Artist embraced the landscape of Northwest with 'magic realism'.Byline: Bob Keefer The Register-Guard It may take an outsider to understand the essential beauty of a place. So it was with the late Carl Hall, an Eastern artist who came west to Oregon and stayed here half a century to paint our trees, beaches and moody atmosphere, attracting national prominence along the way. A small show of Hall's works opens Tuesday and runs through July at the Karin Clarke Gallery, 760 Willamette St. An opening reception will be held from 5:30 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. Thursday; regular hours are 10 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Tuesday through Saturday. Hall, who died in 1996, taught art for four decades at Salem's Willamette University Willamette’s College of Liberal Arts is the undergraduate school on campus. The oldest of the graduate programs is the College of Law, founded in 1883 and located in the Truman Wesley Collins Legal Center. . Though he was born in Washington, D.C., and grew up in Michigan, Hall became a Oregonian, falling in love with the Northwest landscape soon after arriving here as a young soldier to train at Camp Adair during World War II. He met Phyllis, a dance hall hostess, at a USO USO: see United Service Organizations. (UNIX Software Operation) AT&T's Unix division before it turned into USL. See Unix. club in Ashland in 1943. They married the following year. Hall served as a combat artist during the war in the Pacific, seeing action in Leyte and Okinawa, sometimes mailing sketches for publication in the Detroit Free Press The Detroit Free Press is the largest daily newspaper in Detroit, Michigan, USA. It is sometimes informally referred to as the "Freep". Some still refer to it locally as "The Friendly" -- a slogan from an ad campaign in the '70s. . After the war ended, the couple lived briefly in the East but soon set out for Oregon with a panel truck and an 18-foot house trailer. They broke down in Montana, where Hall paid for repairs by painting a mural - in six hours - in a dance hall owned by the mechanic. They soon lived in a trailer park in Salem, and - from the obscurity of the Northwest - Hall began to make his mark on the national art scene. His work soon hung in the Whitney Museum of American Art Whitney Museum of American Art, in New York City, founded in 1930 by Gertrude Vanderbilt Whitney. It was an outgrowth of the Whitney Studio (1914–18), the Whitney Studio Club (1918–28), and the Whitney Studio Galleries (1928–30). in New York New York, state, United States New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of and the Museum of Fine Arts Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, chartered and incorporated (1870) after a decision by the Boston Athenaeum, Harvard, and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology to pool their collections of art objects and house them in adequate public galleries. in Boston. He was represented by Julian Levy, the same Manhattan gallery that staged U.S. shows by surrealists such as Salvador Dali Noun 1. Salvador Dali - surrealist Spanish painter (1904-1989) Dali , Max Ernst, Rene Magritte and Arshile Gorky Vostanik Manoog Adoyan, (better known as Arshile Gorky) (April 15, 1904? – July 21, 1948) was an Armenian and an American painter who had a seminal influence on Abstract Expressionism. Biography Gorky was born in the village of Khorkom near Van, Turkey. . In 1948, Life magazine published six of Hall's paintings in a four-page spread on the young artist, whom the magazine called a "magic realist." "Hall paints the details of log piles, misty valleys, rivers and mountains of Oregon with careful realism," the magazine said. "But over his scenes, the critics feel, he casts a 'magic realism' which reflects his own mystical feeling for nature." In 1949, Hall was awarded a National Institute of Arts and Letters National Institute of Arts and Letters: see American Academy and Institute of Arts and Letters. grant in a ceremony attended by Robert Frost, John Marin John Marin (December 23, 1870 - October 2, 1953) born in Rutherford, New Jersey was an early American modernist artist. Known for his abstract landscapes and watercolors. Biography , Archibald MacLeish Noun 1. Archibald MacLeish - United States poet (1892-1982) MacLeish and Georgia O'Keeffe. But Hall's flirtation with fame soon came to a close, as his representational style of painting was eclipsed by the abstract expressionists, about to take the stage in New York. Hall insisted that his art was about something other than pigment and canvas, but the art world had become fascinated by the notion that a painting existed for its own sake, without reference to the outside world. Landscape was out. Writes Roger Hull, who curated a show of Hall's work at the Hallie Ford Museum in Salem in 2000: "Carl Hall had become a prolific anomaly that accorded with no contemporary trends ... he was increasingly an outsider in his own region and on the national scene." Sixteen of Hall's paintings and half a dozen drawings were selected by gallery owners Karin Clarke and her mother, artist Margaret Coe, from Phyllis Hall's private collection. "He is one of the really great Northwest painters representing a period of time in the 1950s," says Coe, who numbers Hall among such better known Northwest mystic painters as Morris Graves and Mark Tobey. "He is a very strong member of that group and that style." Coe, in fact, met Hall when she was a young artist in Salem and entered a painting at the Oregon State Fair The Oregon State Fair is the official state fair of the U.S. state of Oregon. It takes place every August-September in the state capital, Salem. The first unofficial state fair was held in 1858 (the date the state agency that runs the fair uses for its anniversary), and the . Hall, who judged the fair art that year, awarded her work Best of Show. But beyond that chance encounter, they had no more than a passing acquaintance, though Coe was always aware of Hall and his work. So when Coe and her family opened the Clarke Gallery last year, she immediately thought to phone Phyllis Hall and ask whether any of Carl's paintings would be available to show. A daylong scouting trip to the Hall home found scores of paintings and drawings. "I am thrilled with the show," Coe said. "I feel like the gallery is honored to have his work." CAPTION(S): Carl Hall's "Nude" is an oil from 1966. "Over his scenes, the critics feel, he casts a 'magic realism' which reflects his own mystical feeling for nature." LIFE MAGAZINE IN 1948 REVIEW "Eight Eggs," an oil painting by Carl Hall. |
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