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American
(1930–2007)
Construction
1961
Wood, carpet, and oil paint
22 x 18 x 3 in. (55.88 x 45.72 x 7.62 cm)
Gift of the Marie Eccles Caine Foundation
2001.53
Roy De Forest is best known for his whimsical paintings of wild-eyed, pointy-eared dogs frolicking in crazy-quilt jungles, but he was also a pioneering force in the California assemblage movement. In 1960 he suddenly burst onto the San Francisco scene with a subspecies of that movement all his own, which he called “boardism.” Reviewing his debut at the Dilexi Gallery, Dean Wallace of the “San Francisco Chronicle” enthused: “He takes boards, sticks, and irregular scraps of wood, other miscellaneous materials, just about every hue of paint known to man, and in a frenzied delight of creativity whips out some of the wiggiest, most utterly delightful works of art that have graced gallery walls within my recent memory.”
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