Showing posts with label Nina Osnos. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Nina Osnos. Show all posts

Thursday, September 29, 2011

Wahington Post Art Critic Paul Richard Reviews The First Underground Comic Art Exhibit In A Museum---Washington D.C. May 1969 At The Washington Gallery Of Modern Art--Walter Hopps Director

I have written more on this blog about Paul Richard and Walter Hopps and The Washington Gallery of Modern Art circa 1967-68-69. You can search for those posts by clicking on the names in the Label Box below.
I recently found my copies of Paul Richard's Reviews of this show from 1969. Since they not on the web anywhere as far as I know here it is now.
The above picture is of Walter Hopps taken around the time he was Director of the Corcoran Gallery of Art in Washington D.C.
Click on the photos to enlarge them and double click if necessary to read the above.
The drawing is by Robert Crumb.
   Paul Richard Reviewed the Show again about a week later on June 1, 1969. Here is that Review below.
It was too large for my scanner so I had to do it in pieces to get it all in.
The above drawing is by Robert Crumb. Click on it to enlarge it. This is from 1969. Do the freeways in the cities look like this now. I would say Yes.
   
For all the information and photos I have on this comix art show search my blog for the labels shown below.

And below is the Gilbert Shelton drawing the young collector bought in the show that is referred to in the review above. Click on the picture to enlarge it. And double click if necessary.
Billy Graham / Dope Mystics


Gilbert Shelton

Radical America Komiks

1969

Pen & Ink

19 x 12.5


And click on the link below to see the whole Comic book this drawing comes from which includes stories of Wonder Wart Hog.
The original artwork was large in size. 19 inches by 12.5 inches.

Tuesday, October 5, 2010

What EYE Saw Thanks To Walter Hopps And The Corcoran Gallery Of Art - A Response To Art Critic Paul Richard And His Lecture "What I Saw" At The National Gallery Of Art October 3, 2010



Click on the above picture to enlarge it. This building was The Washington Gallery Of Modern Art in 1967 when Walter Hopps took over as its Director. The name changed to The Corcoran Gallery Of Art Dupont Center in 1968 or 1969. Later it was used for studio space by students of the Corcoran School Of Art. Sometime in the 1970s or 1980s it became a building of law offices. Now it is the economic section of the embassy of Poland.
The address of the building is 1503 21st Street N.W. Washington D.C.

We went to hear former Washington Post art critic Paul Richard deliver a lecture at the National Gallery of Art East Building auditorium last Sunday. It was titled "What I Saw".  Paul was the art critic at the Post for 40 years. I knew him from 1967(when he became the Post art critic)until 1972.
   Here is someone else's review of Paul's lecture. It is very good.
http://greg.org/archive/2010/10/03/what_i_heard_paul_richard.html

We enjoyed his lecture very much but it was not what I expected. I had thought he was going to talk about all the art shows he reviewed over 40 years as an art critic for The Washington Post.
He did talk about Walter Hopps and how important a figure he was and how helpful Walter was to artists in this area and to Paul himself since Paul began his career as an art critic the very same year Walter arrived in Washington D.C. That was 1967.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Walter_Hopps

And here is something about Walter Hopps that Paul Richard wrote in the Washington Post in 2005 after Walter died.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A55574-2005Mar21.html

I met Walter Hopps in 1967. We lived at 2010 P St. N.W. in 1967. That was just around the corner from The Washington Gallery Of Art when Walter took over as Director of that Gallery in 1967. I also spent many hours in the Phillips Collection which was just 2 blocks away from where we lived.

Dupont Circle suddenly became an exciting place to live when Walter Hopps arrived on the scene. Sleepy provincial Washington D.C. got its first taste of modern west coast art. And eventually to many other kinds of modern art that Walter brought to the city.

  I am going to try and list as many of the shows that he brought to the Washington Gallery of Modern Art which changed its name to Corcoran Gallery Dupont Center while he was there. And then in 1970 Walter became Director of The Corcoran Gallery itself and the modern art explosion moved to the big museum with Walter at the helm. It was an exciting time to live in Washington D.C. if you were interested in modern art. Here was this famous wildcat western art curator opening shows and opening people's eyes to what modern could really mean. It seemed anything was possible.

Remember this was all taking place from 1967 to 1972. Starting in 1969 Nixon was in The White House. The Vietnam War was raging. The 1960's changes were blowing full force.
Here is a link to the Corcoran Gallery Of Art Archives page for the year 1969.
http://www.corcoran.org/exhibitions/archive_results.asp?Year=1969
And here is a link  to 1970.
http://www.corcoran.org/exhibitions/archive_results.asp?Year=1970

 And here is a link to the year 1971.
http://www.corcoran.org/archives/archive_results.asp?Year=1971

You can go to the Corcoran Gallery Of Art website and click on exhbitions and then click on archives to see a list of past exhibitions from many other years.

Remember it was Walter Hopps that brought all these shows to D.C. from the years 1968 to 1972. Some were at the Washington Gallery Of Modern Art in 1967. They changed the name to the Corcoran Gallery Dupont Center around 1968 or 1969. And then Walter became Director of the Corcoran Gallery Museum in 1970. He held that job until 1972 or so. Then he moved to a job as curator of modern art at the Smithsonain Museum of American Art.
Here are some of the shows Walter Hopps did in D.C. that I remember best.
Chuck Close
The Hairy Who
Ed Keinholtz
Billy Al Bengston
Cybernetic Serendipity
Eleanor Dickinson
Rockne Krebs, Ed McGowin, Sam Gilliam
Alexander Lieberman
Comics Art Show called The Phonus Balonus Show. The very first underground comic art exhibit in any museum. It was organized by my brother Bhob Stewart and Walter Hopps with the help of Nina Osnos.
The Comic Art Show at The Washington Gallery Of Modern Art.
May 20, 1969 - Jun 15, 1969

Click and double click on these pictures to enlarge them. The pictures were taken by Rachel Stewart in June 1969.
That is me sitting there reading an underground comic book. On a nearby table you can see part of a little file box. We sold underground comics during the show. One day I was downstairs and someone else was supposed to be upstairs watching the money and the comics. And they thought I was upstairs. In any event when I went back upstairs all the money from the little box was gone.

This was the official title of the Comic Art Show:
The Phonus Balonus Show of Some Really Heavy Stuff [Dupont Center]

Paolo Soleri
Click on the name Walter Hopps in the Labels below to see all my other posts on Walter Hopps and The Corcoran Gallery Of Art.

Thursday, September 23, 2010

Nina Osnos And Nina Felshin 1969 Corcoran Gallery Of Art


That is Nina Felshin in the photo above. Felshin is her maiden name.
She was Nina Osnos at one time. Click on these pictures to enlarge them.

The above is a card Nina Osnos gave me back in 1969. She was working for Walter Hopps and The Corcoran Gallery Of Art at that time. She is mentioned in my posts below. She was working for Walter at the Corcoran Gallery Dupont Center in 1969. She asked me, "Do you know how to drive a truck?" I replied,"Yes". That was not exactly true but since it turned out to be a 12 foot UHaul Truck I could manage that. She is the person who along with Walter Hopps gave me the job to go to Chattanooga and pick up an art show and drive it cross country to Los Angeles and return it to the artist. I write about this in my post below about Tiger Joe Marsh and Bruce Nauman and Noah Purifoy.
Hello Nina wherever you are. Joe B.
Here are links to what she has done recently.
http://ccs.bard.edu/ccs/exhibitions/past/index.php?eid=1782

http://www.mtholyoke.edu/offices/comm/csj/022103/felshin.shtml

Monday, September 20, 2010

Bruce Nauman 1969 to 2009


Click on the video to enlarge it and go to youtube where you can see it full screen.
Note: Bruce Nauman is the guy in blue jeans. This is one of the very few videos on youtube where you can see the artist himself. Note also he does not even speak here even when given a chance. I really like artists that let their work speak for them.

In the post below I wrote a little bit about meeting Bruce Nauman in July of 1969. He was living in Walter Hopps' house in Pasadena at that time.
Bruce was kind enough to offer me a glass of Jack Daniels Black label whiskey.
I remember being very exhausted after driving a truck all the way across the country to Los Angeles to return an art exhibit for Walter Hopps who was the Director of The Corcoran Gallery Dupont Center at that time. His Assistant Nina Osnos had given me the job.

There are many videos on youtube about the works of Bruce Nauman. Here is a link to a page of them.
http://www.youtube.com/results?search_query=bruce+nauman&aq=f

Saturday, September 18, 2010

Tiger Joe Marsh July 8th and 9th 1969 Hollywood California Plus Something on Noah Purifoy And Also Bruce Nauman


Tiger Joe Marsh is the bald guy in the video shown above. Click to enlarge and go to Youtube to view full screen. As you can see from this video from Lost in Space Tiger Joe was a big tough guy. Not someone you would want to argue with.



Click on the pictures above to enlarge. Both of the pictures are of Tiger Joe Marsh. Here is more information about him from International Movie Database.
http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0550675/

Tiger Joe was a wrestling champion and then he had a movie career. In July of 1969 my friend Jeff Barr was living in Tiger Joe's house in Hollywood,California.
I had been hired to drive an art show to LA by Walter Hopps who was Director of the Washington Gallery Of Modern Art at that time. I and another fellow took a train to Chattanooga,Tenn. to pick up the art show at the art museum there and then rented a truck to drive it across country to LA and return it to the artist.

It was called Junk Art. It had been made from the remains of the junk from the Watts riots.
Here is a good article about this art and the artist Noah Purifoy. If you read through this you will find he mentions that the show returned to LA in 1969 in a truck.
http://books.google.com/books?id=IezzI4AFRtAC&pg=PA160&lpg=PA160&dq=junk+art+watts+riots&source=bl&ots=0hfZ52Gz_-&sig=Sm6FHFmzAh5O59XjNTf3ZfA20ws&hl=en&ei=O-iUTJvtHYSKlweTy9ioCg&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=4&sqi=2&ved=0CCMQ6AEwAw#v=onepage&q=junk%20art%20watts%20riots&f=false
In another article on Noah Purifoy I read that this Junk Art finally went back to the junk yard. The Junk Art returned to just junk.
http://museumca.org/global/reso_articles_noah_purifoy.html
The link below is to an obituary for Noah Purifoy. It contains excellent bio information on Noah Purifoy.
http://articles.latimes.com/2004/mar/09/local/me-noah9

The story of our cross country trip is another story so I will skip that and go right to LA where after we returned the art to the artist(we had spent the night before that in Pasadena,Ca. at a house Walter Hopps owned. See below for more on that and who was living in Walter's house at that time) we headed to look for my friend Jeff Barr. Jeff and I had roomed together in college.

We found the address in Hollywood but no one was home. It was early in the afternoon. So we waited.
When Tiger Joe got home he wanted to know who we were.
My partner said "We are friends of Jeff Barr and we are going to stay here tonight".
Tiger Joe said, "No, you are not".
Tiger Joe was not going to let two strangers sleep in his house.

Tiger Joe's dining room table was piled high with signed 8" by 10" glossies of Hollywood stars. Right on top of the pile was an 8" by 10" glossy photograph of Marilyn Monroe signed, "To Tiger Joe, Marilyn Monroe".

That was on July 8th 1969. We ended up sleeping in the back of the 12 foot U Haul truck. At least we had some of those blankets that U-Haul provides to wrap furniture in.
The next morning I woke up in the back of the truck. It was July 9th 1969. It was my birthday. I was 29 years old.

P.S. I should mention that on the night of July 7th 1969 we had stayed in Pasadena,California at the home Walter Hopps owned there. He had told me we could stay there. That was the first place we went when we got to LA.
Living in Walter Hopps' home at that time was the artist Bruce Nauman. So I got to meet Bruce Nauman. I even showed him our truck with the junk art in it. He didn't seem impressed.

Bruce Nauman was already famous by 1969 but a few years later he became a super famous and criticially acclaimed artist.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bruce_Nauman