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By producing his first
abstract paintings as early as 1910, Dawson joins Arthur Dove, Abraham
Walkowitz, Morgan Russell, and Konrad Cramer, as one of the most
avant-garde
painters in the United States at the beginning
of the twentieth century.
Born and raised in Chicago to a family who had
been part of the city’s cultural life for generations, Dawson
trained as a civil engineer before joining the design department of
the distinguished Chicago architectural firm of Holabird and Roche.
The fact that painting was his avocation makes Dawson’s pioneering
efforts in modern
art all the more remarkable.
Dawson was well acquainted with avant-garde trends
in painting. For example, during his visit to Europe in 1910 he dined
in Siena with John Singer Sargent and spent a Saturday evening at
the Paris salon of Gertrude Stein. In December 1912 he was asked to
submit works to the Armory
Show, the exhibition that would introduce modern
art to the United States during the winter of 1913. To the disappointment
of Arthur B. Davies, the exhibition’s principal organizer, Dawson
lacked confidence in his art and decided not to contribute.
By 1914 Dawson was finding his work for Holabird
and Roche increasingly unrewarding. That year he decided to buy a
fruit orchard in Ludington, Michigan; he believed the long winter
months would leave him ample time to paint. Unfortunately, the demands
of the farm were year-round, and Dawson’s production as an artist
only diminished. Although he continued to paint throughout his life,
Dawson and his work were largely forgotten until the Ringling Museum
of Art in Sarasota, Florida, organized a retrospective exhibition
in 1967.
Observation was produced when Dawson was at the
height of his powers as an abstract
painter. The work is composed of cubistic
facets of burnt orange, alternating with muted
green and tan, each outlined with black. This is a compositional structure
informed by the paintings of Cézanne, Picasso, and Kandinsky,
which Dawson had seen in Europe and, most likely, at the Armory
Show.

(For Grades K-2)
What sort of mood do these colors give you? Why?
What primary
colors do you see? Secondary?
Did the artist use mostly warm colors or cool colors?
What sort of shapes do you see?
Are these shapes geometric
or organic?
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Manierre Dawson
United States 1887-1969
Observation
Oil on panel, 1913
Museum purchase with
funds provided by the
Leona G. Landberge Bequest
2001:7
© San Diego Museum of Art
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