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Texas Scene

Smithsonian American Art Museum and its Renwick Gallery

Object Details

Artist
Jon Serl, born Olean, NY 1894-died Lake Elsinore, CA 1993
Exhibition Label
Jon Serl was born in upstate New York into a large family of itinerant vaudeville performers. He spent his youth performing and traveling, often playing female roles. He settled in the California desert south of Los Angeles and began an engagement with painting that consumed him for over forty years. Serl’s surreal imagery recalls his theatrical upbringing, flexible notions of family, views on gender binaries and fluid identities, and his own experience of low-income struggle and marginalization. Semi-narrative paintings like Texas Scene show a diverse array of characters, presented in a palette that favors emotion and psychological states of mind over realism. As the artist himself once explained, “You don’t see my paintings, you feel them.”
(We Are Made of Stories: Self-Taught Artists in the Robson Family Collection, 2022)
Credit Line
Smithsonian American Art Museum, The Margaret Z. Robson Collection, Gift of John E. and Douglas O. Robson
Copyright
© 2000, Randall Morris
1975
Object number
2016.38.68
Restrictions & Rights
Usage conditions apply
Type
Painting
Folk Art
Medium
oil on board
Dimensions
34 3/8 × 48 in. (87.3 × 121.9 cm)
See more items in
Smithsonian American Art Museum Collection
Department
Painting and Sculpture
Smithsonian American Art Museum
Topic
Figure group
Occupation\domestic\laundry
Landscape\Texas
Record ID
saam_2016.38.68
Metadata Usage (text)
Not determined
GUID (Link to Original Record)
http://n2t.net/ark:/65665/vk76e0ad06d-85da-47e1-bfd7-a12e2855570c

Related Content

  • Explore America: Texas

There are restrictions for re-using this image. For more information, visit the Smithsonian's Terms of Use page .
International media Interoperability Framework
IIIF provides researchers rich metadata and media viewing options for comparison of works across cultural heritage collections. Visit the IIIF page to learn more.
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