By Alexandre Hogue
Located in Missouri, MO
Lithograph on cream wove paper
Signed in Pencil Lower Right
Titled in Pencil Lower Left
Published by Associated American Artists, New York
Alexandre Hogue (1898 - 1994)
A painter, printmaker, and muralist known for his Dust Bowl series and early 20th-century depictions of Indian life in Taos, New Mexico, Alexander Hogue worked in a style that was abstract and realistic. In Taos, where he first arrived in 1926, he was especially interested in the pueblo Indians spiritual lives and relationship to the land. From 1945, he held an art faculty position at The University of Tulsa in Oklahoma, having taught earlier at Texas State College for Women in Denton, and the Hockaday School for Girls in Dallas.
His formal art education was at the College of Art and Design in Minneapolis, and he was a student of Texas artist Frank Reaugh. In 1921, he moved to New York City where he lived for four years, but he frequently returned to Texas to paint in the summers as well as making numerous trips to Taos. He was also an illustrator and cartoonist for the Dallas Times-Herald, and in Texas did black and white lithographs of the oil fields. In Dallas, he lived at 912 Moreland Street.
Exhibitions:
Art Museum of South Texas, Corpus Christi Jan 14-April 3, 2011
Grace Museum Abilene Texas May 5- August 20, 2011
Fort Worth Museum of Science and History September 16 - November 30, 2011
Museum Collections:
Musee National D'Art Moderen Pompidou Center Paris: Oil in the Sandhills, 1949
Smithsonian American Art Museum, Washington D.C.: Young Girl in Purple, 1930; Dust Bowl, 1933
Dallas Museum of Art: Drought Stricken Area 1934
Museum of Fine Arts Houston: Squaw Creek, 1927
Harry Ranson Center University of Texas at Austin: The Church at Rancho de Taos, 1926
Art Museum of South Texas: Irrigation-Taos, 1931
Sources include:
Charles Eldredge, Art in New Mexico, 1900-1945
Peter Falk, Who Was Who in American Art by Peter Falk
Bill Smith, Note to AskART about the oil field lithographs
Matthew Bakkom Collection, Minneapolis, Minnesota
Exhibition and Museum collection information provided by Robert Gold
Category
1910s Alexandre Hogue Art