1940.17, William Lester, Cypress Fen


GENERAL DESCRIPTION  
Regionalist painter William Lester developed an iconography of the Southwest that reached far beyond simple observation of nature. Rejecting impressionistic interpretations of Texas’ landscape, filled with rolling hills of bluebonnets and restrained to a pastel palette, Lester’s landscapes are instead at the stylistic crossroads of surrealism, expressionism, abstraction and regionalism.

In this less idyllic rendering of the Panhandle Canyonlands, Lester paints a small watering hole nestled within a clearing of eroded land. The viewer witnesses the eerie scene, filled with a haunting sense of emptiness, echoed in the hollowed tree and eroded soil. In the sky, a looming cloud floats above. Its size and shape are mirrored in the rippled pool below, while the glossy sheen of the water juxtaposes the flat, surreal clouds. Cypress Fen captures a critical moment in Lester’s career, on the brink of wholly non-objective, abstract painting, which would characterize the artist’s work for the remainder of his career.
  
Excerpt from
Erin Pinon, Early Texas Art Research Associate, DMA label copy (1940.17), June 2016. 

NOTES
EAS- compare this content to my note  1937.24 Lester, Three Crosses--DONE JLFR

This note was originally created and submitted by Erin Pinon, summer 2016. I am removing the #draft tag and requesting that the content be pulled from Brain and the Google Docs routing process so that I can review formatting, tagging, and text. After review, the note will be retagged with #draft and proceed to be harvested, routed, and revised as usual. (EAS, 8/26/2016)

Exhibition: Lone Star Regionalism :The Dallas Nine and their Circle 1928-1945, February 3, 1985-July 10, 1988

1940.17- drafted by Erin Pinon
CYPRESS FEN, c. 1940

Lester exhibited with the Lone Star Printmakers group, at the Texas centennial, and at the New York World's Fair of 1939. In the 1940s, he joined the art faculty at the University of Texas at Austin, where he taught for the remainder of his career. During the Great Depression, Lester worked for the staff artist for the civilian conservation corps, traveling and sketching in the Palo Duro country. In its harsh color and barren forms, Cypress Fern conveys the haunting emptiness of the Panhandle canyon lands.
Artist/designers

Cultures

Geography 
Depicted location and place of origin: Texas (state/United States): TGN: 7007826

Process/materials
Oil on Masonite

Historical periods

Individuals

Subject terms

RELATED OBJECTS 

PROVENANCE 
Before 1940:  William Lester [1] 
From 1940:  Dallas Museum of Fine Arts, Kiest Memorial Purchase Prize, Eleventh Annual Dallas Allied Arts Exhibition, purchased from the artist. [2]

[1]  The main source for this provenance was existing information in TMS (in Dallas Museum of Art Digital Collections Records Object Files). Exceptions and other supporting documents are noted.  
[2]  The name of the Dallas Museum of Fine Arts, founded in 1933, was changed to the Dallas Museum of Art in 1983.

AUDIO ASSETS 

VIDEO ASSETS

IMAGE ASSETS

WEB RESOURCES 

ARCHIVAL RESOURCES

FUN FACTS

TEACHING IDEAS

RULES
Apply to objects where number equals 1940.17
Apply to objects where constituent_id equals 786

Category
rules_operator
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General Description
 
Regionalist painter William Lester developed an iconography of the Southwest that reached far beyond simple observation of nature. Rejecting impressionistic interpretations of Texas’ landscape, filled with rolling hills of bluebonnets and restrained to a pastel palette, Lester’s landscapes are instead at the stylistic crossroads of surrealism, expressionism, abstraction and regionalism.

In this less idyllic rendering of the Panhandle Canyonlands, Lester paints a small watering hole nestled within a clearing of eroded land. The viewer witnesses the eerie scene, filled with a haunting sense of emptiness, echoed in the hollowed tree and eroded soil. In the sky, a looming cloud floats above. Its size and shape are mirrored in the rippled pool below, while the glossy sheen of the water juxtaposes the flat, surreal clouds. Cypress Fen captures a critical moment in Lester’s career, on the brink of wholly non-objective, abstract painting, which would characterize the artist’s work for the remainder of his career.
  
Excerpt from
Erin Pinon, Early Texas Art Research Associate, DMA label copy (1940.17), June 2016. 

Fun Facts

Archival Resources

Web Resources
 

Notes
EAS- compare this content to my note  1937.24 Lester, Three Crosses--DONE JLFR

This note was originally created and submitted by Erin Pinon, summer 2016. I am removing the #draft tag and requesting that the content be pulled from Brain and the Google Docs routing process so that I can review formatting, tagging, and text. After review, the note will be retagged with #draft and proceed to be harvested, routed, and revised as usual. (EAS, 8/26/2016)

Exhibition: Lone Star Regionalism :The Dallas Nine and their Circle 1928-1945, February 3, 1985-July 10, 1988

1940.17- drafted by Erin Pinon
CYPRESS FEN, c. 1940

Lester exhibited with the Lone Star Printmakers group, at the Texas centennial, and at the New York World's Fair of 1939. In the 1940s, he joined the art faculty at the University of Texas at Austin, where he taught for the remainder of his career. During the Great Depression, Lester worked for the staff artist for the civilian conservation corps, traveling and sketching in the Palo Duro country. In its harsh color and barren forms, Cypress Fern conveys the haunting emptiness of the Panhandle canyon lands.
Artist/designers

Cultures

Geography 
Depicted location and place of origin: Texas (state/United States): TGN: 7007826

Process/materials
Oil on Masonite

Historical periods

Individuals

Subject terms

RELATED OBJECTS 

PROVENANCE 
Before 1940:  William Lester [1] 
From 1940:  Dallas Museum of Fine Arts, Kiest Memorial Purchase Prize, Eleventh Annual Dallas Allied Arts Exhibition, purchased from the artist. [2]

[1]  The main source for this provenance was existing information in TMS (in Dallas Museum of Art Digital Collections Records Object Files). Exceptions and other supporting documents are noted.  
[2]  The name of the Dallas Museum of Fine Arts, founded in 1933, was changed to the Dallas Museum of Art in 1983.

AUDIO ASSETS 

VIDEO ASSETS

rules
Apply To
Objects
number
Equals
1940.17
tags
#draft
#completed
%copyedited_Gail
%Archived
landscapes (representations): AAT: 300015636
trees (plants): AAT: 300132410
rock (inorganic material): AAT: 300011692
@Schiller
*American Art
@Russell
Great Depression: DMA
The Dust Bowl: DMA
Southwest (general region/United States): TGN: 4010660
Texas (state/United States): TGN: 7007826
clouds: AAT: 300343840
water: AAT: 300011772
cypress (wood): AAT: 300012540
signage: AAT: 300193977
regionalism (form of expression): AAT: 300055800
erosion: AAT: 300054116
Lester_William Lewis: ULAN: 500334444
earth (soil): AAT: 300011734
source file
object_notes_3_c-0036.xml.nores