Robert Hooton
1917 Washington, District of Columbia - 2006 Albuquerque, New Mexico
During the 1940s, especially when he lived in Guatemala, Hooton explored narrative in representational drawings and paintings depicting everyday life. Using layers of handmade paper, controlled accidents, and universal shapes, he juxtaposed organic and rigid geometric structures, celebrating the aesthetic character of subtly contrasting forms. His architectural training influenced the quality of his poignant, explorative, and unorthodox mark making, which captured the essence of the abstract expressionist movement of the 1950s.
Hooton is a visual poet who recreates spiritually fantastic experiences. His paintings evoke a spirit of Southwestern enchantment and mysticism and transcend the temporal world. During the 1980s, in his acrylic, pastel, and colored pencil works, Hooton simplified nature’s complex forms into elegant shapes that hover in imaginative landscapes. The work calls to mind the sublime encounter and graceful sensitivity of Mark Rothko’s color field paintings, the synthetic cubist collages of Pablo Picasso, and the philosophy of Zen, which emphasizes experiential wisdom realized through meditation.
Person TypeIndividual
Terms
1879 San Ildefonso Pueblo, New Mexico - 1943 San Ildefonso Pueblo
1956 Santa Cruz, New Mexico - 2014 Brooklyn, New York
1915 Aberdeen, Washington - 1991 Cape Cod, Massachusetts
1914 Chicago, Illinois - 2003 Los Angeles, California
1918 Glendale, California - 2002 Albuquerque, New Mexico
1874 York, Nebraska – 1948 New Orleans, Louisiana
1887 Liozna, Belarus – 1985 Saint Paul de Vence, France
1922 Indianapolis, Indiana - 2018 Albuquerque, New Mexico
born 1941 Youngstown, Ohio; lives Santa Fe, New Mexico