DALLAS, TX.- The Dallas Museum of Art opened the first-ever museum retrospective for Octavio Medellín (1907-1999), an influential Mexican American artist and teacher whose work helped shape the Texas art scene for six decades. Medellín was a noted sculptor who mastered a wide range of media, engaging with modernist trends in both his native Mexico and the United States. Octavio Medellín: Spirit and Form will include approximately 80 works, exploring the evolution of Medellíns sculptural practice, his public art commissions, and his legacy as a beloved and respected teacher. During the more than 40 years he lived and worked in the Dallas area, Medellín influenced generations of students as an instructor at the school of the Dallas Museum of Fine Arts (DMFA, today the DMA) and as founder of the Creative Arts Center. Octavio Medellín: Spirit and Form opened February 6, 2022, and is curated by Dr. Mark A. Castro, The Jorge Baldor Curator of Latin American Art. The exhibition is included in free general admission and will be on view through January 15, 2023.
This recognition for Octavio Medellín, an important artist in the history of our city and Museum, is long overdue. We are elated to honor his career and contribute new scholarship on his significant and diverse bodies of work, said Dr. Agustín Arteaga, the DMAs Eugene McDermott Director. Medellíns grand legacy can be attributed to both his incredible talent and his enormous influence in our community as a mentor to so many. We hope this exhibition cements his place among the most important artists working in Texas in the 20th century.
Of Otomí ancestry, Medellín was born in the city of Matehuala, San Luis Potosí, Mexico. In the wake of the violence of the Mexican Civil War, he immigrated with his family to San Antonio, Texas, in 1920. Working a variety of jobs to support himself, he began studying art in his spare time, eventually leaving San Antonio in 1928 to study briefly at the Art Institute of Chicago. The following year, he journeyed to Mexico City, where he explored Mexican Modernism, encountering important artists such as José Clemente Orozco and Carlos Mérida, but also traveled on foot through the rural countryside of the Gulf Coast. Returning to San Antonio, he became a rising star in that citys art scene, producing sculptures in wood, clay, and stone. In 1938, with the support of art patron Lucy Maverick, he traveled to Yucatán to study the Maya ruins at Chichén Itzá, inspiring an important body of work that is being featured in the exhibition. Following his return to the United States, Medellín became a prominent figure in the Texas art scene, first in San Antonio and then in Dallas, where he lived until he retired to Bandera, Texas, in 1980.
The exhibition includes 30 sculptures, dating from 1926 to 1995 and tracing Medellíns evolving interests in material and form. His sculptures of locally sourced wood and stone explore notions of tension in both the political and the personal. The monumental Spirit of the Revolution, made in Texas limestone, responds directly to his experiences of post-revolutionary Mexico. The Hanged, perhaps his most iconic work, alludes to the violence he witnessed as a young boy during the Mexican Civil War, but also has undeniable resonance with scenes of the lynching of Black and Brown men in the United States. Over the course of his career, as his work became increasingly abstract, Medellín experimented with metal and glass, and expanded his artistic practice into other mediums, such as printmaking, pottery, mosaic, and stained glass.
Beginning in the late 1940s, Medellín was commissioned to create large-scale works for public buildings and religious institutions across Texas. The exhibition includes preparatory drawings and photographs from Medellíns personal archives, donated by the artist to the Bywaters Special Collections at Southern Methodist University (SMU). Notable projects represented in the exhibition through color drawings include mosaic murals depicting the stations of the cross at St. Bernard of Clairvaux Church near White Rock Lake; a series of stained-glass windows for now-demolished Trinity Lutheran Church of Dallas that were preserved and are now installed at the Moody Performance Hall and Love Field Airport; and a stained-glass window at the University of Texas at Austin.
In addition to his artistic practice, Medellín worked as an art instructor for over four decades and developed a devoted following of students. He taught at various institutions, including North Texas State Teachers College (today the University of North Texas) and SMU. Beginning in 1945, Medellín was an instructor and central figure at the DMFAs school for 21 years, often participating in the Art in Action series, in which the Dallas public was invited to watch him work on sculptures, some of which will be featured in the exhibition. In 1966 he opened the Octavio Medellín School of Sculpture in Oak Cliff, providing art classes to students of all skill levels. Today called the Creative Arts Center and located in East Dallas, the school has served thousands of students. At all of these institutions, Medellín acted as guide and mentor to generations of aspiring artists, working with well-known figures such as Marty Ray, Tomas Bustos, and David Hickman.
The exhibition will have an accompanying publication, the first monograph dedicated to Medellín. The 104-page catalog includes a lengthy essay by curator Dr. Mark A. Castro examining the artists life, as well as grouped object entries featuring the works in the exhibition and others from throughout the artists career. Published by the Dallas Museum of Art and distributed by Yale University Press, the catalog will be available in early 2022.
Medellíns career was characterized by an intense drive to expand his knowledge of materials and techniques, to share that knowledge freely with his students, and, above all, to create compelling works of art, said Dr. Castro. I remain in awe of his personal tenacity and the dynamism of his sculptures. We are thrilled to present the first museum retrospective of this important artist in the city that he called home.
The Museum continues to conduct research on Octavio Medellín and welcomes any information regarding additional, unknown works by him, as well as supporting materials (e.g., correspondence, photographs, and ephemera) related to the artist.