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Magazine articles page for Alexandre Hogue ((1898 - 1994)), known for Indian genre and modernist-leaning landscape painter, lithographs graphics. Showing 12 magazine articles.
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1898 Memphis, Missouri - 1994 Tulsa, Oklahoma. Known for: Indian genre and modernist-leaning landscape painter, lithographs graphics.
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... Read full biography
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... Read full biography
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... Read full biography
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... Read full biography
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 il... Read full biography
Alexandre Hogue - Artist Info
About Alexandre Hogue: Magazine Ads
Magazine Articles (12)
Magazine articles based on askART research. List may not be comprehensive.
- The Modern West: American Landscapes, 1890-1950February 2007Neff, Emily BallewAmerican Art Review
- News Beat-On the SceneJune 2004Editors, Southwest ArtSouthwest Art
- Art Events-New MexicoJune 2003Bucher, KristinSouthwest Art
- American Revival of Tempera PaintingApril 2002Boyle, Richard JAmerican Art Review
- Dallas Museum of ArtDecember 2001Harvey, Eleanor; Lyle GrayAmerican Art Review
- Frank Reaugh and His StudentsOctober 2001Grauer, MichaelAmerican Art Review
- A Sense of PlaceOctober 2000Greene, Alison De LimaSouthwest Art
- Painting in DallasOctober 1999Harvey, Eleanor JonesAmerican Art Review
- Oil Patch DreamsOctober 1998Carraro, FrancineAmerican Art Review
- Images of the American PrairieOctober 1996Editor, American ArtistAmerican Artist
- Plain PicturesOctober 1996Kinsey, Joni LAmerican Art Review
- Texas Modern & Post ModernMarch 1996Greene, Alison de LimaAmerican Art Review
