeSueur in 1951 and the two maintained a relationship until 1965 living together on and off from 1955 to 1965 19 From 1959 to 1963 the two lived at 441 East 9th Street in the East Village 20 Known throughout his life for his extreme sociability passion and warmth O Hara had hundreds of friends and lovers throughout his life many from the New York art and poetry worlds Soon after arriving in New York he was employed at the Museum of Modern Art selling postcards at the admissions desk and began to write seriously O Hara met longtime partner Vincent Warren in the summer of 1959 Warren a Canadian ballet dancer was the inspiration for several of O Hara s poems including Poem A la Recherche d Gertrude Stein Les Luths Poem So many echoes in my head and Having a Coke With You Warren died on October 25 2017 51 years after O Hara s death Death EditIn the early morning hours of July 24 1966 O Hara was struck by the driver of a jeep on the Fire Island beach after the beach taxi in which he had been riding with a group of friends broke down in the dark 21 22 23 24 He died the next day at age 40 of a ruptured liver at Bayview Hospital in Mastic Beach Long Island 25 Attempts to bring negligent homicide charges against 23 year old driver Kenneth L Ruzicka were unsuccessful many of O Hara s friends felt the local police had conducted a lax investigation to protect one of their own locals 26 O Hara was buried in Green River Cemetery on Long Island 27 The painter Larry Rivers a longtime friend and lover 28 delivered one of the eulogies along with Bill Berkson Edwin Denby and Rene d Harnoncourt 29 In popular culture EditIn music Edit In First Aid Kit s song To A Poet there is the lyric But Frank put it best when he said you can t plan on the heart a reference to O Hara s poem My Heart citation needed In Martha s song 1967 I Miss You I m Lonely the lyric I look at you and I am confident that I d rather look at you than all the portraits in existence in the world except possibly O Hara by Grace Hartigan 30 references both O Hara s poem Having a Coke With You and Grace Hartigan s portrait of O Hara Rilo Kiley s 2004 album More Adventurous is titled after a line in O Hara s poem Meditations in an Emergency Each time my heart is broken it makes me feel more adventurous 31 The title track references the same line I read with every broken heart we should become more adventurous 32 Frankie Cosmos s music is influenced by O Hara s works visible in two of her albums Zentropy and Next Thing Greta Kline has stated that her stage name derived from the poet 33 In film Edit In the 2011 film Beastly the lovestruck main characters read O Hara s poem Having a Coke with You aloud to each other citation needed In literature Edit O Hara is a minor character in William Boyd s 2002 novelAny Human Heart citation needed O Hara s Lunch Poems is the basis of Paul Legault s Lunch Poems 2 citation needed In television Edit In the season 1 episode of the HBO series Bored to Death The Case of the Missing Screenplay the main character loses a screenplay written by Jim Jarmusch about the life of Frank O Hara 34 In the last episode of the series Normal people based on Sally Rooney s homonimous novel Connell s gift for Marianne s birthday is said to be a Frank O Hara s collection of poetry 35 Several episodes of Mad Men season 2 reference O Hara s collection of poetry Meditations in an Emergency The first episode shows a character reading from it over lunch in a bar recalling O Hara s 1964 collection Lunch Poems as does the last episode which uses the book s title as its episode title 36 In the twelfth episode Don Draper finds his copy of Meditations in an Emergency in Anna Draper s home in California citation needed In plays Edit The poetry of Frank O Hara features prominently in Rachel Bonds s 2017 play At the Old Place citation needed Landmarks Edit On June 10 2014 a plaque was unveiled outside one of O Hara s New York City residences at 441 East Ninth Street Poets Tony Towle who inherited the apartment from O Hara and Edmund Berrigan read his works at the event 37 Bibliography EditWorks by Frank O Hara at Open Library nbsp Books published during his lifetime Edit A City Winter and Other Poems Two Drawings by Larry Rivers New York Tibor de Nagy Gallery Editions 1951 sic i e 1952 Oranges 12 pastorals New York Tibor de Nagy Gallery Editions 1953 New York Angel Hair Books 1969 Meditations in an Emergency New York Grove Press 1957 1967 Second Avenue Cover drawing by Larry Rivers New York Totem Press in Association with Corinth Books 1960 Odes Prints by Michael Goldberg New York Tiber Press 1960 Lunch Poems San Francisco CA City Lights Books The Pocket Poets Series No 19 1964 Love Poems Tentative Title New York Tibor de Nagy Gallery Editions 1965 Posthumous works Edit In Memory of My Feelings commemorative volume illustrated by 30 U S artists and edited by Bill Berkson New York The Museum of Modern Art 1967 The Collected Poems of Frank O Hara Edited by Donald Allen with an introduction by John Ashbery 1st ed New York Knopf 1971 Berkeley University of California Press 1995 shared the National Book Award with Howard Moss Selected Poems 38 The Selected Poems of Frank O Hara Edited by Donald Allen New York Knopf 1974 Vintage Books 1974 Standing Still and Walking in New York Edited by Donald Allen Bolinas Calif Grey Fox Press Berkeley Calif distributed by Bookpeople 1975 Early Writing Edited by Donald Allen Bolinas Calif Grey Fox Berkeley distributed by Bookpeople 1977 Poems Retrieved Edited by Donald Allen Bolinas Calif Grey Fox Press Berkeley Calif distributed by Bookpeople 1977 Selected Plays Edited by Ron Padgett Joan Simon and Anne Waldman 1st ed New York Full Court Press 1978 Amorous Nightmares of Delay Selected Plays Baltimore MD Johns Hopkins University Press 1997 Selected Poems Edited by Mark Ford New York Knopf 2008 Poems Retrieved City Lights 2013 Lunch Poems 50th Anniversary Edition City Lights 2014 Exhibitions Edit Jackson Pollock New York George Braziller Inc 1959 New Spanish painting and sculpture New York The Museum of Modern Art 1960 Robert Motherwell with selections from the artist s writings by Frank O Hara New York The Museum of Modern Art 1965 Nakian New York The Museum of Modern Art 1966 Art Chronicles 1954 1966 New York G Braziller 1975 On O Hara Edit Frank O Hara Poet Among Painters by Marjorie Perloff New York G Braziller 1977 1st paperback ed Austin University of Texas Press 1979 Chicago IL University of Chicago Press with a new introduction 1998 Frank O Hara by Alan Feldman Boston Twayne Publishers 1979 frontispiece photo of Frank O Hara c by Richard Moore Frank O Hara A Comprehensive Bibliography by Alexander Smith Jr New York Garland 1979 2nd print corrected 1980 Homage to Frank O Hara edited by Bill Berkson and Joe LeSueur cover by Jane Freilicher originally published as Big Sky 11 12 in April 1978 rev ed Berkeley Creative Arts Book Company 1980 Art with the touch of a poet Frank O Hara exhibit companion compiled by Hildegard Cummings Storrs Conn The William Benton Museum of Art University of Connecticut 1983 January 24 March 13 1983 Frank O Hara To Be True To A City edited by Jim Elledge Ann Arbor University of Michigan Press 1990 City Poet The Life and Times of Frank O Hara by Brad Gooch 1st ed New York Knopf 1993 New York HarperPerennial 1994 In Memory of My Feelings Frank O Hara and American Art by Russell Ferguson Los Angeles The Museum of Contemporary Art Los Angeles University of California Press 1999 Hyperscapes in the Poetry of Frank O Hara Difference Homosexuality Topography by Hazel Smith Liverpool University Press Liverpool 2000 Digressions on Some Poems by Frank O Hara by Joe LeSueur New York Farrar Straus and Giroux 2003 Frank O Hara The Poetics of Coterie by Lytle Shaw Iowa City University of Iowa Press 2006 Painting EditAlice Neel Frank O Hara 1960 85 7 x 40 6 x 2 5 cm National Portrait Gallery Smithsonian Institution Larry Rivers O Hara Nude with Boots 1954 97 x 53 Larry Rivers Foundation Jasper Johns In Memory of My Feelings Frank O Hara 1961 40 1 4 x 60 MCA Chicago Wynn Chamberlain Poets Clothed Poets Naked 1964 Earl McGrath collection Alfred Leslie a link to The Death Cycle 1966 The Death of Frank O Hara 1 Grace Hartigan Frank O Hara 1926 1966 1966 80 1 8 x 80 in 203 4 x 203 2 cm Smithsonian American Art Museum Gift of Grace Hartigan See also EditPortal nbsp Biography LGBT culture in New York City List of LGBT people from New York CityReferences Edit a b American Council of Learned Societies Frank O Hara in American National Biography New York Oxford University Press 1999 Doty Mark in Myers Jack and Wojahn David editors A Profile of Twentieth Century American Poetry Carbondale Southern Illinois University Press 1991 Happy Birthday more or less Frank O Hara 2014 03 20 Brad Gooch City Poet the life and times of Frank O Hara p 15 Dery Mark December 17 2018 Edward Gorey Frank O Hara and Harvard s Gay Undergroud Lit Hub Retrieved March 29 2021 Rounds Anne Lovering 2017 Frank O Hara s Virtuosity Soundings An Interdisciplinary Journal 100 1 29 53 doi 10 5325 soundings 100 1 0029 S2CID 171596564 My Heart is in my pocket it is poems by Pierre Reverdy in Lunch a b Frank O Hara Poets org Retrieved March 29 2021 Padgett Ron 2004 Joe LeSueur amp Frank O Hara Joe A Memoir of Joe Brainard Coffee House Press p 64 ISBN 978 1 56689 159 2 a b c d Frank O Hara The Collected Poems of Frank O Hara Ed Donald Allen University of California Press 1995 ISBN 0 520 20166 3 Frank O Hara The New American Poetry edited by Donald Allen Grove Press 1960 ISBN 0 394 17225 6 Digressions on Some Poems by Frank O Hara by Joe LeSueur City Poet by Brad Gooch Keane Tim 2 July 2014 Into a Future of His Choice Catching Up with Frank O Hara The Brooklyn Rail Retrieved March 29 2021 a b Frank O Hara Personism A Manifesto The Collected Poems of Frank O Hara edited by Donald Allen University of California Press 1995 ISBN 0 520 20166 3 William Watkin In the process of poetry the New York school and the avant garde Bucknell University Press 2001 ISBN 0 8387 5467 8 ISBN 978 0 8387 5467 2 Marjorie Perloff Frank O Hara Poet Among Painters University of Chicago Press 1998 ISBN 0 226 66059 1 ISBN 978 0 226 66059 2 Perloff pg 45 Chiasson Dan 31 March 2008 The World of Frank O Hara The New Yorker Digressions on Some Poems by Frank O Hara Frank O Hara Lived Here Village Preservation 10 June 2014 Retrieved March 29 2021 City Poet The Life and Times of Frank O Hara by Brad Gooch p 459 Belanger Craig Frank O Hara Frank O Hara 2005 1 MasterFILE Premier EBSCO Web 12 May 2011 Smith Hazel Frank O Hara Encyclopedia of Lesbian Gay Bisexual and Transgendered History in America Ed Marc Stein Detroit Charles Scribner s Sons 2004 Gale Biography In Context Web 12 May 2011 Frank O Hara Contemporary Authors Online Detroit Gale 2003 Gale Biography In Context Web 12 May 2011 Frank O Hara 40 Museum Curator Exhibitions Aide at Modern Art Dies Also A Poet The New York Times July 26 1966 City Poet The Life and Times of Frank O Hara by Brad Gooch pp 460 1 Wilson Scott Resting Places The Burial Sites of More Than 14 000 Famous Persons 3d ed 2 Kindle Location 35306 McFarland amp Company Inc Publishers Kindle Edition Cotter Holland September 6 2009 Refurbished Reputation for a Nervy Painter The New York Times Retrieved March 29 2021 From A Short Chronology in Donald Allen The Collected Poems of Frank O Hara 1967 I Miss You I m Lonely by Martha Bandcamp Retrieved March 29 2021 Meditations in an Emergency by Frank O Hara Poems Academy of American Poets Poets org Retrieved March 29 2021 Rilo Kiley More Adventurous Genius Retrieved March 29 2021 White Caitlin May 22 2014 Frankie Cosmos is Here to Show You Her Own Universe Vice Retrieved March 29 2021 I showed him the poet Frank O Hara and he started calling me Frank And then it just became my name I played a couple solo Porches shows with him when his band was in transition and he would introduce me as Frankie Cosmos Bored to Death Normal people Mad Men Meditations in an Emergency AMC Retrieved April 20 2011 Frank O Hara Lived Here National Book Awards 1972 National Book Foundation Retrieved 2012 04 07 With essay by Katie Peterson from the Awards 60 year anniversary blog External links Edit nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Frank O Hara Official website Frank O Hara Papers in the Museum of Modern Art Archives Frank O Hara at Academy of American Poets Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Frank O 27Hara amp oldid 1178084224, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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