Paul Harris | Activating the Surface
dick’s bowl with poppies
art crayon on paper
13.25 x 17.75 inches
1996
orange hibiscus, pink oleanders
art crayon on paper
15.5 x 21.5 inches
1983
flores rosa vicuña
art crayon on paper
18.25 x 13.5 inches
1991
katie’s bouquet
art crayon on paper
14 x 12.75 inches
2002
Iceland poppies
art crayon on paper
16 x 13 inches
1995
Tulips
art crayon on paper
14 x 18.5 inches
2004
naked ladies
art crayon on paper
10.5 x 15.5 inches
1991
four grapefruit
art crayon on paper
16.25 x 11.5 inches
1992
green apples II
art crayon on paper
15.5 x 12 inches
1993
pears on a pink cloth
art crayon on paper
17.5 x 14 inches
1989
grapes, p.d.
art crayon on paper
11.25 x 17.25 inches
2002
bananas
art crayon on paper
15 x 10.75 inches
1989
mexican bananas
art crayon on paper
14 x 16.5 inches
2002
rags I
art crayon on paper
12 x 17 inches
2001
day
art crayon on paper
21.5 x 16 inches
2000
spring
art crayon on paper
21.25 x 16.25 inches
2000
the acrobats II
art crayon on paper
11.25 x 17.25 inches
2007
The flying trapeze
art crayon on paper
17.25 x 10.75 inches
2008
the river
art crayon on paper
10.25 x 14.75 inches
2007
woman iv
art crayon and paste on paper
24 x 18 inches
1999
woman vi
art crayon and paste on paper
24 x 18 inches
1999
black doors
art crayon on paper
17.5 x 11.75 inches
1987
patio, oaxaca canyon
art crayon on paper
17.25 x 12 inches
1987
doorway, arizcun
art crayon on paper
12.5 x 15 inches
1989
shells scattered i
art crayon on paper
14.5 x 20 inches
1999
shells scattered ii
art crayon on paper
14.5 x 20 inches
1999
shells in grey bowl i
art crayon on paper
14.5 x 20 inches
1999
shells in grey bowl ii
art crayon on paper
14.5 x 20 inches
1999
tin pitchers
art crayon on paper
12.5 x 18.75 inches
1989
seaview provincetown i
art crayon on paper
20.5 x 15 inches
1984
bouquet
bronze
13 x 12 x 25.5 inches
1968
the light-hearted woman
bronze
24 x 18 x 15 inches
2003
anna in love
bronze
30 x 22 x 20 inches
1987
woman falling
bronze
45 x 27 x 18.5 inches
1998
Paul Harris
activating the surface: wax and pigment drawings
Through the years, Paul Harris returned to his wax and pigment drawings with subjects ranging from still lifes to abstracts, from figures to landscapes and many more in between. In fact, although known as a sculptor, his go-to medium remained the art crayon.
The presence of color is almost more important that his subjects. Harris seems to adhere to Matisse’s rule of still life painting: color is the first element. However, the method in which that color is applied comes from the teachings of Hans Hofmann, who Harris studied with in 1949. Hofmann taught his students to activate the surface and balance the composition with idea of push and pull, where bold color planes emerge from and recede into energetic surfaces of intersecting shapes.
Harris’ drawings pulsate with energy as the movement he put into the pieces, etched into the composition, can be felt as much today as the moment they were created. The lines, nearly frantic with color, keep the eye traveling, yes, but they also keep the mind engaged in the images, searching, reaching, in continuous dialog with the viewer.
Harris, always concerned with pattern and texture, understands the spatial relationship inherent in a finite drawing. These pieces, intimate and compelling, relay an accessible, inspirational narrative. As one artist noted, “they make me feel like I can do this.”
In this show we can see why Harris never put aside his crayons.
As Harris noted in a 2000 radio interview, “I remember in sixth grade the teacher wanted a lot of things made that she would use the next year and the next, I didn’t do much work in her class except make these big drawings. I became very accustomed to crayons, and I’ve never been able to let them go. Crayons are still my best friends in making drawings. I don’t think it will ever end.”
And it never did.
Biography
Paul Harris (1925-2018) BFA University of New Mexico/New School for Social Research. Ed.D Columbia University. Studied with Hans Hofmann, Agnes Martin, Johannes Molzahn. Taught as Fulbright Professor in Chile, Sculpture Professor at College of Arts and Craft Oakland, among other art institutions. Exhibited extensively across the country including MoMA, LACMA, Berkeley Museum of Art, Poindexter Gallery, Art Institute of Chicago, 1965 New York World’s Fair, Museum of Contemporary Crafts, San Francisco Museum of Art, the Smithsonian Institute, and various shows in Europe.
For additional information about Paul Harris visit: www.paulharrisart.com
acknowldegements
This exhibition is sponsored by the Montana Art Gallery Directors Association (MAGDA), a statewide service organization for non-profit museums and galleries, and supported in part by grants from the Montana Arts Council,
a state agency funded by the State of Montana; coal severance taxes paid based upon coal mined in Montana
and deposited in Montana's Cultural and Aesthetic Projects Trust Fund; and the National Endowment for the Arts.
In addition, thank you to the Paul Harris & Marguerite Kirk Gallery for loan of the bronzes and Dr. Michele Corriel
for curatorial assistance.