GENERAL DESCRIPTION
The most influential large scale teaching effort [in Dallas' art community] occurred in 1926 when Olin Travis, recently returned from extensive study at The Art Institute of Chicago, established the Dallas Art Institute on the second floor of a building at 1215 1/2 Main Street. This school offered the first selection of classes in several art fields, such as painting (portrait, landscape, and still life), composition, life drawing, sculpture, art history, costume design, illustration, and commercial art. The faculty included Kathryn Hail Travis, painter and wife of the founder, Thomas M. Stell, Jr., and other professional specialists. Summer classes were held in the Ozark mountains of Arkansas.
The Dallas Art Institute produced a wide range of talented students who also enriched the local art ranks such as Everett Spruce, Charles T. Bowling, J. O. Mahoney, Jerry Bywaters, Lloyd Goff, Ruby Stone, and Ralph Rountree, already listed among entrants in the early Annual Allied Arts Exhibitions of Dallas County. Others who studied at the Institute and became professional artists included William Lester, William Elliott, Grace Turner, Allie Gatteys, Amelia Urbach, James Brooks, Bertha Landers, Bill McClanahan, Honore Guilbeau, Emil Guidroz, Bill Cole, and Mike Owen.
In the early years of the Great Depression, student enrollment decreased dramatically. The Institute was reorganized with a civic board, and the school was moved to the grounds of the Civic Federation, an enlightened institution headed by Elmer Scott and Gaynell Hawkins. The Institute flourished under these benevolent influences and an enlarged faculty. It also became a focal point, at Maple Avenue and Alice Street, for the famous Alice Street Art Carnivals where an average of some seventy artists developed an avid audience for their wares at depression prices.
In 1935, the Dallas Art Institute moved to larger quarters at 2503 McKinney Avenue, an early Dallas home built of hand-made "south Dallas pink" bricks and remodeled to suit the needs of art classes. The next, and final, move of the Institute was in 1941 into the school wing of the recently completed art museum in Fair Park. There the Institute continued for two years until it was deemed wise by the Trustees of the Museum that a new school should be developed with an art curriculum more compatible with the opportunities available at the museum. Thus for some fifteen years the Dallas Art Institute and Olin Travis and his faculty were influential in the development of an entire generation of Dallas artists.
Excerpt from
Jerry Bywaters, Seventy-Five Years of Art in Dallas: The History of the Dallas Art Association and the Dallas Museum of Fine Arts (Dallas, TX: Dallas Museum of Fine Arts, 1978), 10-12.
NOTES
Removed TMS tags 1933.23, 1950.91.
CC was routed in July 2015 and changes have been made based on those revisions. Did not change tag from #routed to #complete because I have not verified the formatting and additional resources.- Changed status to completed June 15, 2016.
Confirmed note updated in GDrive. Tagged completed and moved GDoc to Queta folder. (1/24/2017)
Adding "draft" tag back to note, Dec 19, 2016, as part of the revised harvest/route procedure. This note will be pulled into GDrive and manually moved to Queta's folders for final review. Update- January 18, 2017- Adding #routed tag so that I can easily keep track of this note in Evernote to confirm that it is eventually pushed into GDrive. As of January 18, 2017 the content is in Brain but not in GDrive so I am unable to finish revisions and mark it complete in Evernote or move the GDoc to Queta's folder.
Confirmed note updated in GDrive. Tagged completed and moved GDoc to Queta folder. (1/24/2017)
Wrote rule to apply to content that contains Dallas Art Institute because there is not a way to link content chunks.
Possible to write the rule for Texas artists 1926-1943?
Something like-- Apply to objects where place of origin equals Dallas and date lte 1943 and gte 1926?
Rule revised January 2017 to link to objects by specific objects by constituents rather than actual constituents (biographies).
1783 Olin Travis
Kathryn Hail Travis
1087 Thomas Stell
1176 Everett Spruce
1270 Charles T. Bowling
J.O. Mahoney
2951 Bywaters
2534 Lloyd Goff
97852 Ruby Stone
Ralph Rountree
786 William Lester
1177 William Elliott
Grace Turner
Allie Gatteys
2525 Amelia Urbach
2692 James Brooks
1027 Bertha Landers
Bill McClanahan
1212Honore Guilbeau
Emil Guidroz
Bill Cole
303 Mike Owen
ASSOCIATED CONTENT CHUNKS
AUDIO ASSETS
VIDEO ASSETS
IMAGE ASSETS
WEB RESOURCES
Dallas Art Institute~Read more about this school in Kendall Curlee's essay on the Handbook of Texas Online.
ARCHIVAL RESOURCES
FUN FACTS
TEACHING IDEAS
RULES
Set operator as or
apply to content where content contains Dallas Art Institute
Apply to objects where constituent_id equals 1783
Apply to objects where constituent_id equals 1087
Apply to objects where constituent_id equals 1176
Apply to objects where constituent_id equals 1270
Apply to objects where constituent_id equals 2951
Apply to objects where constituent_id equals 2534
Apply to objects where constituent_id equals 97852
Apply to objects where constituent_id equals 786
Apply to objects where constituent_id equals 1177
Apply to objects where constituent_id equals 2525
Apply to objects where constituent_id equals 2692
Apply to objects where constituent_id equals 1027
Apply to objects where constituent_id equals 1212
Apply to objects where constituent_id equals 303
Category
rules_operator
OR
General Description
The most influential large scale teaching effort [in Dallas' art community] occurred in 1926 when Olin Travis, recently returned from extensive study at The Art Institute of Chicago, established the Dallas Art Institute on the second floor of a building at 1215 1/2 Main Street. This school offered the first selection of classes in several art fields, such as painting (portrait, landscape, and still life), composition, life drawing, sculpture, art history, costume design, illustration, and commercial art. The faculty included Kathryn Hail Travis, painter and wife of the founder, Thomas M. Stell, Jr., and other professional specialists. Summer classes were held in the Ozark mountains of Arkansas.
The Dallas Art Institute produced a wide range of talented students who also enriched the local art ranks such as Everett Spruce, Charles T. Bowling, J. O. Mahoney, Jerry Bywaters, Lloyd Goff, Ruby Stone, and Ralph Rountree, already listed among entrants in the early Annual Allied Arts Exhibitions of Dallas County. Others who studied at the Institute and became professional artists included William Lester, William Elliott, Grace Turner, Allie Gatteys, Amelia Urbach, James Brooks, Bertha Landers, Bill McClanahan, Honore Guilbeau, Emil Guidroz, Bill Cole, and Mike Owen.
In the early years of the Great Depression, student enrollment decreased dramatically. The Institute was reorganized with a civic board, and the school was moved to the grounds of the Civic Federation, an enlightened institution headed by Elmer Scott and Gaynell Hawkins. The Institute flourished under these benevolent influences and an enlarged faculty. It also became a focal point, at Maple Avenue and Alice Street, for the famous Alice Street Art Carnivals where an average of some seventy artists developed an avid audience for their wares at depression prices.
In 1935, the Dallas Art Institute moved to larger quarters at 2503 McKinney Avenue, an early Dallas home built of hand-made "south Dallas pink" bricks and remodeled to suit the needs of art classes. The next, and final, move of the Institute was in 1941 into the school wing of the recently completed art museum in Fair Park. There the Institute continued for two years until it was deemed wise by the Trustees of the Museum that a new school should be developed with an art curriculum more compatible with the opportunities available at the museum. Thus for some fifteen years the Dallas Art Institute and Olin Travis and his faculty were influential in the development of an entire generation of Dallas artists.
Excerpt from
Jerry Bywaters, Seventy-Five Years of Art in Dallas: The History of the Dallas Art Association and the Dallas Museum of Fine Arts (Dallas, TX: Dallas Museum of Fine Arts, 1978), 10-12.
Fun Facts
Archival Resources
Web Resources
Dallas Art Institute~Read more about this school in Kendall Curlee's essay on the Handbook of Texas Online.
Notes
Removed TMS tags 1933.23, 1950.91.
CC was routed in July 2015 and changes have been made based on those revisions. Did not change tag from #routed to #complete because I have not verified the formatting and additional resources.- Changed status to completed June 15, 2016.
Confirmed note updated in GDrive. Tagged completed and moved GDoc to Queta folder. (1/24/2017)
Adding "draft" tag back to note, Dec 19, 2016, as part of the revised harvest/route procedure. This note will be pulled into GDrive and manually moved to Queta's folders for final review. Update- January 18, 2017- Adding #routed tag so that I can easily keep track of this note in Evernote to confirm that it is eventually pushed into GDrive. As of January 18, 2017 the content is in Brain but not in GDrive so I am unable to finish revisions and mark it complete in Evernote or move the GDoc to Queta's folder.
Confirmed note updated in GDrive. Tagged completed and moved GDoc to Queta folder. (1/24/2017)
Wrote rule to apply to content that contains Dallas Art Institute because there is not a way to link content chunks.
Possible to write the rule for Texas artists 1926-1943?
Something like-- Apply to objects where place of origin equals Dallas and date lte 1943 and gte 1926?
Rule revised January 2017 to link to objects by specific objects by constituents rather than actual constituents (biographies).
1783 Olin Travis
Kathryn Hail Travis
1087 Thomas Stell
1176 Everett Spruce
1270 Charles T. Bowling
J.O. Mahoney
2951 Bywaters
2534 Lloyd Goff
97852 Ruby Stone
Ralph Rountree
786 William Lester
1177 William Elliott
Grace Turner
Allie Gatteys
2525 Amelia Urbach
2692 James Brooks
1027 Bertha Landers
Bill McClanahan
1212Honore Guilbeau
Emil Guidroz
Bill Cole
303 Mike Owen
rules
Apply To
Content
content
Contains
Dallas Art Institute
source file
dma_insight-0025.xml.nores