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Perry House - "Happyville"
press kit |
Sat. Oct. 17 - Sun. Nov. 22, 2009
opening reception - Saturday October 17,
6 to 9 PM
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to view more work, all images compressed 300 dpi format for viewing this
page.
select and copy images
for 300 dpi hard copy publication. back
to Perry House web page
.
Speaking
with the artist
on
Houston, his career, and Happyville
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Born in Orange Texas in
1943, Perry House graduated from the California College of Arts, Oakland,
CA in 1970 and has been living and working in Houston for the last 30 years.
As Houston's art scene was coming of age, House was one of the early pioneers
of abstraction, showing with some of the most historically notable galleries
in Houston, including William Graham, Davis/McClain, and Inman galleries.
In the collection of the Houston Museum of Fine Arts, the artist
received an NEA fellowship award in 1990 and mounted solo efforts at Diverse
Works in 2000, curated by Susie Kalil, and 2004 at the Galveston Arts Center
curated by Clint Willour.
Perry House's earlier bodies
of works from 1987 and 1994 (ill. 7 and 8 below) defy as much convention
as possible while still being able to refer to the finished art object
as a painting. The artist in these works strips away decoration, narrative,
sex, politics, and even perspective, while at the same time evoking the
passage of time, weight, depth, and our mortal coil. Artists in early Houston
of Perry House's generation, Dick Wray, Don Foster, and Lucas Johnson,
hung out together, had to hang together, and had to hang tough in a provincial
backwater. They were the few, but remained undaunted until the culture
in Houston caught up.
Well now it's time to celebrate.
Perry House and a few others survived, and are doing quite well in the
new millennium. House arrives in "Happyville" with a more or less optimistic
perspective as well as metaphorical overview of who, what and where we
are going.
"My art has always been about
some particular opposites. Elegance and violence, humor and horror, the
sacred and the profane. Things are sectioned, distorted and exploded. That's
been my artist's statement as long as I can remember. I have it tacked
to the wall" |
House quotes the late
great and boisterous Los Angeles artist of the 1950 and '60's John Altoon.
" I'm drawing a picture in my mind of what's on your mind. I'm a little
confused in my mind, but your mind is coming in clear as hell."
For Perry House the Happyville
series is another version of Vanitas. "The neighborhoods are still-lifes
in a way. They are in transition like everything in our lives." The
traditional vanitas painting was popular in the Netherlands in the early
1600's and contains collections of objects symbolic of the inevitability
of death and the transience and vanity of earthly achievements and pleasures.
In Perry House's latest body
of work the colors are indeed joyful, there is plenty of perspective, with
recognizable architectural elements not evident in earlier works even while
the world and worldly things are floating away and the happiness precious
but fleeting. (courtesy DMA Nau-haus 2009) |
Happyville series, acrylic
on canvas, 48"x 60" y.2009
Happyville series, acrylic
on canvas, 48"x 48" y.2009
Happyville series, acrylic
on canvas, 48"x 96" y.2009
Happyville series, acrylic
on canvas, 24"x 72" y.2009
Happyville series, acrylic
on canvas, 48"x 48" y.2009
.
Perry House 1987 series
on canvas (ill. 7) not 300 dpi, image
avaible at higher resolution on request (dan@nau-haus.com)
Perry House 1994 series
water media on paper (ill. 8) not 300 dpi, image avaible
at higher resolution on request (dan@nau-haus.com)
|
back to Perry House web page
Naü-
-haus
.
.
223 E. 11th St
Houston Texas, 77008
713-482-8357
On
view weekends noon to 5 during May
or
by apointment / 713-261-1409
contact:
dan@nau-haus.com
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