Loren Mozley (October 2, 1905 – September 22, 1989) was an artist of the American Southwest. He is known for his New Deal artwork post office mural in Albuquerque, New Mexico that depicts the Pueblo Revolt of 1680.[1] He has other New Deal commissions in Clinton, Oklahoma and Alvin, Texas.[2] His painting Rocks and Cypresses is in Huntington Gallery at the University of Texas.[3] He had a retrospective there in 1978; most of the works shown were landscapes of Mexico, New Mexico and central Texas.[4] In 2013, the Dallas Museum of Art hosted a show of his work called Loren Mozley: Structural Integrity.[5]

He also taught art in Taos,[1] and once in August 1935 gave Georgia O'Keeffe a lift from New York back to New Mexico.[6] Along with Ward Lockwood he helped found the art department at the University of Texas in 1938.[3] He was an expert in Latin American art and also taught at the University of Southern California and National University in Mexico City.[7]

A portrait of Loren Mozley by the artist Andrew Dasburg is in the Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art.[8]

References

  1. 1 2 No title [Notable murals of Albuquerque], Albuquerque: The Magazine. Mar2016, Vol. 12 Issue 10, p47-57.
  2. "Loren Mozley New Deal Projects". Living New Deal (UC Berkeley Dept of Geography). Retrieved 2023-03-06.
  3. 1 2 Art Professor Loren Mozley Dead at 83, Austin American-Statesman, Austin, Texas · Tuesday, September 26, 1989, page b4
  4. "Art This Week," Austin American-Statesman, February 19, 1978, page 27.
  5. Art, Dallas Museum of (2013-02-04). "Loren Mozley: Structural Integrity". Dallas Museum of Art Uncrated. Retrieved 2023-03-06.
  6. Blumenshein's Taos Romance Traced, The Taos News, April 20, 1978, page 15.
  7. Loren Mozley Will Lecture at Pan American Round Table, The Austin American Austin, Texas · Sunday, April 12, 1953, page C-16
  8. "Loren Mozley". art.nelson-atkins.org. Retrieved 2023-03-06.

Further reading

Mozley L. University of Texas at Austin & Valley House Gallery. (1977). Loren mozley : a retrospective. University Art Museum University of Texas at Austin. OCLC 22519294


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