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Sunday, September 14, 2025 |
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The Contemporary Arts Museum Houston presents a 20- year survey of the work of Trenton Doyle Hancock |
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Trenton Doyle Hancock, Miracle Machine #19 or Whisk Wish, 2006. Graphite, ink, acrylic on paper, 8 x 7 ! inches. Collection Anne and Joel Ehrenkranz, New York.
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HOUSTON, TX.- For nearly two decades since his graduation from Temple University, Trenton Doyle Hancock has brought to life a cast of colorfuland often not so colorfulcharacters through his work. At the center of Hancocks storytelling is an imaginative and epic narrative about fictional creatures called the Mounds, who populate a wildly fantastic, inventive landscape. The artists use of vivid imagery and mythology has earned him national and international recognition and prompted a fascination with the foundation of his practice. What emerges upon further examination of those foundations is a wide-range of influences including comics, graphic novels, cartoons, music, and film. While Hancocks paintings have become widely known, his drawingsboth discrete and monumentalhave not been fully explored before now. Trenton Doyle Hancock: Skin and Bones, 20 Years of Drawing is the first in-depth examination of Hancocks extensive body of drawings, collages, and works on paper.
The exhibition features more than two hundred works of art as well as a collection of the artists notebooks, sketchbooks, and studies, many showing the preparation for several public commissions. Comprehensive in scope, this survey includes works from 1984 to 2014, chronicling the foundation of the artists prolific career. The exhibition provides a glimpse into the evolution of Hancocks idiosyncratic vision beginning in his childhood. Ephemera such as early childhood drawings and the artists comic strip that ran in a college newspaper are featured to allow viewers to see the genesis of the artists mythology as well as the evolution of his practice.
Skin and Bones includes a range of the artists presentation of drawings from graphite on paper to paper affixed to canvas, from the use of collage to the use of wall as an expansive plane for monumental works. Inherent in the presentation of these drawings is the exploration of the artists conceptual framework and the narratives that manifest throughout his bodies of work. The exhibition presents a more focused concentration on his use of line and mark making as well as his approach to the tradition of drawing and his ability to implode that tradition through mechanical dexterity and conceptual weight.
The exhibition is organized into five sections:
Epidemic includes ephemera such as the artists early sketches, cartoons that he created for his college newspaper first at Paris Junior College and then later at Eastern Texas State University (now Texas A&M at Commerce), and features the debut of a new series of thirty drawings entitled Step and Screw.
The Studio Floor is a series of ten drawings that Hancock credits as the catalyst to his subsequent practice of bringing the graphic narrative of comic books and cartoons into his contemporary art practice.
Moundish includes drawings associated with the artists iconic mythology of the Mound: its birth, life, and death; the cosmology of characters that it encounters; and the struggles between good and evil.
From the Mirror examines self-portraiture within his work from the past two decades.
The final section, The Liminal Room, showcases stand-alone works that explore the artists experimentation with drawing as a medium and practice.
Among the works featured are monumental, site-specific wall drawings, wallpaper created by the artist and produced by the Fabric Workshop and Museum in Philadelphia, as well as the debut of a digital animation by the artist. The exhibition is organized by Valerie Cassel Oliver, CAMH Senior Curator. The exhibition will be on view at the Contemporary Arts Museum Houston through August 3, 2014 before travelling to the Akron Art Museum in Ohio where it will be on view September 6, 2014, to January 4, 2015.
Trenton Doyle Hancock was born in 1974 in Oklahoma City, OK, and lives and works in Houston, TX. Raised in Paris, TX, Hancock earned his BFA from Texas A&M University, Commerce, and his MFA from the Tyler School of Art at Temple University, Philadelphia. Hancock was featured in the 2000 and 2002 Whitney Biennial exhibitions, becoming one of the youngest artists in history to participate in this prestigious survey. He had his first solo exhibition at the Contemporary Arts Museum Houston in 2001. His work has been exhibited nationally and internationally at venues including The Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth, TX; The Museum of Contemporary Art, North Miami; Institute for Contemporary Art at the University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia; The Studio Museum in Harlem, New York; The University of South Florida Contemporary Art Museum, Tampa; The Savannah College of Art and Design, Savannah and Atlanta; The Weatherspoon Museum, Greensboro, NC; Sheldon Museum of Art, Lincoln, NE; Canzani Center Gallery, Columbus College of Art and Design, OH; Olympic Sculpture Park at the Seattle Art Museum, WA; The Fruitmarket Gallery, Edinburgh; and Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen, Rotterdam, The Netherlands. Hancocks mythology has been translated to the stage in an original ballet, Cult of Color: Call to Color, commissioned by Ballet Austin and Arthouse (now The Contemporary Austin). The ballet set design and costumes were created by Hancock with choreography by Stephen Mills and an original composition by Graham Reynolds. The ballet performances debuted in Austin in April 2008.
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