Rita Deanin Abbey
Art Museum

Gallery

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Gallery

  • A diagonal, side shot of a sculpture. The focal point of the photo is a bronze sculpture of a muscular, male figure wearing a mountain lion skull. He is doing a ballet pose, lifting his furtherest away arm up with his wrist bent, and lifting his closest arm out and toward us with a pointed index finger. His closest leg is also lifted toward us. The background is blurred but we can still make out the main gallery of the museum with colorful paintings on the wall, a sloped ceiling, and entries to other small galleries.
  • Two guests in the center of the photo walk the hallway of the main gallery of the museum, which features five visible, colorful, large-scale paintings. Their backs are to the camera, but you can see their heads are turned to view the paintings which are all abstracts with rectangular and organic shapes ranging from blues, reds, and yellows as the main colors. The guest closest to the camera is wearing soft green pants with a matching yellow and green sweater.
  • Photo of guests in the main gallery of the museum. In the foreground are two of Abbey's larger pieces on the wall, both explosions of color: oranges, blues, yellows, purples. In the background, two guests (a man and woman) are walking through the gallery.

Rita Deanin Abbey’s lifetime of work spans 78 series of art, 59 groups of art, and 22 individual works of art.

Rita Deanin Abbey worked in a variety of materials, techniques, styles, themes, and sizes to create artworks that range from small scale to monumental. She utilized the language of color, line, pattern, texture, and form for inquiry into limitless compositional elements. 

Below are a few of the series that are currently on display in the museum.

1956–1958

Arches National Monument Series

5 on display, 12 in series

From 1956 to 1959, Abbey experienced the Southwest desert landscape, living in or near national monuments in Arizona, New Mexico, and Utah. She painted out-of-doors, was awed by the majesty of the desert, and grew fascinated by the geology, plant life, and wildlife she observed.

The Arches National Monument Series, 1956–1958, contrast organic textures with geometric shapes while focusing on color with a textured impasto manner of paint application.

  • Busy painting with center being a culmination of shapes in a tornado-diagonal form against a background of messily painted purple, white, and tan. The shapes are ovals, triangles, and rectangles. Part of the Arches National Monument Series.
  • Horizontal oil painting with dark blue and orange background. Yellow-gray rectangle tilted slightly to the left with two wide stripes (one the right and one on the left) on the painting. Each strip is a darker yellow, almost gray. Each shape it outlined in another yellow or orange color with pops of deep purple throughout the painting.

1959–1962

Taos Series

4 on display, 12 in series

The Taos Series serves as a complement to the Arches National Monument Series.

Enamored with the landscapes of New Mexico, Arizona, and Utah, Abbey honed her expressions of color into a palette of cooler tones for this series of works.

1975

Texture Series

7 on display, 7 in series

In 1975 and 1977, Abbey explored textured surfaces, producing the Texture Series. The surface of the canvases were built-up to achieve earth-like textures using the application of acrylic paint, sand, and sawdust mixed with polymer gloss medium. 

With highly textured surfaces suggestive of geological processes and forms, and with precise use of color, the paintings acquire a sense of earth’s tension, movement, and contour. Her eagerness to explore new materials continued to foster experimentation with textures. Restricted hues mixed with sand, sawdust, and earth created flowing planes of textured surfaces.

1979–1987

From Desert to Bible VistAs

6 on display, 22 in series

The From Desert to Bible Vistas series combines mysterious structural forms with haunting atmospheric qualities. In the act of painting, Abbey strives to discover images based on visual perceptions and subjective impressions of desert phenomena. She also drew from meaningful and salient aspects selected from her everyday life. These paintings are diverse in style, but their unifying element and Abbey’s source of inspiration are the forces of nature.

1984–2006

Porcelain Enamels fired on Metal

48 on display, 145 in series

During a sabbatical in 1984, Rita Deanin Abbey studied with Professor John Killmaster at Boise State University and began working with porcelain enamel on steel. 

Abbey was attracted to vitreous enamels because of the intensity and fastness of the color, the luminous, reflective hard surface, the possibilities for contrasting impasto with transparent layers, and the malleability and resistance of the metal. She respected and loved the wide range of color and sculptural possibilities in the enameling process. By using painting and spraying applications of porcelain enamel on steel panels or hammered shapes, she fired the surfaces several times, striving to intensify textures, subtleties, and contrasts of color. To enhance the dynamics of space, she often juxtaposes hammered enamels with relief wood carvings or enameled panels.