San Pedro Art Association

Last updated
San Pedro Art Association
Formation1936
Founded at San Pedro, Los Angeles

The San Pedro Art Association, established in 1936, is an art association set within the Los Angeles Harbor community of California. It has a history of established and well known artists dating back to its inception. Through exhibitions and public lectures, it encouraged works beyond representational art, and included figurative and abstract expressionist paintings in the 1950s. Though it originally exhibited primarily watercolor and oil paintings, the association evolved to include various other mediums and art forms.

Contents

History

The San Pedro Art Association (SPAA) was established in 1936 in San Pedro, California. The original members' goals focused on expanding art in San Pedro and its surrounding communities. [1] The association was formed by local artists in the community and it held seasonal art shows and exhibitions that were juried by established professionals and awarded artists in both oil painting and watercolor mediums. [2] [3] [4] The SPAA has historically sponsored cultural art exchanges with artists outside the United States; [5] [6] [7] this tradition continues through current exhibitions. Since then, the association has expanded and is known for bringing local artists together with varied art forms that include painting, photography, sculpture, ceramics, woodworking and jewelry making. [8] Exhibitions continue to be presented seasonally and are open to the public.

In 1953, under the direction of its President Jay Meuser, the San Pedro Art Association wrote many of its bylaws and became a non-profit corporation providing a structure for the future growth of its membership and activities. [9] Some of the significant stated goals that continue to be utilized and implemented are:

These established goals of enriching the community through art were significant and continue today as an important function of the foundation for the organization and its membership. The San Pedro Art Association is responsible for art lectures and demonstrations by local and other prominent artists as well as providing community events and monthly artwalks of galleries in historical downtown San Pedro. [8] [10]

In 2011, the San Pedro Art Association had its 75th anniversary celebration and exhibition. Under the leadership of the association's president John Stinson, San Pedro Art Association was presented with certificates of recognition by the Los Angeles City and County as well as the State of California. [11]

Honors and recognition

[11]

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Millard Sheets</span> American artist (1907–1989)

Millard Owen Sheets was an American artist, teacher, and architectural designer. He was one of the earliest of the California Scene Painting artists and helped define the art movement. Many of his large-scale building-mounted mosaics from the mid-20th century are still extant in Southern California. His paintings are in the Metropolitan Museum of Art and the Whitney Museum in New York, the Chicago Art Institute, the National Gallery in Washington D.C.; and the Los Angeles County Museum.

Salomón Huerta is a painter based in Los Angeles, California. Huerta was born in Tijuana, Mexico, and grew up in the Boyle Heights Projects in East Los Angeles. Huerta received a full scholarship to attend the Art Center College of Design in Pasadena and completed his MFA at UCLA in 1998. Huerta gained critical acclaim and commercial attention in the late 1990s for his minimalist portraits of the backs of people's heads and color-saturated depictions of domestic urban architecture. He was included in the 2000 Whitney Biennial and has been featured in numerous exhibitions around the US, Europe, and Latin America such as The Gagosian Gallery in London, England, and Studio La Città in Verona, Italy.

Elyse Pignolet is a visual artist living and working in Los Angeles, California.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Colin Campbell Cooper</span> American painter

Colin Campbell Cooper, Jr. was an American impressionist painter of architectural paintings, especially of skyscrapers in New York City, Philadelphia, and Chicago. An avid traveler, he was also known for his paintings of European and Asian landmarks, as well as natural landscapes, portraits, florals, and interiors. In addition to being a painter, he was also a teacher and writer. His first wife, Emma Lampert Cooper, was also a highly regarded painter.

Timothy J. Clark is an American artist best known for his large watercolor paintings of urban landscapes, still lifes, and interiors, and for his oil and watercolor portraits. His paintings and drawings are in the permanent collections of more than twenty art museums.

Roger Edward Kuntz was a highly accomplished Southern California landscape painter and a member of the Claremont Group of painters - professors and graduates of Pomona College, Scripps College, and the Claremont Graduate School. A figurative artist with an eye for abstract form, he won critical acclaim for striking compositions that transform an unusual array of subjects, including tennis players, domestic interiors, freeways, road signs, bathtubs and the Goodyear Blimp. A retrospective exhibition of his work, at the Laguna Art Museum in Laguna Beach, CA in 2009, was aptly titled "Roger Kuntz: The Shadow Between Representation and Abstraction". In the exhibition catalogue, curator Susan M. Anderson wrote: "Kuntz's work of the late 1950s and early 1960s quintessentially embodied the experimentation, fragmentation, and paradox in American culture of the time."

Maxwell Hendler is an American painter. In 1975, he became the first contemporary artist to have pictures in the collection of the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York.

Roland Conrad Petersen is a Danish-born American painter, printmaker, and professor. His career spans over 50 years, primarily in the San Francisco Bay Area and is perhaps best-known for his "Picnic series" beginning in 1959 to today. He is part of the Bay Area Figurative Movement.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Alexandra Bradshaw</span> Canadian-American painter

Alexandra Bradshaw, also known as Alexandra Bradshaw Hoag, was a Canadian-American watercolor artist and art professor. She studied art in the United States and Paris and became an instructor and head of the Fine Arts department at Fresno State College in California. Her works were exhibited in group and solo exhibitions throughout California and the United States from the 1930s through the 1960s. She married late in life to Clarence Hoag, the founder of Hoag Press in Boston. Their residence in Wakefield, Massachusetts, was Castle Clare and Bradshaw kept her house in South Laguna, California.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Francis McComas (painter)</span> Australian-American painter

Francis McComas (1875–1938) was an Australian-born artist who spent most of his adult life in California, receiving some national recognition. He was one of the few California artists invited to exhibit in the 1913 International Exhibition of Modern Art in New York.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Jay Meuser</span> American painter

Jay Meuser was an American abstract expressionist painter. Meuser's style was versatile and his works prolific. In his lifetime he worked as an illustrator, portrait painter and cartoonist for several newspaper editorial pages.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Guy Diehl</span> American painter

Guy Louis Diehl is an American artist best known for still life paintings and prints, many of which incorporate direct references to historically significant artists and artworks.

Kim McCarty is an artist and watercolor painter living and working in Los Angeles, California. Her work has been exhibited in over twenty solo exhibitions in New York and Los Angeles. She often works in large formats using layers of monochromatic colors.

Travis Collinson is a visual artist whose paintings take elements from photographs and sketches and reinterpret them at larger scale.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Jack Hooper (artist)</span> American painter (1928–2014)

Jack Hooper was an American painter, muralist, sculptor, printmaker and art educator. Hooper was a major figure on the Southern California art scene, belonging to that generation of Los Angeles painters who matured during the late 1950s and the 1960s, painters such as John Altoon, Sam Amato, Robert Irwin, Lee Mullican, William Brice and Billy Al Bengston. He was an innovator in the use of new materials, most importantly plastic in art. He is known for abstract expressionist, mural and figurative painting. Hooper has exhibited in art museums and galleries nationally and internationally including solo shows in Europe, Mexico and the United States. Modeling renown UCLA art professor and figurative artist, Jan Stussy, the last 20 years of his life were spent in rural Mexico, where he drew and painted every single day until his death.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Ron Linden</span> American painter

Ron Linden is a California abstract painter, independent curator, and associate professor of art at Los Angeles Harbor College, Wilmington. He lives and works in the San Pedro area of Los Angeles.

Donna N. Schuster was an American easel painter, who created work in the style of modern impressionism using the medium of oil and watercolor. She focused her work in Wisconsin then later moved to Los Angeles, California where she died in 1953.

Carolyn Castaño, is an American visual artist. She is the recipient of the Joan Mitchell Foundation Grant for Painters and Sculptors (2013), the California Community Foundation Getty Fellow Mid-Career Grant (2011), and the City of Los Angeles Individual Artist Grant (2011). She is an Assistant Professor, Drawing & Painting, at Long Beach City College.

Rexford Elson Brandt was an American artist and educator. Much of his oeuvre consists of paintings inspired by the life and geography of the West Coast of the United States, particularly California. Brandt worked in multiple mediums including print making, oil painting and watercolor painting. He gained national recognition for his watercolor painting during the period from the mid-1930s to the 1990s. Early in his career he was associated with California Scene Painting but after World War II Brandt focused on complex, semi-abstract works. The depiction of the regenerative warmth of the sun was a central focus of his painting; he wrote that "Everyone has hang-ups, I suppose. Mine is sunshine. Not sunlight -- although I like to paint sunlight too."

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Susan Landauer</span> American art historian and curator (1958–2020)

Susan Landauer (1958–2020) was an American art historian, author, and curator of modern and contemporary art based in California. She worked for three decades, both independently and as chief curator of the San Jose Museum of Art (SJMA) and co-founder of the San Francisco Center for the Book. Landauer was known for championing movements and idioms of California art, overlooked artists of the past, women artists, and artists of color. She organized exhibitions that gained national attention; among the best known are: "The San Francisco School of Abstract Expressionism", "Visual Politics: The Art of Engagement", and retrospectives of Elmer Bischoff, Roy De Forest, and Franklin Williams. Her work was recognized with awards and grants from the International Association of Art Critics, National Endowment for the Arts and Henry Luce Foundation, among others. Critics, including Roberta Smith and Christopher Knight, praised her scholarship on San Francisco Abstract Expressionism, De Forest, Richard Diebenkorn, and Bernice Bing, among others, as pioneering. In 2021, Art in America editor and curator Michael Duncan said that "no other scholar has contributed as much to the study of California art." Landauer died of lung cancer at age 62 in Oakland on December 19, 2020.

References

  1. "Art Association Beginnings". San Pedro News-Pilot, San Pedro, CA. 2 September 1948. p. 6.
  2. "Art Gallery Opens Today". Independent Press Telegram, Long Beach, CA. 22 March 1953. p. B-1.
  3. "250 Attend New Art Gallery Opening in Plaza Park Building". San Pedro News Pilot, San Pedro, CA. 23 March 1952. p. 1.
  4. "Permanent Art Gallery". San Pedro News Pilot, San Pedro, CA. March 25, 1953.
  5. "Pan American Exchange Exhibitionto be Shown". San Pedro News-Pilot, San Pedro, CA. Aug 10, 1949. p. 7.
  6. "Art Exhibit of Foreign Art at San Pedro Slated Tomorrow". Long Beach Press Telegram, Long Beach, CA. Aug 11, 1949.
  7. "Brazilian Painting at SP Art Show". San Pedro News-Pilot, San Pedro, CA. Nov 6, 1976.
  8. 1 2 "San Pedro: A Different Kind of Burgeoning Art Scene". LA Weekly, Los Angeles, CA. Jan 9, 2004.
  9. "City of Los Angeles". Resolution for the San Pedro Art Association on the Occasion of its 75th Anniversary. Sep 16, 2011.
  10. "Downtown SP on the Upswing". Daily Breeze, Torrance, CA. May 30, 2002.
  11. 1 2 Knabe, Don (September 13, 2011). "Knabe Commemorates San Pedro Art Association's 75th Anniversary". San Pedro News Pilot.