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Jack Rabbit Flats - West Texas
Otis Marion Dozier is noted as a member of a group of Texas
regionalist artists known as the "Dallas Nine". His style was
characterized by brilliant colors and strong forms, often focusing
on the plight of farmers affected by the Great Depression.
Dozier was born in Forney, Texas in 1904. Raised on a
farm in Mesquite, Texas with three siblings, his surroundings
provided the materials that allowed him to cultivate a love for
nature and wildlife. He once said, "youve got to start from where
you are and hope to get to the universal." His surroundings became a
primary focus for subject matter in his art. Other areas providing
inspiration for his works would include the Big Bend and Gulf Coast
areas of Texas, the Four Corners area of New Mexico, Arizona, and
Utah, and the bayous and swamps of Louisiana. His earliest art
training was in Dallas from Vivian Aunspaugh, Cora Edge, and Frank
Reaugh when his family moved there in the early 1920s.
Dozier became a member of the Dallas Artists League in the 1930s
after becoming involved with a group of regionalist artists. He
taught at the Dallas School of Creative Arts from 1936 to 1938,
while at the same time studying the various works of European
artists such as Picasso, Leger, and Matisse. His initial style
included bright colors and dominant forms but later moved to the
earthy tones of beige, green, brown, and gray. In 1940, Dozier
married and together he and his wife contributed much to the Dallas
cultural scene.
Seeking to Purchase Works by
Otis Dozier
& other Early Texas Artists

FineArts
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San
Antonio,
Texas
Specializing in Early Texas Art Since 1988
Email or Call Richard Plumly
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Buying
Works by
Otis Dozier
For Over 25 Years
Otis
Marion Dozier
Dozier attended the Colorado Springs Fine Arts Center
in 1938 on a scholarship, studying with Boardman Robinson. For the
next seven years he served as Boardmans assistant. While in
Colorado, the Rocky Mountains became a favorite painting ground
where he completed more than 3000 sketches of ghost towns and
mountains. Influenced by Robinson, he developed a more fluid style
and became an expert in the lithographic medium. Upon returning to
Dallas, Dozier taught life drawing at Southern Methodist University
from 1945 to 1948. From 1948 until 1970 he taught drawing and
painting at the Dallas Museum of Fine Arts. He participated in sole
exhibitions in the early to mid 1940s, as well as other major
exhibitions at the Whitney Museum of American Art and the
Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City.
Dozier completed murals at the Agricultural and
Mechanical College of Texas (Texas A&M University) and at various
post offices in Texas. He won many awards at various exhibitions,
including the International Watercolor Exhibition in San Francisco
in 1932; the Museum of Modern Art in New York in 1933; the First
National Exhibition in New York in 1936; Allied Arts exhibitions in
1932, 1935, and 1947; and two Texas General exhibitions in 1946 and
1947. His works may be found in the permanent collections of the
Museum of Fine Arts in Houston; the Archer M. Huntington Art Gallery
at the University of Texas at Austin; the Modern Art Museum of Fort
Worth; the Marion Koogler McNay Art Museum in San Antonio; the
Dallas Museum of Art; and the Panhandle-Plains Museum in Canyon,
among others.
Dozier died of heart failure in 1987.
Biography Credit AskArt.com

Photograph of Dozier after painting the above illustrated painting
in the left column. |