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Magazine articles page for Andrew Dasburg ((1887 - 1979)), known for Modernist landscape, portrait and still-life painting. Showing 14 magazine articles.
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1887 Paris, France - 1979 Taos, New Mexico. Known for: Modernist landscape, portrait and still-life painting.
Born in Paris, France, Andrew Dasburg became a pioneer of American modernism. He was a master teacher at Woodstock, New York where, with Konrad Cramer, he rebelled against the traditional and... Read full biography
Born in Paris, France, Andrew Dasburg became a pioneer of American modernism. He was a master teacher at Woodstock, New York where, with Konrad Cramer, he rebelled against the traditional and sensitive approach to landscape of John Fabian Carlson and Birge Harrison. He married Grace Mott Johnson,... Read full biography
Born in Paris, France, Andrew Dasburg became a pioneer of American modernism. He was a master teacher at Woodstock, New York where, with Konrad Cramer, he rebelled against the traditional and sensitive approach to landscape of John Fabian Carlson and Birge Harrison. He married Grace Mott Johnson, an artist, in 1909, and in 1918, he began summer trips to Taos, New Mexico at the invitation of Mabel Dodge Luhan. He settled there in 1930. In New York, he studied at the Art Students League with... Read full biography
Born in Paris, France, Andrew Dasburg became a pioneer of American modernism. He was a master teacher at Woodstock, New York where, with Konrad Cramer, he rebelled against the traditional and sensitive approach to landscape of John Fabian Carlson and Birge Harrison. He married Grace Mott Johnson, an artist, in 1909, and in 1918, he began summer trips to Taos, New Mexico at the invitation of Mabel Dodge Luhan. He settled there in 1930. In New York, he studied at the Art Students League with Kenyon Cox and Birge Harrison, whose tonalist style he countered by helping to form a Fauve group called the Sunflower Club, dedicated to using bright colors. He then went to France. He exhibited in the Armory Show of 1913 and is associated with American... Read full biography
Born in Paris, France, Andrew Dasburg became a pioneer of American modernism. He was a master teacher at Woodstock, New York where, with Konrad Cramer, he rebelled against the traditional and sensitive approach to landscape of John Fabian Carlson and Birge Harrison. He married Grace Mott Johnson, an artist, in 1909, and in 1918, he began summer trips to Taos, New Mexico at the invitation of Mabel Dodge Luhan. He settled there in 1930. In New York, he studied at the Art Students League with Kenyon Cox and Birge Harrison, whose tonalist style he countered by helping to form a Fauve group called the Sunflower Club, dedicated to using bright colors. He then went to France. He exhibited in the Armory Show of 1913 and is associated with American Synchromist painters of that time, having shared a house at Woodstock with Synchromist leader Morgan Russell.... Read full biography
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Magazine Articles (14)
Magazine articles based on askART research. List may not be comprehensive.
- The Henri Circle & the American ImpAugust 2004Danly, SusanAmerican Art Review
- The 21st Annual Spring Arts CelebraApril 2004Editor, Art-TalkArt-Talk
- Art Events-New MexicoOctober 2003Schneider, WolfSouthwest Art
- Art Events-New MexicoJune 2003Bucher, KristinSouthwest Art
- BooksJanuary 2003Editors, ARTnewsARTnews
- Modernists in TaosDecember 2002Witt, David L.American Art Review
- The Old Jail Art CenterDecember 2001Blagg, MargaretAmerican Art Review
- Art EventsFebruary 2001Editors, Southwest ArtSouthwest Art
- The Art of CollectingOctober 2000Editors, Southwest ArtSouthwest Art
- Into the WildDecember 1999Wilkinson, ToddSouthwest Art
- In the GalleriesNovember 1999Editor, Art TalkArt-Talk
- Taos Artists & Their PatronsAugust 1999Campbell, SuzanAmerican Art Review
- An Insider's View of TaosApril 1999Busler, LeslieSouthwest Art
- To Be ModernAugust 1996Yount,SylviaAmerican Art Review
