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Duane Hanson:
A Master Returns
From the collection of Mrs.
Duane Hanson
September 20 through December 20, 1998
This exhibition featured eight
life-sized sculptures by Duane Hanson, a noted American sculptor,
and a former art professor at Oglethorpe University. Hanson's super-realist
sculptures are cast from human models and rendered in polyvinyl,
auto body filler (bondo), or bronze. The "skin" of the
sculptures is painted in such detail as to resemble human flesh.
The sculptures are then finished with clothing, hair, jewelry and
other accessories. The exhibition also features a maquette, or a
proposed commission never completed, as well as items from the artist's
workshop including casts, chisels, brushes and items unique to his
medium, such as eyeballs and teeth.
Hanson's work has been featured
in exhibitions at the Whitney Museum of American Art, the Nelson-Atkins
Museum, the Musee des Beaux Arts de Montreal, World Design Exposition
in Nagoya, Japan, and in numerous other museums and galleries around
the world. A traveling exhibition of Hanson's sculptures organized
by the Art Museum of Fort Lauderdale will open at the Whitney Museum
of American Art on December 17, 1998.

Duane Hanson
Duane Hanson was born in Alexandria,
Minnesota January 17, 1925. He received his BA from Macalester College
in 1946 and his MFA from the Cranbrook Academy of Art in Bloomfield
Hills, Michigan in 1951. From 1962-1965 Hanson was an art professor
at Oglethorpe University in Atlanta. While in Atlanta, Hanson was
commissioned to produce several large decorative sculptures for the
exterior of buildings, including the Stormy Petrel which adorns the
Dorough Field House at Oglethorpe University. It was during his time
at Oglethorpe that Hanson received a grant from the Ella Lyman Cabot
Trust to develop his work with life-sized polyester resin and fiberglass
sculpture.
After Hanson moved to New York
in 1969, his works were shown in solo exhibitions in New York and
Germany. From 1976-78, a major retrospective of his sculptures went
on an extended museum tour throughout the United States. Hanson was
named Florida Ambassador of the Arts in 1983. His first bronze sculptures
were featured in a solo exhibition in Japan in 1984. Hanson died January
6, 1996.
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