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Celebrating the 100th anniversary of the artists birth, this exhibition
and its companion show, Jerry Bywaters: Lone Star Printmaker, focus
on a lifetime spent participating in and studying the cultural life of
the American Southwest by Dallas art figure Jerry Bywaters (1906-1989).
The title is drawn from an unpublished essay about Bywaters by his longtime
friend, Dr. John Chapman. An active painter, Professor Bywaters served
for thirty-five years as a faculty member in Southern Methodist Universitys
Division of Fine Arts and as Director of the Dallas Museum of Fine Arts
from 1943 to 1964. This exhibition, featured in the museums firstfloor
galleries, will explore different facets of Bywaterss paintingslandscapes,
architecture and urban themes, portraiture, and genre scenesas well
as Bywaters career as a mural painter. The works of art will be
supplemented with archival holdings from the artists personal papers
in the Jerry Bywaters Collection on Art of the Southwest, housed at SMUs
Hamon Arts Library.
Underlying all of Bywaterss work was some perspective on the interaction
of people and the land, whether the land served as a source of livelihood,
a stage for historical events, a backdrop for architecture, or, as found
in the landscape section that opens the exhibition, simply as a source
of artistic inspiration. For Bywaters, familiarity with the natural world
and incorporating it and its effects were basic to his art. In a 1928
letter explaining his decision to work as a studioinstead of a commercialartist,
Bywaters reminded his father that I must be out of doors.
Landscape afforded Bywaters an avenue of experimentation with media and
he worked with equal ability in oil (Ranch Gate), watercolor (Near
Abiqui), and pastel (Chisos Mountains). Although his heyday
was the ten-year period from 1933 to 1943, when he was able to travel
frequently to Arizona, Colorado, New Mexico, and West Texas, Bywaters
continued depicting landscapes long after he had turned away from other
subjects.
Bywaterss fascination with landforms and other aspects of the natural
world led him to an equal interest in human traces on the landscape (one
of his most important relationships was a friendship with noted Texas
architect ONeill Ford that began in the 1920s and lasted throughout
their lives). Cathedral in Burgos, Spain (1927) and House in
Old Lyme, Connecticut (1928) evidence Bywaters shortlived experimentation
with Impressionist techniques but also his far more enduring interest
in architectural forms, which lasted until the end of his artistic activity,
as exemplified by Adobe House in Taos (1974). Bywaters utilizes
architecture as a lens to view the Southwests past in an almost
wistful way in The New Highway Passed em By (1938) and its
future with gentle humor in Texas Subdivision, executed in the
same year.
In portraiture, Bywaters painted subjects from all walks of life, including
nuns he observed on a boyhood train trip, a member of the Navajo tribe
encountered during a visit to Shiprock, Arizona, and prominent Dallas
architect David Williams. Regardless of the cultural background of any
given subject, though, Bywaters wanted to convey a sense of the character
of the individual sitter. Similarly, his genre scenes depict individuals
in various tasks of everyday life, be they cowboys at a rodeo, oil field
workers wrestling with a drill bit, Mexican women washing clothes in a
stream, or mourners at the funeral of a child.
The same year that he wrote the aforementioned letter to his father, Bywaters
became fascinated with the burgeoning Mexican muralist movement and spent
several months touring in Mexico getting to know the work of two of its
leaders, José Clemente Orozco and Diego Rivera. A few years later
he undertook his first mural project with his close friend, Alexandre
Hogue, executing ten panels in Dallas City Hall. The exhibition will give
visitors a glimpse of Bywaterss work as a Texas muralist by displaying
creations related to his murals in Farmersville and Quanah and his submissions
for the Amarillo and San Antonio competitions. Bywaters also had a career
as a printmaker, as explored in the concurrent exhibition at the Meadows
Museum, Jerry Bywaters: Lone Star Printmaker. Between the two exhibitions,
visitors will be able to compare and contrast five examples of the artists
treatment of the same or similar subject matter with different media.
The catalogue that accompanies the exhibition, published by Texas A&M
University Press in collaboration with the Meadows Museum, reproduces
more than forty of Bywaters paintings in a full-color gallery and
includes essays by three scholars who knew and worked with Bywaters: Dr.
Sam Ratcliffe (exhibition guest curator and head of the Jerry Bywaters
Collection on Art of the Southwest), John Lunsford, former director of
the Meadows Museum and curator emeritus of the Dallas Museum of Art, and
Dr. Francine Carraro, executive director of the Abbe Museum. These essays
examine the roles that Bywaters played as an archivist/historian, museum
professional, and artist and are preceded by an introductory essay by
the premier historian of American regionalist painting, Dr. William H.
Gerdts. In addition to the paintings, the book is illustrated with drawings,
photographs, letters, documents, and ephemera from the artists papers.
Jerry Bywaters: Interpreter of the Southwest has been organized
by the Meadows Museum, in collaboration with Bywaters Special Collections,
Hamon Arts Library at SMU. Major funding for this exhibition and publication
has been provided by The Meadows Foundation.
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