Exhibit
May 5 - June 30, 2012
In conjunction with the Dale Chihuly show at the Arboretum, the Museum will be displaying art glass by Dallas artists Mary Lynn Devereux and Polly Gessell
Arcadia Salon
Sunday, May 20, 2:00
Evolution of An Idea
The Texas Sculpture Association sponsors this program featuring never-before-seen New Interchangeable Art by Morton Rachofsky.
Arcadia Salon
Thursday, June 14, 5:30
Jennifer Way, Ph.D., professor of Art History at University of North Texas, discusses the work of Melé within the context of concrete art, constructivism, and geometric abstraction.
Opening Reception
Friday, July 20, 6:30
Three African-American Artists: Kevin Cole, Albert Shaw, and Jack White curated by Phillip Collins
Joan
Pedragosa is from Catalonia (Badalona). From 1947 until 1950, he studied
design and industrial aesthetics in Barcelona, and beginning in 1955
he worked in various advertising agencies, particularly with Oleguer
Jacas.
In 1960-62 he worked in Lausanne for Ralph M. Chavannes and was responsible for Graphic Creations. This time in Switzerland marked an accelerated evolution toward pure geometric works. He became interested in the Russian constructivism of Kasimir Malevich and Vladimir Tatlin, and in the vanguard work of Eastern European artists. He was attracted to Italian Futurism.
In 1965 he was named a professor of plastica publicitaria in the Municipal Conservatory of Art in the Massana School. Throughout the 60s and 70s he continued designing corporate symbols and trademarks for companies.
By the 1980s he was making tridimensional sculptures, using geometry to delimit the interaction between volume and space. He constructed a series of structures using the theories of Copernicus, also paying homage to Albert Einstein.
El Astrologo and Pasajero a Juneau were among his large sculptures. During the 1990s he continued creating large sculptures, visiting not only AlasKa, but Patagonia and Tierra del Fuego. He had a period of intense creativity, and in 2002 his sculptures were presented in El Centro Cultural Cajastur. His sculptures traveled to Oviedo, Mieres, AvilÌs and Gijon. In 2004 his works were shown at ExposiciÛ Terrassa.
Joan Pedragosa died in 2005. In 2006 a retrospective of his work, Espai Sense LÌmits was held at the Museum of Badalona.



