<< Chapter < Page Chapter >> Page >

Ann Holmes, she was a very good critic—she knew what she was doing. But it just doesn’t seem to me looking back that it was taken seriously or that there was that much interest. Meredith started—he may have started in the late 60s—and then the de Menils. I think that they helped. They were very concerned with controlling the arts scene in Houston, but they probably stirred it up and helped in the long run, but there was a little feeling about it. You know, they wanted to run the Museum of Fine Arts and they wanted to run St. Thomas and all of them, and then they finally found the right thing—the museum that they founded—but they stirred things up, there’s no question, and they brought good people here. I don’t think Houston was ready for some of them, but they brought them here anyway.

Mildred Dixon Sherwood. Courtesy of the artist.

Subject matter

Painting to me is seeing, feeling and discovering the life that exists within all things. I paint from memory, usually from an emotional reaction to something I’ve seen or felt, trying always to combine the visual with the imaginary world of fantasy and dreams. In painting this way it is easier to simplify and eliminate the unimportant and to emphasize the elements that convey the mood and the idea I wish to express. I cannot say what particular thing has influenced me in painting. It’s been more of a period of drawing and seeing and seeking in all directions. The more I paint, the more aware I become of the spiritual forces in all of life, and joy and sorrow.

Institutions

I remember being in one of the early Contemporary Arts Museum exhibits because they did one that the artists painted pictures of other artists. I painted a picture of Henri Gadbois, and Henri painted a picture of me. I was active in the Contemporary Arts Association. I didn’t have any official title; I was not in an official capacity, but I was active. As I said, I showed in exhibits they had and I was one of the artists in the program they had where you could borrow or rent pictures—but I never had any official capacity.

Lee Malone was director at the Museum of Fine Arts [when I had my two-person show in February of 1955]. He was a very nice man. He was a man who would liked to have been a painter, he told me, he was sorry he gave it up. I liked him personally. Well of course, Mr. Chillman was the first [director]; Miss Uhler and Mr. Chillman were the two that I was most fond of because I knew them the best.

Up in the air

By Mildred Dixon Sherwood. Courtesy of the artist.

A dry spell

[It was in the 70s] more or less that I had a blank and I hadn’t been able to do any painting or drawing or anything. It was very difficult. I don’t understand, because Preusser used to say that [he’d]never seen anyone who could paint faster. I couldn’t finish one painting that I didn’t have another one in my mind. And I don’t know what happened. I painted for a while in the 70s and I painted a little in the 80s, too. But I was not satisfied with my paintings, and I looked at some of them recently—they’re in storage—and I realize now I was trying to get something I didn’t get and I think I became discouraged. And then my husband died and I sold my house and I moved, and I don’t have a studio anymore, and that may have something to do with it.

I had a—I guess I still do, in a way—a photographic memory, so it was not difficult for me to paint at all. If I saw something that made an impression on me, I had a picture in my mind that changed as it was worked on. And I spent a lot of time in Guatemala and Mexico; I painted a lot of things. In fact, some of my best things were those pictures. But [later] I didn’t like what I was painting. That was very discouraging to me. I think if I had kept on I would have gotten over it. As I said, looking at the pictures I painted in that period that are in storage now, I can see that I was trying to get somewhere and then I got discouraged. And then moving and not having anyplace to paint anymore…and of course, as you get older you don’t have the energy you had before. It’s a mess to paint!

A footnote to young artists

Try to see it your own way. I’m not the intellectual type of painter—I’m more of an emotional painter, so obviously, paint what really means something to you. I don’t know if anyone should give anybody else advice because everybody’s a little different and works in a different way, trying to express a different thing. And it’s just as well. Just paint what you want to.

Mildred Dixon Sherwood was interviewed on June 9, 2006. You can listen to the interview here .

Get Jobilize Job Search Mobile App in your pocket Now!

Get it on Google Play Download on the App Store Now




Source:  OpenStax, Houston reflections: art in the city, 1950s, 60s and 70s. OpenStax CNX. May 06, 2008 Download for free at http://cnx.org/content/col10526/1.2
Google Play and the Google Play logo are trademarks of Google Inc.

Notification Switch

Would you like to follow the 'Houston reflections: art in the city, 1950s, 60s and 70s' conversation and receive update notifications?

Ask