DALLAS, TX.- Alexandre Hogue: The Erosion Series presents the first exhibition ever devoted to a review of the works that made the artist both famous and infamous during the unfolding of the Dust Bowl in the 1930s. The exhibition, on view February 16 through June 15, 2014, features more than 25 works from private collections and public institutions, including that of the
DMA, by this member of the so-called Dallas Nine. Alexandre Hogue: The Erosion Series is drawn, in part, from the touring exhibition Alexandre Hogue: An American VisionaryPaintings and Works on Paper, organized by the Rockwell Museum of Western Art in Corning, New York. Additional loans arranged by the DMA will make the Dallas presentation unique, and provide a full account of this important body of work.
We are delighted to exhibit a selection of works from Alexandre Hogue, whose relationship with the DMA is profound and enduring, with a holding of 35 of the artists works in the collection, said Maxwell L. Anderson, The Eugene McDermott Director of the Dallas Museum of Art. We invite a new generation of viewers to encounter the prophetic vision of this distinguished artist whose understanding of our natural environment, and mankinds need to live in concert with the land, inspired this exceptional group of works.
Alexandre Hogues deep concern for environmental issues spanned the entirety of his career. The land-management failures that spawned the devastation of the Dust Bowl decade of the 1930s were witnessed by Hogue firsthand on his brother-in-laws ranch near Dalhart, Texas, and became the impetus for some of the artists most powerful imagerythe Erosion series. Works such as the DMAs own Drouth Stricken Area served as an alarm to the public and an accusation and rebuke to powers that, through encouraging poor farming practices, had helped to produce the greatest ecological disaster in American history.
"Current drought conditions and the decreasing water supplies in the Southwest certainly make Hogues striking imagery from the dirty 30s seem amazingly prescient, said Sue Canterbury, The Pauline Gill Sullivan Associate Curator of American Art at the Dallas Museum of Art. The Dust Bowl was a man-made disaster, and it is impossible to view these works without considering the choices we each need to make in our relationship with the environment and our use of its resources.
Born in Missouri in 1898, Hogue moved with his family to Denton, Texas, early in his life. After a year at the Minneapolis College of Art and Design and a short stint as an illustrator at the Dallas Morning News, Hogue moved to New York City in the early 1920s to work in advertising and study in the citys museums. Every summer, Hogue would return to Texas, eventually moving back in 1925 to work with fellow artists. In the early 1930s, Hogue became one of the original members of the Dallas Nine, a group of painters, printmakers and sculptors active in Dallas who focused on the Southwest landscape as their inspiration. The group, active from the 1930s into the early 1940s, presented their work a number of times at the Dallas Museum of Art, including in Exhibition of Young Dallas Painters: The Dallas Nine in 1932 at the Dallas Museum of Fine Arts, and they were the focus of the 1985 exhibition Lone Star Regionalism: The Dallas Nine and Their Circle, 19281945. Hogue moved to Tulsa, Oklahoma, and was head of the art department at the University of Tulsa from 1945 to 1963; he remained in Tulsa until his death in 1994.
Alexandre Hogue: The Erosion Series is included in the Museums free general admission.