Article clipped from Dallas Semi Weekly Campus

wo teams. Me session♦ Carl SandbuIfPrintmakers Have Lively PortfolioIn Art Dept.turer, is to sp p. m., in McFa der the auspic* Course.Sandburg viferal inquiries eh regarding opus wishes to 3, with skirts will be admit-us tonight and I girls will be :ht be arranged gainst the boyspersons have for us to en-1 public once 5 of this pleas-to be played dlas Ice Arenap!has been quot-stick approxi-ith rags, cloth r in order that e used to hit a 11 to be used is ubber ball that : playing with, game is to hitThe Lone Star Printmakers fourth circuit of prints, now on view in the art department until March 9, is a representative and interesting show. And one that can be enjoyed by everyone even those who are awe stricken, hush voice, and reluctant to observe art.In this group are issues you may know. Some of the prints you will like; some you will not like. But the exhibit is alive and willing to let you be the judge of its worth.The last few years have seen a tremendous increase in popular art appreciation. People want to buy art, but not the paintings which only a few can afford, and that is the motivation of this show. In 1937, the Lone Star Printmakers organized. Originally it was a group of fifteen Texas artists, but since that time has expanded until all the leading southwestern artists are members. When this group was established it was for the purpose of making available to a wide audience popular priced prints of regional subjects and also to provide exhibits for this region.These exhibits, about twenty-five a year, go to: colleges, museums, and art groups over the southwest. In the past two years, exhibits from the Lone Star Print-makers have gene to: New York, the deep south, the middle west, and the far west.Most of the prints in the current Lone Star show are lithographs made by drawing directly on stone and are of subjects well known to everyone.If you visit the art department exhibit you will see prints by Ward Lockwood and Everett Spruce of the Texas University's art department; Edmund Kinzgner of the Baylor art department; Don Brown, head of the art department at Centenary College; Delmar Pschel of North Texas Agricul tural College; William Lester, Charles Bowling, Reveau Bassett, Alexander Hogue and Jerry By waters, all of Dallas.With Miss LaMond in the Printmakers Guild and Mr. Bywaters a member of the Lone Star Printmakers, the S. M. U. art department has its hand in helping the development of a truly regiona art—J. B. B. H.burg, Illinois, the son of £ Young Sandbu age of thirte* of a milk wa a beginning o: jobs which wj of a barber si a theater, “rid dish washer in City to Omafc During the war he spen Porto Rico. In youth from Galesburg, wl to finish his c Between the Sandburg wor school, earnii tutor, bell rii the gym. Desj activities, he l to become cap team, editor c ly and annual eral declamat After gri travelled aror ing films for derwood. He ' Milwaukee, w lian Steichen, photographer, Though he poetry since Sandburg's a did not begin became associ Magazine. Fr Sandburg has ranks high in It is not g Mr. Sandburg degree of E from Lombai Phi Beta Ka in 1928. In a orary degree 1914 winner lt;for his poem of half of tl America’s aw Carl Sand three daught bert, Michigj traveling ove lectures and s providing his on the guita This man, formality, hi and his eai puts his aud for they knoi “voice of tl
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Dallas Semi Weekly Campus

Dallas, Texas, US

Wed, Mar 04, 1942

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USA 05 May 2025

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