A painter and, later, avid birder, Karl Zerbe became an influential teacher at one of the most prestigious American institutions: the School of the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, or SMFA (now SMFA at Tufts University). His paintings, often rendered in encaustic, are generally Expressionist, although he experimented with a range of styles, from Cubism to Pop Art.
Zerbe was born in Berlin, but his family moved to Paris for a decade shortly after his birth. Returning to Germany, he first lived in Frankfurt and in 1920 he worked in an architect’s office and began studies in chemistry at Technische Hochschule (the technical university) in Friedberg. From 1921 to 1923, he studied at the Munich Academy of Art and at the Debschitz Art School, a role model for the Bauhaus where Anni Albers and Josef Albers taught for years. With funding from the city of Munich, Zerbe enjoyed a two-year sojourn traveling and working in Italy. The Third Reich declared his art “degenerate” and destroyed some of his work, prompting him to flee to Boston in 1934.
In 1937 Zerbe became head of the painting department at SFMA, a position he held for seventeen years. With like-minded painters he became a seminal member of the group known as the “Boston Expressionists.” His frustration with the slow drying time of oil paints led him to paint largely in gouache until he developed a facility with encaustic, often lecturing on the process. He also worked in fresco, and inspired his students to experiment with various materials.
Zerbe mentored Charleston artist William Halsey and encouraged him and his wife Corrie McCallum to use the school’s travelling fellowship in Mexico to avoid the imminent war in Europe. Having traveled there before, Zerbe offered them contacts abroad and urged that they leave as soon as possible, before the committee returned from summer break to overturn this change in destination. It was a life-altering experience for the young couple. In a 1987 interview Halsey stated: “Zerbe immediately noticed my work and he was very good for me. I mean, I got a lot through him.” Zerbe visited Charleston in 1940, perhaps at Halsey’s invitation.
In 1954 Zerbe took a leave of absence from the SFMA and began teaching at Florida State University, in Tallahassee, where he remained until his retirement as professor emeritus in 1971, a year before his death. An activist, Zerbe served as president of the Artists Equity Association, founded in the late 1940s to ensure the economic well-being of artists. Among its members were several artists with Southern connections: Jacob Lawrence, George Biddle, Charles Burchfield, and Ben Shahn. In the early 1960s Zerbe took inspiration from the Civil Rights Movement, reflected in a series of brush drawings and acrylic collages inspired by the Albany Movement, a series of civil rights protests in Albany, Georgia, led by members of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee and the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People. Zerbe engaged with civil rights issues through literary analysis as well; he wrote an article deconstructing the relevant racial themes of Porgy and Bess, a 1935 opera centered on the struggles within a Black community in Charleston, South Carolina.
His final body of work focused on birds. Expressive interpretations, this series of ornithological prints and paintings were anthropomorphic, and conveyed his belief in the connectivity and interdependency of all life forms. His time in Berlin at the start of the Third Reich, his successive involvement with the American Civil Rights Movement, and his later-in-life dedication to the natural world contributed to a theme of racial and environmental harmony.