Kermit Oliver
Born1943 (age 8081)
Refugio, TX
NationalityAmerican
Alma materTexas Southern University

Kermit Oliver (born 1943) is an American painter who studied and worked in Houston before moving to Waco, Texas.  His work reflects his Texas heritage and his interests in mythology, religion, and history.  Oliver combines “contemporary and classical elements, resulting in a style he calls symbolic realism.”[1] His paintings create “strange, lushly illustrated worlds populated by people and animals realistically drawn but placed in surreal juxtaposition.”[2]

Oliver was named the 2017 Texas State Two-Dimensional Artist by the Texas Commission on the Arts. His painting, “Tobias,” was included in the 2016 inaugural exhibition at the Smithsonian’s National Museum of African American History and Culture in Washington, D.C.  In 2013, Oliver was honored with the first Lifetime Achievement Award from the Art League Houston.[3] 

Background and education

Oliver was born in Refugio, Texas, where his father worked as a cowboy on a cattle ranch. By the age of 6 or 7, his talent for drawing the cattle, horses, and the south Texas flora and fauna was evident.[2]  After graduating from high school, in 1960 Oliver enrolled at Texas Southern University in Houston, where he was a student of the artist, Dr. John T. Biggers.[4] He married fellow art student, Katie Washington, in 1962. [5] While at Texas Southern University, he was the recipient of a Jesse Jones Art Scholarship, and he graduated in 1967 with Bachelor of Fine Arts and art education degrees.[6] In 1968 Oliver began teaching art at Texas Southern University, and he also taught at the Art League of Houston during this time; however, he soon decided not to pursue teaching as a career.[7] 

For most of his life, Oliver worked as both an artist and a full-time mail sorter for the US Postal Service, initially in Houston and then for thirty years after moving to Waco, Texas in 1984. He believed that a steady income was the best way to support his family while allowing him the freedom to pursue art on his own terms.[8] He retired from the postal service in 2013 and continued working as an artist.[9]

Art

While still an art student, Oliver’s work was included in a show at Houston’s Courtney Gallery, and in 1970 the gallery gave him his first solo exhibition.  He had his second solo show at the DuBose Gallery the following year. [5] In the years after his graduation from Texas Southern University, Oliver became an integral part of the Houston art scene. He was the first African-American artist in Houston to be represented by a major commercial gallery.[10] His work was subsequently exhibited in numerous solo and group shows and has been included in a number of museum collections.[11] In 2005, the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston held a retrospective exhibition of Oliver’s work titled, “Notes from a Child’s Odyssey: the art of Kermit Oliver,” that included a selection of more than 90 works created over four decades.[2]

Alvia Wardlaw, curator of Oliver's 2005 retrospective exhibition, noted that “The love of flora and fauna that you see in Kermit’s art began in that childhood where he was free to roam around Refugio and ride horses and hunt and sketch and draw…His visual sensibility with regards to the Texas landscape which he makes a metaphor for the wonders of the universe was born out of those youthful experiences.”[4] Oliver has noted that his work deals with ideas such as growth, metamorphosis, birth, death, rebirth, resurrection, immortality and "redemption...that especially."[6] His paintings create worlds where "...animals, plants, and humans interact in surprising scenes that seem freighted with a mysterious and complex significance.”[10] For example, a painting of a figure standing in front of rows of tall shrubbery is not simply a study of a garden—it is titled “Theseus and the Labyrinth.”[8]

Oliver is also known for his celebrated work as a designer of scarves for Hermes, the French fashion house. The relationship began in 1980 when Hermes asked Lawrence Marcus of the upscale department store Neiman Marcus, if he knew of an American artist who could create a design for a scarf with a Southwestern theme.  Marcus told Hermes about Oliver, and the design was a successso much so that Oliver created 17 designs for Hermes over 32 years. He is the only American artist to create designs for Hermes.[8]

Oliver's work is held in the collection of The Museum of Fine Arts, Houston.[12]

References

  1. Anonymous (April 2005). "Oliver Retrospective". Southwest Art. 34 (11): 70.
  2. 1 2 3 Holley, Joe (May 31, 2014). "A Well Kept Secret". Houston Chronicle. Retrieved 17 August 2018.
  3. "Current State Artists". Texas Commission on the Arts. 2017. Retrieved 12 August 2018.
  4. 1 2 Rowell, Charles Henry (2009-02-28). "An Interview with Alvia Wardlaw". Callaloo. 32 (1): 261–276. doi:10.1353/cal.0.0393. ISSN 1080-6512. S2CID 161566300.
  5. 1 2 Fax, Elton (1977). Black artists of the new generation. New York: Dodd, Mead. pp. 128–129. ISBN 978-0396074342. OCLC 2984385.
  6. 1 2 Reynolds, Sarah C. (2008). Houston reflections : art in the city, 1950s, 60s, and 70s. Houston: Rice University Press. p. 183. ISBN 9780892630059. OCLC 184906193.
  7. J., Wardlaw, Alvia (2005). Notes from a child's odyssey : the art of Kermit Oliver. Oliver, Kermit, 1943-, Museum of Fine Arts, Houston. Houston: Museum of Fine Arts, Houston. pp. 27–29. ISBN 0890901325. OCLC 60128384.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  8. 1 2 3 Hoover, Carl (17 May 2017). "Waco artist Kermit Oliver named Texas State Artist for 2017". Waco Tribune-Herald. Retrieved 16 August 2018.
  9. Glentzer, Molly (29 September 2013). "Art League gives lifetime honor to Kermit Oliver". Houston Chronicle. Retrieved 17 August 2018.
  10. 1 2 Sheeler, Jason (October 2012). "Portrait of the artist as a postman". Texas Monthly. 40 (10): 114–312.
  11. "Kermit Oliver" (PDF). Hooks-Epstein Gallery. Archived from the original (PDF) on 11 November 2018. Retrieved 17 August 2018.
  12. "The Museum of Fine Arts, Houston Online Collection". Retrieved August 30, 2020.
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