Flower of the Prairie: George Grosz's Impressions of Dallas, 1952
When
- Tuesday
- Jul. 24, 2012
- 11:00 AM - 5:00 PM
Description
In 1952 George Grosz, the expatriate German dadaist and satirist, was invited to Dallas by Leon Harris, Jr., the young vice president of the Harris and Company department store. Harris had commissioned Grosz to create a series of paintings illustrating the landscape, economy, and society of Dallas for the store's 65th anniversary celebrations. Grosz's series, called Impressions of Dallas, was exhibited at the Dallas Museum of Fine Arts in Fair Park in October 1952 and then in New York in 1954, but have since remained almost forgotten.
In 2012 on the 60th anniversary of the series' first presentation at the DMFA, the Dallas Museum of Art will present Flower of the Prairie: George Grosz's "Impressions of Dallas," 1952. The exhibition will feature twenty works from the series, accompanied by a rich selection of historic photographs of Dallas, documenting the city as Grosz discovered it in 1952. The exhibition will also examine the context for the Impressions of Dallas series with twelve of Grosz's works made earlier in his career, including graphic work and watercolors made in Berlin in the 1920s and early 1930s, and paintings and watercolors made in New York during the late 1930s and 1940s.
Tickets
| $10.00 |
Phone
Where
Ends
- Sunday
- May. 27, 2012
- 5:00 PM
Tags
art , museum , visual art , attraction



