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Paintings by Maurice Lapp, July 29-September 9, 1956

 Sub-Series

Scope and Contents

An exhibition of 28 paintings by American artist Maurice Lapp.
The exhibition records span three folders and include an artist biography, correspondence with the artist, and registration receipts, plus a catalog, clippings, and installation photographs.

Dates

  • Creation: July 29-September 9, 1956

Creator

Conditions Governing Access

At this time, the exhibition records are unavailable to the public and will only be made available to FAMSF staff upon request.

Biographical / Historical

Maurice Lapp was an American painter and educator born in Chicago, Illinois on June 17, 1925. He studied at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago where he earned both his BFA and MFA. Maury studied painting abroad in 1950 on a Ryerson Foreign Travel Fellowship, and settled in the San Francisco Bay Area after his return. In 1952, Lapp began teaching painting at the California College of Arts and Crafts in Oakland. A Fulbright Grant received in 1954 allowed him to study in Mexico, where he remained for a year and a half, painting and exhibiting. In 1956 he moved to Santa Rosa, California where he joined the art faculty at the Santa Rosa Junior College. He remained at the Junior College until his retirement in 1992, but his teaching career did not end there. Lapp, whose strong work ethic prompted him to paint daily, was a popular instructor and continued to mentor part-time until the year before his death at age 88.

Lapp had numerous solos exhibitions in his long career, including at the Oakland Museum of California, the de Young Museum in 1962, Santa Rosa Junior College, University of California at Davis, University of California, Santa Cruz, Walnut Creek Civic Arts Center, Stanford University, American Cultural Institute in Mexico, and the Legion of Honor in 1956 and 1958. Of particular interest to Lapp throughout his career was urban architecture and cityscapes, often depicting skylines and more intimate structures in angular, Abstract Expressionist forms that nevertheless conveyed an array of moods. He was known for his compositions of San Francisco and Chicago, and would frequently revisit a skyline at different times of day to capture it in different lights. His palette and nearly non-objective style tied him to the Bay Area's output of artists who helped spur the West Coast's Abstract Expressionist movement. Yet he was equally if not more so known as a Sonoma County artist who both taught and supported the work of noted local artists such as Micah Schwaberow and Elizabeth Quandt. He died in Santa Rosa, California on May 31, 2014.

Source: https://www.annexgalleries.com/artists/biography/3915/Lapp/Maurice

Extent

0.1 Linear Feet (The exhibition records span three folders plus a catalog, clippings, and photographs.)

Language of Materials

From the Collection: English

Abstract

An exhibition of 28 paintings by American artist Maurice Lapp. The exhibition records span three folders plus a catalog, clippings, and photographs.

Related Exhibitions

Legion of Honor: Paintings by Maurice Lapp (1956)
Legion of Honor: Maurice Lapp: Paintings (1968)
de Young: Recent Paintings by Maurice Lapp (1962)
de Young: San Francisco Art Institute Artist Members' Exhibition of Painting, Sculpture, and Prints (1962)

Separated Materials

The Bulletin of the California Palace of the Legion of Honor Vol. 14, No. 3 served as the exhibition catalog and is in the Legion of Honor Exhibition Catalog collection in box 1. Clippings are housed within the Legion of Honor Exhibition Clippings collection in box 2. Installation photograph prints and negatives are housed in the Legion of Honor Exhibition Photograph collection in box 19.

Repository Details

Part of the Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco Archives Repository

Contact:
50 Hagiwara Tea Garden Dr
San Francisco California 94118 USA