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Houston's 1950's & 1960's Modern Art Scene


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Houston Mod invites you to an evening reception for the exhibit

Back to the Future: Elements of "Modern" in Mid-Century Texas Art

Friday, September 25, 2009, 5 - 7 PM

William Reaves Fine Art, 2313 Brun, Houston, Texas 77019

Join fellow mod enthusiasts for refreshments and a special gallery talk on leading Houston mid-century artists. Over 60 works will be on display. Link to the catalog

Viewers of the show will receive the rare opportunity to step back some six decades in time to examine great art that presaged the "future" of Texas and Houston art.

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Artists Included:

David Adickes/ Jack Boynton/ David Cargill/ Patty Cargill/ Bill Condon/ Ben Culwell/ Henri Gadbois/ William Hoey/ Dorothy Hood/ Amy Freeman Lee/ Leila McConnell/ Herbert Mears/ Robert Morris/ Dimitri Parsons/ Robert Preusser/ Charles Bert Rees/ Bill Reily/ Robert Rogan/ Charles Schorre/ Richard Stout/ Stella Sullivan/ Mckie Trotter/ Dan Wingren/ and many others.

Houston Mod members will receive a 5% discount on any paintings purchased at the event and WRFA will donate $100 of each sale to Houston Mod.

Background information on the exhibit by Bill Reaves:

Texas art underwent a metamorphosis in the middle

years of the twentieth century. The nation and Texas experienced

bold and dynamic changes during the years between 1945

and 1965, and art was no different. The times were rife with

creative expansion; sparking a period of broadened artistic expression

which pushed far beyond comfortable traditions of impressionist

landscapes and familiar modes of American Scene to

make room for a newer, more abstract milieu. It was in this moment

that Texas art fully confronted, and eventually came to

embrace, the elements of “modernism”.

It is not that abstract art forms were unknown in Texas

prior to this time. Indeed, sophisticated collectors such as San

Antonio’s Marion Koogler McNay were accumulating European

masters such as Van Gogh and Picasso as early as the late

1920s, and a few indigenous artists such as Robert Preusser and

Frank Dolejska were actively producing and entering abstract

works in Houston Annuals by the late 1930s. Still, abstract

statements remained on the margins of the art field in Texas until

after World War II, resting in static states until the energy

surge that jolted post-war America propelled new and varied

approaches to the fore.

The emergence and growth of “modern art” in Texas

was nurtured and fed through a loosely-coupled network of art

museums, artist’s leagues and university art departments. During

the period of reference, these art establishments ushered in

progressive art movements by mounting exhibitions, sponsoring

demonstrations and offering art instruction which exposed Texans

(both artists and patrons alike) to modernist trends extant in

the larger American and international art circles. Inspired and

informed by such art movements as cubism, Dadaism and expressionism,

abstraction grew and progressed in Texas, assuming

both objective and non-objective modes. Annual juried exhibitions

such as The Texas Generals and competitive exhibitions

such as those sponsored by Dallas oilman D.D. Feldman

presented new venues for public display of modernist works and

gave state-wide exposure to Texas painters working in this

mode.

As a consequence, the imagery and style of Texas works

produced in this time assumed a dramatically different “look”

from their pre-war predecessors. Paintings of the period, and

particularly those of younger Texas artists, began to reference

more diverse and sophisticated subject matter. Artists presented

their subjects through flattened planes, altered perspectives and

stylized compositions.

This description is continued on the William Reaves website.

We hope to see you there!

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