This biography from the Archives of AskART:
| The following, submitted December 2001, is from Katherine S. Haas and is a biographical summary written by the artist.
Richard Haas was born in 1936 in Spring Green, Wisconsin. His father had a business
in this picturesque valley, which was also the home of Frank Lloyd
Wright. Haas's earliest influences and exposure to the arts was through
the Taliesen Foundation, which he visited and worked at as a teenager
with his Uncle who was a stonemason for Mr. Wright. Haas moved to
Milwaukee and ultimately attended the University of Wisconsin,
Milwaukee receiving his B.S. degree in 1958 and his M.F.A. from the
University of Minnesota in 1964.
Following his Graduate
Studies, Mr. Haas taught Art at Michigan State in Lansing, Michigan and
then moved to New York City where he took a teaching position at
Bennington College in Vermont. He taught printmaking there for
nearly ten years and gave up full-time teaching to pursue his mural
career in 1979. Since then Richard has completed more than 120
murals, interior and exterior. He also occasionally takes a guest
teaching position and lectures nationally and internationally.
He
has received numerous prizes and honors, among them The American
Institute of Architects Medal of Honor, (1977) The Municipal Art
Society Award, (1977), Fellowships from the National Endowment for the
Arts (1987) and the Guggenheim Foundation (1983), the Doris C. Freedman
Award (1989) and the Honorary Alumnus of the year from his Alma Mater,
University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee.
RESUME 1936 Born in Spring Green, Wisconsin 1959 B.S. University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee 1964 M.F.A., University of Minnesota
AWARDS/GRANTS 1991 Distinguished Alumnus Award, University of Wisconsin 1989 Doris C. Freedman Award 1987 National Endowment for the Arts 1983 Guggenheim Fellowship 1977 New York City Municipal Art Society Award 1977 American Institute of Architects Medal of Honor 1998 National Academy Faculty Exhibition, New York, NY
ONE-PERSON EXHIBITIONS 2000 Trompe l'oeil Architectural Façades, Southern Alleghenies Museum, Loretto, PA Richard Haas, A Print Survey 1971-2000, Printworks, Chicago, Illinois 1999 Paintings, Prints and Drawings of Richard Haas, Hudson River Gallery, Dobbs Ferry, New York 1998 Gateway to the Waterfront, The Richard Haas Exhibition, Art on Main Street Yonkers, New York 1997 Richard Haas: Maquettes and Proposals, Art on Main Street, Yonkers, NY Richard Haas, Huntington Museum of Art, Huntington, West Virginia 1996 Richard Haas: Projects and Prints, Marsha Orr Contemporary Fine Art Gallery, Tallahassee, Florida
New York Past and Present: Paintings, Drawings, Prints and an
Installation by Richard Haas, The Century Association, The Century
Association, New York, 1992 Richard Haas: Drawings, Paintings and Prints - University of Wisconsin Milwaukee, WI Richard Haas: Print Survey 1970-1991 Condeso/Lawler Gallery, New York Richard Haas: Print Survey 1970-1991 Miramar Gallery, Sarasota, FL Richard Haas: Prints & Models Sam Houston State University, Huntsville, TX 1990 Richard Haas: Architectural Projects & Architectural Facades 1976-86 Rhona Hoffman, Chicago, IL
GROUP EXHIBITIONS 2001 City: Prints and Photographs from the '30s though Today, Brooke Alexander Gallery, New York, New York New York in Print, Michael Ingbar Gallery of Architectural Art, New York 176th Annual Exhibit, National Academy of Design, New York, NY 176th Annual Exhibit, National Academy of Design, New York, NY Westchester Arts Council, Locations, Real and Imagined, White Plains, NY 2000-01 The Annual Professional Painter's Exhibition, The Century Association, New York, New York 2000 Open Air Sketching, The Hudson River Museum, Yonkers, New York New York Perspectives II, MB Modern, New York, New York Self-Portraits, Printworks, Chicago, Illinois New York Icons, Spaced Gallery of Architecture, New York, New York 13 Contemporary Realists, Recent works on Paper, David Findlay Jr. Contemporary, New York, New York Invitational Exhibition of Painting and Sculpture, American Academy of Arts and Letters, New York, New York 13 Contemporary Realists, Recent Works on Paper, David Findlay Jr. Contemporary Art, New York, New York Artists Revisit the Chrysler, Michael Ingbar Gallery, New York, New York World Views, The Nabisco Gallery, East Hanover, New Jersey Cig-Art4: Where there's Smoke, Art Museum of South Texas, Corpus Christi Private Visions, David Findlay Jr. Contemporary, New York, New York 1999 Professional Painter's Exhibition, The Century Association, New York, NY Contemporary American Realist Drawings from the Jalane and Richard Davidson Collection at The Art Institute of Chicago, Chicago, Ill Works on Paper: A Riverhouse Retrospective, Steamboat Springs, Colorado The Annual Professional Painters' Exhibition, The Century Association, New York 174th Annual Exhibition, The National Academy, New York, New York Private Visions, Works on Paper, David Findlay Jr Contemporary, NYC
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This biography from the Archives of AskART:
| The creator of trompe l'oeil urban architectural monuments through
printmaking and murals, Richard Haas focuses on city subjects, "from
the ornate cast-iron industrial buildings of downtown (Manhattan) to
the fantastical, titanium and glass Guggenheim Bilbao." Mediums
include woodcut, drypoint, aquatint, screenprint, drawings, etching,
pastel, oil and gouache. In the late 1990s, he began printing on
aluminum rather than paper, which gave a strenthening, illuminated
effect "to such icons as the Empire State Building and the George
Washington Bridge."
In 2005, a Catalogue Raisonne of his work, The Prints of Richard Haas,
was published, having been written by Marilyn Kushner, curator at the
Brooklyn Museum. It is described as ". . . a journey
through the annals of modern architecture as through a printmaker's
career." The survey begins with his woodcuts in the 1960s, many
of them Expressionist-style portraits of well-known persons such as
Einstein and Nietzsche. Later he went through a Minimalist phase,
doing grid etchings. From the Catalogue, it is clear that
geometric work by Piet Mondrian and organic-seeming architecture of
Frank Lloyd Wright clearly influenced work by Haas.
He arrived in New York City from Wisconsin in 1968 and took a studio in
SoHo. His first rendering of New York City architecture was a
drypoint of the five-story Haughwout Building. From that time he
did the fronts of numerous commercial structures, focusing on doors,
rooflines and perspective to other buildings. Some of his works
are birds-eye views and others are city panoramas such as views of
Chicago, Munich and New York.
Haas has also done "shadow prints", which are silhouette's or shadows
of buildings cast onto other buildings. Symbolizing the meeting
of religion and commerce, an example of creating this effect is his
work with a shadow of Temple Emanu-El on an office building on 42nd
Street.
Source:
Deidre Stein Greben, 'Edifice Complex', ARTnews, December 2005, p. 104.
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