Kerry Awn

Last updated
Kerry Awn
KerryAwn3.jpg
Kerry Awn c.2014
Birth nameKerry Wallace Fitzgerald
Born1949 (age 7475)
Houston, Texas
Medium Comedian, muralist, iconographer
Nationality American
Years active1971- Present

Kerry Fitzgerald (born 1949), better known as Kerry Awn, is an American cartoonist, actor, muralist, comedian, musician, iconographer and poster artist. He is best known for his comedy and the iconic 'Austintatious' mural near the University of Texas campus, a landmark he created with two other artists. [1] Born in Houston as Kerry Fitzgerald, Awn became prominent on the Austin countercultural scene in the 1970s as a concert poster artist and as a member of the Uranium Savages.

Contents

Comedian: stand-up and comedy rock

Kerry Awn went to the Houston Comedy Workshop in 1981 and began his career as a comedian. In 1982 he joined Esther's Follies where his outlandish characters drew attention. [2] Awn continued with Esther's Follies as a regular for 30 years until 2011. [3] He has also been a regular at the Velveeta Room, the Austin comedy club named after one of Awn's characters, lounge lizard Ronnie Velveeta. [4] He is the original winner of the Funniest Person in Austin contest in 1986. Kerry Awn has performed extensively as a stand-up comic from Amarillo to Austin. [5]

'Austintatious' mural

Created in 1974, the mural dubbed 'Austintatious' is located on the north-facing wall of the 23rd Street Renaissance Market in Austin, Texas. Considered to be an important part of Austin history, the 40-year-old mural was damaged by graffiti in 1994 and again in January 2014. [6] The colorful mural shows a bustling town beneath a clear blue sky surrounding Stephen F. Austin who is holding a few armadillos. In June 2014, Kerry Awn joined the other two original artists Tom Bauman and Rick Turner, who had returned to restore the mural. They crowd-sourced to raise $30,000 for supplies and to afford five weeks away from work. The three artists also collaborated in 2003 to create the Tejas mural that covers the opposite end of the market.

The three Austintatious Artists returned for a major restoration in October 2021 in advance of the mural's 50th anniversary. The time capsule contained some finishing touches including some friends of the artists, Henry Gonzalez, Michel Priest, Earl Campbell and Ann Richards. This time the restoration was completed with funding from Austin's Dougherty Arts Center and the Phogg Foundation. The latter planned a 50th anniversary celebration April's Fools Day, 2023. [7]

The three artists, Kerry Awn, Bauman and Turner, came back to Austin again in April 2024 — Awn from Alpine, Turner from New York City and Bauman from Driftwood. They repainted the central portion of the fisheye-lens mural after a tagger wrote 5-foot-tall letters across it. [8]

The trio has made trips home in 1982, 2002, 2014, 2022 and 2024. Each time the artists have added new buildings and historical structures to the piece, Turner said. "(Additions are) normally dictated by whatever is happening in popular culture at the moment,... It keeps the mural alive. It is a living, evolving, growing thing." Awn expected the original mural might to last five years, adding, “We didn’t know it was gonna still be up 50 years later.” [9]

Other murals by Kerry Awn can be found on Planet K stores in the Austin area. One became the subject of a criminal charge, when the City of Bee Cave objected to it under its sign ordinance. In June 2012, after more than a year of battling over murals and building permits, Bee Cave City Council approved a settlement with the owner of Planet K. [10]

Cartoon and poster art

Kerry Awn's work appeared prominently in Austin's The Rag and Houston's Space City, early underground papers. Often Kerry Awn's art was featured on the cover of Space City. [11] During the heyday of the Armadillo World Headquarters, he created concert posters and handbills, many of which are archived in a collection at the Austin History Center. He was an among the group of artist known as the Armadillo Art Squad. [12] The collection includes posters that promoted shows at Austin venues such as the Roadhouse, Jovitas, The Ritz, Willies Steamboat, Armadillo World Headquarters, the Continental Club, Soap Creek Saloon, La Zona Rosa, Liberty Lunch, and the Velveeta Room.

Painting

Kerry Awn's painting of a young Willie Nelson is at the entrance to the new Outlaws & Armadillos exhibit at the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum in Nashville. The exhibit opened May 2018 and will run through early 2021. [13]

Awards

Kerry Awn was inducted into the Austin Arts Hall of Fame [14] and has been recognized by the City of Austin and the State of Texas for his contributions to the arts. [11] He was voted Austin's funniest person 10 years running by the Austin Chronicle.

Related Research Articles

<i>Austin Stories</i> American TV series or program

Austin Stories is an American sitcom that aired on MTV from September 10, 1997 until January 7, 1998. It aired Wednesday nights at 10:30 pm. The show aired twelve episodes filmed on location in Austin, Texas.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Armadillo World Headquarters</span> Bygone Texas music hall in Austin

Armadillo World Headquarters was an influential Texas music hall and beer garden in Austin at 52512 Barton Springs Road – at South First Street – just south of the Colorado River and downtown Austin. The 'Dillo flourished from 1970 to 1980. The structure that housed it, an old National Guard Armory, was demolished in 1981 and replaced by a 13-story office building.

William De White, better known as Guy Juke, is a Austin, Texas–based graphic artist and musician. As a poster artist he created memorable imagery for nightclubs such as Armadillo World Headquarters and was one of the 'Armadillo Art Squad'. His work is recognized for its blocky, sharp-edged figures on angular, geometric settings. Often darkly detailed, his work include shadowy and angular figures inspired by horror films, haunting western landscapes, and loopy cartoon characters.

The Austin American-Statesman is the major daily newspaper for Austin, the capital city of the U.S. state of Texas. It is owned by Gannett.

Jagmo, born Nels Jacobson, is a US artist and poster art historian born in Chicago in 1949. He moved to Austin, Texas in 1978 and began creating rock posters in 1981. For three years during the early 1980s Jacobson served as bar manager and promotional director for Austin's Club Foot. He has designed posters for live-music venues such as Liberty Lunch, Cain's Ballroom and The Fillmore, and for performers such as Stevie Ray Vaughan, the Ramones, Divine, Roky Erickson, Etta James, Dead Kennedys, the B-52's, Bonnie Raitt, Joe Ely, Los Lobos, the Pixies, Iggy Pop, Willie Nelson, Fela Kuti, Jimmie Dale Gilmore and Jerry Jeff Walker. In 1987, Jacobson helped organize the Texas-U.S.S.R. Musicians' Exchange tour of the Soviet Union and accompanied the performers to Leningrad, Moscow and Kyiv. He was art director for South by Southwest (SXSW) during its first six years, designing the original logo, and in 1998 founded the SXSW Continuing Legal Education program, which he continues to oversee in 2019. Jacobson has served on the packaging Grammy Award committees for the Texas and San Francisco chapters of the National Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences, and is a founding Director of the American Poster Institute and the South Austin Museum of Popular Culture, and a board member of The Rock Poster Society (TRPS).

ArmadilloCon is a science fiction convention held annually in Austin, Texas, USA, since 1979. As the second longest running science fiction convention in Texas, it is sponsored by the Fandom Association of Central Texas and is known for its emphasis on literary science fiction. ArmadilloCon was traditionally held in mid-October during the weekend of the Texas-OU football game, but moved to a late-summer/early-fall weekend in 1998.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Jim Franklin (artist)</span> American cartoonist

Jim Franklin is an artist, illustrator, and underground cartoonist best known for his poster art created for the Armadillo World Headquarters, a former Austin, Texas, music hall. He is also known for his detailed, surrealistic illustrations of armadillos, making them an emblem of underground music.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Esther's Follies</span>

Esther's Follies is a modern-day vaudeville theatre located on 6th Street in downtown Austin, Texas. The group is named after actress Esther Williams. Acts incorporate magic, juggling, singing, dancing, and sketches on current events. The show is fast-paced, and most of the acts incorporate a comedic theme.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">South Austin Popular Culture Center</span>

The Austin Museum of Popular Culture (AusPop) is a Texas 501(c)(3) nonprofit organisation dedicated to collecting, preserving, and exhibiting art and memorabilia that reflect Austin's eclectic contributions to popular culture worldwide.

Boyd Vance was an American stage actor, director and producer in Austin, Texas. Vance was particularly known for supporting and advancing African-American performing arts in Austin. In 1993 he co-founded ProArts Collective, which he directed until his death following unexpected heart surgery in 2005.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Spamarama</span> Food festival and cook-off in Austin, Minnesota

Spamarama (SPAMARAMA) is a long-time annual festival and competitive cookoff held in Austin, Texas, during 1978–2007 and in 2019 and 2022 to celebrate Spam, the branded canned pork product. The festival includes a Spam cook-off, Spam themed competitive activities, and live music.

Bill Narum was an artist, illustrator, and Texas counter-culture icon known for his work in popular entertainment, and for being one of the few non-natives to have lived with the Tarahumara tribe of northern Mexico in Copper Canyon.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">AJ Castillo</span> Musical artist

Arturo Castillo, Jr., better known as AJ Castillo, is an American singer of Mexican descent. He is a cumbia, and Tejano music recording artist, accordionist, singer, performer, and producer. His debut album, "Who I Am", was released in 2009. His second album, On My Way, was released in 2010. Castillo won Best New Artist – Male at the 2010 Tejano Music Awards.

The Folk Music Club was an organization founded in 1963 at the University of North Texas that attracted student musicians, several of whom went on with other performing artist to define a Texas music and cultural movement in Austin that grew to national prominence and left a legacy that endures today. Its student members included Spencer Perskin, Steven Fromholz, Ray Wylie Hubbard, Michael Martin Murphey, and Eddie Wilson.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">2020 United States Senate election in Texas</span>

The 2020 United States Senate election in Texas was held on November 3, 2020, to elect a member to the United States Senate to represent the State of Texas, concurrently with the 2020 U.S. presidential election, as well as other elections to the United States Senate in other states and elections to the United States House of Representatives and various state and local elections. Incumbent Republican Senator John Cornyn won re-election to a fourth term against Democratic nominee MJ Hegar by 9.6%.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">2018 Texas elections</span>

The 2018 general election was held in the U.S. state of Texas on November 6, 2018. All of Texas's executive officers were up for election as well as a United States Senate seat, and all of Texas's thirty-six seats in the United States House of Representatives. The Republican and Democratic Parties nominated their candidates by primaries held March 6, 2018. Convention Parties nominated their candidates at a series of conventions. County Conventions held March 17, 2018, District Conventions held March 24, 2018, and a State Convention held April 14, 2018. At the present time there is only one Convention Party in Texas, that is the Libertarian Party. Other parties may seek to achieve ballot access.

Micael Priest was an American artist and raconteur. Due to Priest's color-blindness, his primary medium was pen and ink, which he put to great use in inexpensively printed, highly graphic, rock posters. Often printed in single color or split-fountain reliefs, the posters were done mostly for Armadillo World Headquarters, a music hall in Austin, Texas that operated from August 7, 1970 to December 31, 1980.

Lashonda Lester was an American stand-up comedian from Austin, Texas. Her posthumous debut album, Shondee Superstar, was released by Dan Schlissel's Stand Up! Records in 2019, and was critically praised. John-Michael Bond of Paste magazine called her "a rare talent with a preternatural gift for razor-sharp storytelling." Marc Maron called her a "funny, authentic, hard-working comic who had her own voice... That’s an honest comic. The best kind."

Doug Mellard is a Los Angeles–based American stand-up comedian originally from Texas. He is known for his appearances on Last Comic Standing, Live at Gotham, and his work with comedian Doug Benson. The Austin American-Statesman called him "a high-energy crowd destroyer."

<i>Groovers Paradise</i> Album by Doug Sahm

Groover's Paradise is an album by Doug Sahm, produced by musician Doug Clifford and released on Warner Records in 1974. Following his return to Texas after his success with the Sir Douglas Quintet in California, Sahm settled in Austin, Texas. As the local music scene thrived, he was featured as the main attraction in local clubs and he recorded his debut album for Atlantic Records.

References

  1. Christine Ayala (2014-07-27). "Mural at University Co-op keeps its artists together for 40 years". American-Statesman Statesman. Retrieved 2014-09-27.
  2. Chip Chandler (2012-07-04). "'Austin's funniest person' starts comedy night series". Amarillo Globe-News. Retrieved 2014-10-05.
  3. Robert Faires (2011-03-18). "After 30 years, Awn is off". Austin Chronicle. Retrieved 2014-10-10.
  4. "The Velveeta Room with Howard Beecher and Adam Shumate". Austin360. 2011-05-20. Archived from the original on 2014-10-14. Retrieved 2014-10-07.
  5. "Kerry Awn". The Velveeta Comedy Lounge. Retrieved 2014-10-06.
  6. Alyssa Mahoney (2014-02-18). "Artists and University Co-op crowdsource to restore 40-year-old mural defaced by graffiti". Daily Texan. Retrieved 2014-09-25.
  7. Barbaro, Nick (October 28, 2022). "Public Land for Public Good". Austin Chronicle. Retrieved November 27, 2022.
  8. Grumet, Bridget (2024-04-03). "How iconic 'Austintatious' mural near UT Austin campus became work of a lifetime". Austin American Statesman. Retrieved April 5, 2024.
  9. Engstrom, Amelia (2024-04-03). "`Austintatious' original artists, UT alumni return to restore mural after defacing". The Daily Texan. Retrieved April 5, 2024.
  10. Meagan OToole-Pitts (2012-06-26). "Bee Cave settles with AusPro over Planet K murals, permits". Lake Travis View. Retrieved 2014-09-27.
  11. 1 2 Thorne Dreyer (2011-05-13). "Artist, Musician, Actor & Comic Kerry Awn". The Rag Blog. Retrieved 2014-09-27.
  12. "Kerry Awn Posters". Austin History Center, Austin Public Library. 2014-09-27. Retrieved 2014-10-05.
  13. Blackstock, Peter (2018-06-13). "Austin360 On The Record: Outlaws & Armadillos, Tish Hinojosa, more". Austin American Statesman.
  14. "On Culture's Front Lines The 2005 class of the Austin Arts Hall of Fame". The Austin Chronicle. 3 June 2005.