Terrell James
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Terrell James (born 1955) is an American artist who makes abstract paintings, prints and sculptures. She is best known for large scale work with paint on stretched fabric, and for parallel smallscale explorations such as the ''Field Studies'' series, ongoing since 1997. She lives and works in Houston, Texas.


Early life and education

Terrell James was born in Houston, Texas in 1955. A seventh generation Texan, she graduated from Houston's Lamar High School in 1973. In 1973 she studied painting and printmaking at the
Instituto Allende The Instituto Allende is a visual arts school in San Miguel de Allende, Mexico. The institute provides a range of courses, and offers a BA in Visual Arts and an MA in Fine arts in association with the Universidad de Guanajuato. Its courses and d ...
in San Miguel de Allende (Guanajuato, Mexico). From 1973 to 1977 she attended The
University of the South The University of the South, familiarly known as Sewanee (), is a private Episcopal liberal arts college in Sewanee, Tennessee, United States. It is owned by 28 southern dioceses of the Episcopal Church, and its School of Theology is an off ...
in Sewanee, Tennessee, where she continued her studies in painting and printmaking.


Art practice


Painting

James's painting suggest ambiguous visions of nature, urban geometries and technical artifacts, resisting easy determination. Instead of obvious images and visual stability, the viewer finds a pictorial landscape composed of alternate potential readings. Writing for the Museum of Fine Arts Houston, Daniel Stern stated that "To gaze at a painting of ersis to enter into an experience in the making: painting in which the act of painting continues on as the eye wanders the finished surface. Each individual painting is completed by each individual encounter."


Field studies

James's numbered series ''Field Studies'', beginning in 1997, are small works devoted to ongoing, open-ended visualization. Curator Alison de Lima Greene has written: "Sometimes a drawn line darts across the field or serves as a scaffold, sometimes pale afterimages challenge the viewer's eye, and even the occasional collaged element is welcomed as well." ''Field Studies'' are often made in parallel with much larger synchronous works, tracking their internal color relationships in a secondary form.


Related work


Forrest Bess and archival research

From 1980 to 1985 James worked as a field collector and material archivist for the Archives of American Art, at the Smithsonian Institution. While in this position, she was involved in the cataloging and exhibition of works by artist Forrest Bess. This assignment included her research involving Bess's family and contacts in Bay City, Texas, her cataloging of correspondence related to the artist's exhibition with New York gallerist Betty Parsons, and her organization of the 1986 exhibition of Forrest Bess' paintings in collaboration with Hiram Butler Gallery. This show led to the involvement of other galleries, such as New York's Hirschl & Adler Modern. Her research on Bess's life and work was seminal to the posthumous emergence of his worldwide following among collectors and institutions. In addition to archival work, James was integrally involved in the production of films and books about Bess. James played the archetypal feminine figure of Forrest Bess in Jim Kanan's 1987 film of Bess, ''Fishmonger'', and was a primary source for Chuck Smith's book ''Key to the Riddle.''


Exhibitions

James has had solo exhibitions at a number of venues nationally, including Hiram Butler Gallery, Houston, Froelick Gallery, Portland, OR, The Cameron Museum of Art, Wilmington, NC, and internationally at Cadogan Contemporary, London, UK, and Fundacion Centro Cultural, Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic.


Collections

*Whitney Museum of American Art *Menil Collection, Houston *Watermill Collection (Robert Wilson Foundation, Water Mill, N.Y.) *Casa Lamm/Televisa Cultural Foundation and Museum (Mexico, D.F.) *
Museum of Fine Arts, Boston The Museum of Fine Arts (often abbreviated as MFA Boston or MFA) is an art museum in Boston, Massachusetts. It is the list of largest art museums, 20th-largest art museum in the world, measured by public gallery area. It contains 8,161 painting ...
*
Museum of Fine Arts Houston The Museum of Fine Arts, Houston (MFAH), is an art museum located in the Houston Museum District of Houston, Texas. The permanent collection of the museum spans more than 5,000 years of history with nearly 80,000 works from six continents. Follo ...
*
Dallas Museum of Art The Dallas Museum of Art (DMA) is an art museum located in the Arts District of downtown Dallas, Texas, along Woodall Rodgers Freeway between St. Paul and Harwood. In the 1970s, the museum moved from its previous location in Fair Park to the A ...
*University of St. Thomas, Houston *Albee Foundation, New York The Cameron Museum of Art (Wilmington, N.C.), *Free International University World Art Collection, the Netherlands *
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Mexico D.F. *
Portland Art Museum The Portland Art Museum (PAM) is an art museum in downtown Portland, Oregon, United States. The Portland Art Museum has 240,000 square feet (22,000 m2), with more than 112,000 square feet (10,400 m2) of gallery space. The museum’s permanent c ...
, Oregon *the Rice University Collection, Houston *United States Department of Stat, *Museum of the University of the South, Sewanee, Tennessee *
San Antonio Museum of Art The San Antonio Museum of Art (SAMA) is an art museum in Downtown San Antonio, Downtown San Antonio, Texas, USA. The museum spans 5,000 years of global culture. The museum is housed in the historic former Lone Star Brewing Company, Lone Star Bre ...
*Texas Tech University *National Gallery of Art


Recognition and commentary

*Texas Artist of the Year (Art League Houston, 2016) *2014 Texas Art Hall of Fame (Houston Fine Art Fair) *Decorative Center Houston's 2013 Design Star Award *2010 Visual Arts Fellowship from the Edward Albee Foundation *2008 Texan-French Alliance for the Arts' TFAA Recognition Award


References


Further reading


Bovee, Katherine, ''Virgil Grotfeldt and Terrell James at Froelick Gallery,'' Art Lies, Issue No.58, p 104, 2008.
*Buhmann, Stephanie (September 2016), ''Place and Transition in the Work of Terrell James'', HOVER: Art League 2016 Texas Artist of the Year, Houston TX, pp.3–7.

*Della Monica, Lauren P., ''Painted Landscapes: Contemporary Views,'' Schiffer Publishing, 2013.
Gray, Lisa, ''About Time: Terrell James's art hangs near a crossroads where her past and present intersect,'' Houston Press, Houston TX, pp. 12–13, April 26, 2001.
*Greene, Alison de Lima, ''Terrell James: Field Studies'', Houston TX, March 2011, pp.3–5.
Hodges, Steve, ''Walter Hopps: Standing Sideways (Terrell James and Virgil Grotfeldt)'', Glasstire, Houston TX, April, 2005.
* ttp://brooklynrail.org/2017/07/criticspage/On-Walter-Hopps-Terrell-James James, Terrell (July,2017), ''On Walter Hopps'', The Brooklyn Rail, Brooklyn NY, Critics' Page.*Paglia, Michael and Edwards, Jim, ''Texas Abstract: Modern / Contemporary'', SF Design, llc/FrescoBooks, 2014.. *Petry, Michael (October 2016), The Abstraction of the Physical into the Poetic, ''Remember the Poison Tree'', Cadogan Contemporary, London UK, pp.7–12. *Pillsbury, Edmund P. and Littman, Robert R. (2001), ''Impression and Sensation: The Painting of Terrell James'', Pillsbury and Peters Fine Art, Dallas TX, pp.2–4. ASIN B00SNWO4EA. {{DEFAULTSORT:James, Terrell 1955 births Living people Artists from Houston Sewanee: The University of the South alumni 21st-century American painters 21st-century American women artists 20th-century American painters 20th-century American women artists Painters from Texas