Skip to main content

Edward Chavez Abstract Paintings

1917-1995

Edward Chávez was descended from the early-day Spanish settlers in the present-day American Southwest. He was born into a sheep ranching family of twelve in Ocaté near Wagonmound in northeastern New Mexico. When he was five-year-old, an unusually hard winter wiped out all of the family’s livestock and assets, necessitating relocation to Red Lion in northeastern Colorado, where the family earned a meager livelihood working in the local sugar beet fields. Chávez later recalled: "From childhood, I knew only poverty and deprivation, and hard struggle and laboring to eke out a subsistence by one’s own hands out of rebelling earth and certainly a resisting society." His parents encouraged him and his siblings to exceed their immediate limitations through learning, discovery and adventure. He attended Junior High School in Sterling, Colorado, where his teachers supported his initial desire to become an artist. When his family moved to Denver in 1932, he completed his secondary education at East High School. He credited his art teacher, Helen Perry, for her key role in advancing his career as an artist, as she also did for two other students, Jenne and Ethel Magafan, later his wife and sister-in-law, respectively. They all benefited from her guidance and art instruction, enhanced by her attendance at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago and study in Paris with French Cubist painter and sculptor, André Lhote. She also introduced Chávez and the Magafans to artist Frank Mechau of Glenwood Springs, Colorado, who acquainted them with the contemporary French and American painting he had encountered during his earlier three-year sojourn in Paris. When Chávez graduated from the East High School in 1935, he became apprenticed to Mechau who that year had become affiliated with the Broadmoor Art Academy (succeeded a year later by the Colorado Springs Fine Arts Center). In addition to assisting him with his Federal mural projects in the 1930s, as did the Magafans, Chávez studied with Boardman Robinson, director of the Fine Arts Center and himself a recognized muralist, as well as with faculty members Arnold Blanch and Peppino Mangravite.

As a native of New Mexico, Chávez, like the Magafans, embraced Mechau’s artistic approach of universalizing a specific locale in his work. Mechau likewise shared with them the compositional qualities and palette of early Renaissance artists, Paolo Uccello and Piero della Francesca. They informed Chávez’s murals painted under the U.S. Treasury Department's Section of Painting and Sculpture for post offices in Geneva, Nebraska (Building a Sod House, 1941) and Center, Texas (Logging Scene, 1941). In 1937, he and Jenne Magafan collaborated on a decorative map for the Glenwood Springs post office. In the late 1930s, under one of the Federal art programs, Chávez painted two murals of Western life at West High School in Denver where they can still be seen. As a participant in the Depression-era Federal Art Projects, he created several lithographs including El Izquierdo (1939). Following the attack on Pearl Harbor, Hawaii, in December 1941, he was inducted into the U.S. Army and initially stationed at Fort Warren, Wyoming. For its Service Club, he executed Indian of the Plains (1942), a large egg tempera mural on plywood measuring 20 by 45 feet, as well as several other murals at the U.S. Army locations in the United States and overseas in Recife, Brazil. He later served as a military art correspondent recording war activities for the U.S. government archives. In 1942, he won third prize in the Life Magazine art competition for men in the armed services. For Christmas that year, he was one of 10 artist-servicemen who made holiday cards published by the American Artists Group.

Following his military discharge after World War II, Chávez relocated to the art community Woodstock, New York, joining his wife, Jenne Magafan, who had recently moved there from California with her twin sister. Woodstock attracted several artists whom he and the Magafans previously had known in Colorado Springs, including Arnold Blanch, Doris Lee and Yasuo Kuniyoshi. In 1947, Chávez received several awards for his work, indicative of the recognition accorded him soon after settling in the East: Pepsi-Cola’s Fourth Annual Exhibition —"Paintings of the Year," Associated American Artists Lithograph Competition, and the Albany Print Club. In 1948, Abbott Laboratories commissioned him to do a series of paintings on the state of American Indian health and medicine for the company’s publication, What’s New. To gather material, he traveled to three reservations: the Chippewas of Red Lake in Minnesota, the Sioux Cheyenne in South Dakota and the Shoshones and Arapahoes in Wind River, Wyoming. His paintings were later exhibited at the Smithsonian Institution in Washington, D.C. In 1948, art professionals nominated him for a Louis Comfort Tiffany Foundation Award, allowing him to visit Mexico. It deepened his connection with Spanish/Mexican culture, enabling him to see firsthand the work of the Mexican Mural School artists Diego Rivera, José Clemente Orozco and David Alfaro Siqueiros that later influenced his work. The trip also resulted in a stronger, brighter palette reflected in his Modernist Desert Still Life (1948) dominated by a deer skull highlighted against large desert rocks. The painting also documents the gradual post-war evolution of his work to a more abstract style.

In 1951, he won a Fulbright Grant allowing him and his wife to paint in Italy for the year. Shortly after their return, he lost her to an unexpected cerebral hemorrhage. His contact with contemporary European art in Italy further reinforced his referentially Abstract style as noted by The New York Times art critic, Howard Devree, in the review of his one-man show at the Ganso Gallery in New York in 1953. In the context of the rapid post-World War II development of the Abstract art, Chávez produced Geometric Abstract (1952), a small multi-media drawing of various interlocking geometric shapes highlighted on a grid-like structure with red, black and gray. In connection with his increasingly abstract work in the 1970s and 1980s, he noted, "I must always begin with the very definite subject matter, something I have seen or felt or experienced. [My painting], although abstract in style, is also based on my personal experiences with nature, not with people specifically, but with nature, including people, then it's transferred into abstract terms for me." He also described the transferral process: "If I begin with an idea or a subject matter, it is only the point of take-off from which to venture into an unknown. From then on it is a process of discovery in terms of the chosen medium or material. If in the process the original image is lost-so be it. I must allow it to grow and change and develop in whatever way it must." Often he preceded his painting with a "succession of drawings in black and white, brief statements of my theme, expressing only the essentials in masses of light and dark."

Although he spent the last 50 years of his professional career based in Woodstock, New York, he primarily drew upon the imagery of his native New Mexico and the Rocky Mountain West, where he had spent the first half of his life. In the summers he traveled to New Mexico, Utah and Colorado absorbing and sketching the landscape. It became the subject of his strong, bright abstract paintings with titles such as Mojave (Mojave Desert), Green River (Utah), Arroyo Hondo (near Taos, New Mexico), Chaco (Chaco Culture National Historical Park, New Mexico), Enchanted Mesa (near Acoma Pueblo, New Mexico), Ocaté (Chávez’s birthplace) and Gunnison (Black Canyon of the Gunnison, Colorado). Along with his post-war easel paintings, Chávez created several referentially abstract and abstract sculptures in bronze, steel and wood. One of his earliest pieces in this genre was a life-size bronze crucifix he fashioned in 1950 for the Episcopal Chapel in Woodstock. In the 1960s, he created several Abstract sculptures in black walnut, followed by largely Abstract bronzes during the following two decades. Some relate to ancient mythology, such as Icarus, while others are linked to specific geographical locations, such as Chama and Ocaté. Several bronzes explore Native American subjects, including Ouray (1977, 5 edition of 50). Referencing the 19th-century Ute Indian Chief Ouray who lived in southwest Colorado, it is a small standing piece with a slightly protruding shape in the center possibly alluding to an animal-skin Indian shield.

In 1977, Chávez sculpted a large standing totem, likewise titled Ouray, in black walnut. He treated the 19th-century mining town of Telluride, Colorado, which is a small bronze sculpture, Telluride III (c. 1980). He was inspired by the still-visible vestiges of the timber mining structures that began decaying in the mountains around the town following the 1893 Silver Crash and World War I. Chávez also was known as a fine craftsman for his unusual jewelry exhibited in the 1950s at the Woodstock Guild of Craftsmen. He also taught a class in jewelry making at the Guild as well as courses on the approach to design through materials in the 1960s. He likewise served as an instructor of drawing and painting at the Art Students League in New York (1954) and its summer school in Woodstock, New York (1955–58). He also was visiting professor of art at Colorado College in Colorado Springs (1959), assistant professor of art at Syracuse University in New York (1960–61) and instructor in art at Dutchess Community College in Poughkeepsie, New York (1963), and at the Albany Institute of Art in Albany, New York. He was Artist in Residence at the Huntington Museum of Art in West Virginia and lectured at Vassar College. He was an honorary member of the National Society of Mural Painters and served as chairman of the Woodstock Artists Association and a member of its Board of Trustees. A recipient of the Childe Hassam Purchase Award from the American Academy of Arts and Letters (1953), he also won the Albany Institute of Art Sculpture award (1965), and the Felton Sculpture award from the Silvermine Guild of Artists (1977). In recognition of his professional accomplishments, Chávez was made an Associate of the National Academy of Design in New York in 1970 and an Academician two years later.

to
1
1
Overall Width
to
Overall Height
to
2
1
2
1
1
2
2
3
666
644
560
336
2
2
2
Artist: Edward Chavez
Edward Chavez Primordial Landscape Modernist Southwestern Oil Painting
Edward Chavez Primordial Landscape Modernist Southwestern Oil Painting

Edward Chavez Primordial Landscape Modernist Southwestern Oil Painting

By Edward Chavez

Located in Denver, CO

A powerful modernist Southwestern oil painting by Edward (Eduardo) Chavez titled Primordial Landscape, depicting an abstracted desert-inspired terrain built through layered color, or...

Category

Mid-20th Century Abstract Edward Chavez Abstract Paintings

Materials

Oil

Eduardo Chavez Postwar Abstraction Bird Motif Oil Painting c 1980
Eduardo Chavez Postwar Abstraction Bird Motif Oil Painting c 1980

Eduardo Chavez Postwar Abstraction Bird Motif Oil Painting c 1980

By Edward Chavez

Located in Denver, CO

This striking abstract oil painting by American modernist Edward (Eduardo) Arcenio Chavez (1917–1995) features a dynamic bird motif rendered in bold, expressive color. Painted circa ...

Category

1980s Abstract Edward Chavez Abstract Paintings

Materials

Oil

Related Items
ABSTRACT Pastel Shark Artwork Contemporary Artist Martin Paaskesen Pink
ABSTRACT Pastel Shark Artwork Contemporary Artist Martin Paaskesen Pink

ABSTRACT Pastel Shark Artwork Contemporary Artist Martin Paaskesen Pink

Located in Barcelona, Barcelona

At Escat Gallery we are committed to maintaining the highest standards of trust and professionalism for our collectors. Every artwork in our collection comes with a Certificate of Au...

Category

2010s Abstract Edward Chavez Abstract Paintings

Materials

Linen, Oil, Acrylic

Bird. 2019, hardboard, oil, 41x28 cm
Bird. 2019, hardboard, oil, 41x28 cm

Bird. 2019, hardboard, oil, 41x28 cm

By Dmitry Lavrentjev

Located in Riga, LV

Bird. 2019, hardboard, oil, 41x28 cm

Category

2010s Abstract Expressionist Edward Chavez Abstract Paintings

Materials

Oil, Cardboard

Untitled Jacques Rouby (1953-2019) Contemporary abstract art painted cardboard
Untitled Jacques Rouby (1953-2019) Contemporary abstract art painted cardboard

Untitled Jacques Rouby (1953-2019) Contemporary abstract art painted cardboard

Located in Paris, FR

Painted sculpted cardboard Unique work Coming from the artist's studio Jacques ROUBY, the aesthetics of mystery "Experimental dreamer, passionate about graphic adventures, delibera...

Category

1990s Abstract Edward Chavez Abstract Paintings

Materials

Oil, Cardboard

Mid-Century - Horse Race #28 Pierre Bosco (Italy/France, 1909-1993)
Mid-Century - Horse Race #28 Pierre Bosco (Italy/France, 1909-1993)

Mid-Century - Horse Race #28 Pierre Bosco (Italy/France, 1909-1993)

By Pierre Bosco

Located in SANTA FE, NM

Mid-Century - Horse Race #28 Pierre Bosco (Italy/France, 1909-1993) Oil on canvas Signed lower right. 9 /78 x 6 7/8 (17 7/8 x 14 5/8 inches, frame size) *Frame appears to be original...

Category

1960s Abstract Expressionist Edward Chavez Abstract Paintings

Materials

Canvas, Oil

"Kinetic II", Mixed Media Shimmering Colorful Textured Abstract, Bright Colors
"Kinetic II", Mixed Media Shimmering Colorful Textured Abstract, Bright Colors

"Kinetic II", Mixed Media Shimmering Colorful Textured Abstract, Bright Colors

Located in Carmel, CA

Lesley Anne Spowart (American, born 1957) "Kinetic II" 2025 Mixed media, acrylic paint, and oil paint on paper glued over board Signed by the artist at the bottom right corner and on...

Category

2010s Abstract Edward Chavez Abstract Paintings

Materials

Mixed Media, Oil, Acrylic, Paper, Glue, Board

River In The Sea-Monroe Hodder, American, Abstract, Bold, Modern, sea, Blue, Oil
River In The Sea-Monroe Hodder, American, Abstract, Bold, Modern, sea, Blue, Oil

River In The Sea-Monroe Hodder, American, Abstract, Bold, Modern, sea, Blue, Oil

By Monroe Hodder

Located in Knowle Lane, Cranleigh

River In The Sea is an oil on canvas painting by American artist Monroe Hodder. Hodder’s abstract paintings are gloriously bold. Inspired by the urban backdrops of her life in New Yo...

Category

2010s Abstract Edward Chavez Abstract Paintings

Materials

Canvas, Oil, Acrylic

Mid-Century "The Horse Race" Pierre Bosco #50 B (Italy/France, 1909-1993)
Mid-Century "The Horse Race" Pierre Bosco #50 B (Italy/France, 1909-1993)

Mid-Century "The Horse Race" Pierre Bosco #50 B (Italy/France, 1909-1993)

By Pierre Bosco

Located in SANTA FE, NM

Mid-Century "The Horse Race" #50 B Pierre Bosco (Italy/France, 1909-1993) Oil on canvas Signed lower right. 15 x 12 inches, frame size “The savage art of Bosco bears its rudeness a...

Category

1960s Abstract Expressionist Edward Chavez Abstract Paintings

Materials

Canvas, Oil

"Rosettes III" (animalia, fauna, original abstract painting, bold, natural)
"Rosettes III" (animalia, fauna, original abstract painting, bold, natural)

"Rosettes III" (animalia, fauna, original abstract painting, bold, natural)

By Nicholas Evans

Located in Paris, IDF

"Rosettes III" is a graphic and bold abstract painting, of terracotta oil paint on canvas. The name pays homage to the captivating "rosettes," the distinctive and natural markings fo...

Category

21st Century and Contemporary Abstract Edward Chavez Abstract Paintings

Materials

Linen, Oil

The Calf is Your Spirit Animal, colorful abstract with text
The Calf is Your Spirit Animal, colorful abstract with text

The Calf is Your Spirit Animal, colorful abstract with text

By C. Dimitri

Located in Brooklyn, NY

Abstract, landscape and animal painting, The Calf is Your Spirit Animal is focused on color, movement and form. Oil paint on wood panel.

Category

2010s Abstract Edward Chavez Abstract Paintings

Materials

Oil, Wood Panel

Ice Birds, blue colors, bird patterned abstraction
Ice Birds, blue colors, bird patterned abstraction

Ice Birds, blue colors, bird patterned abstraction

By C. Dimitri

Located in Brooklyn, NY

"Make Me Proud or At Least Less Ashamed" captures a moment of quiet persistence. The surface shimmers with layered paint, paper, resin and copper, materials that hold both fragility ...

Category

2010s Abstract Edward Chavez Abstract Paintings

Materials

Copper

Untitled Jacques Rouby (1953-2019) Contemporary abstract art sculpted cardboard
Untitled Jacques Rouby (1953-2019) Contemporary abstract art sculpted cardboard

Untitled Jacques Rouby (1953-2019) Contemporary abstract art sculpted cardboard

Located in Paris, FR

Painted sculpted cardboard Unique work Coming from the artist's studio Jacques ROUBY, the aesthetics of mystery "Experimental dreamer, passionate about graphic adventures, delibera...

Category

1990s Abstract Edward Chavez Abstract Paintings

Materials

Oil, Cardboard

Untitled Jacques Rouby (1953-2019) Contemporary abstract art sculpted cardboard
Untitled Jacques Rouby (1953-2019) Contemporary abstract art sculpted cardboard

Untitled Jacques Rouby (1953-2019) Contemporary abstract art sculpted cardboard

Located in Paris, FR

Painted sculpted cardboard Unique work Coming from the artist's studio Jacques ROUBY, the aesthetics of mystery "Experimental dreamer, passionate about graphic adventures, delibera...

Category

1990s Abstract Edward Chavez Abstract Paintings

Materials

Oil, Cardboard

Edward Chavez abstract paintings for sale on 1stDibs.

Find a wide variety of authentic Edward Chavez abstract paintings available for sale on 1stDibs. You can also browse by medium to find art by Edward Chavez in canvas, fabric, oil paint and more. Much of the original work by this artist or collective was created during the 20th century and is mostly associated with the abstract style. Not every interior allows for large Edward Chavez abstract paintings, so small editions measuring 22 inches across are available. Customers who are interested in this artist might also find the work of D.S. Silver, Robert Freiman, and Frealon Norden Bibbins. Edward Chavez abstract paintings prices can differ depending upon medium, time period and other attributes. On 1stDibs, the price for these items starts at $3,250 and tops out at $8,750, while the average work can sell for $3,450.