Richard Gordon Stout

(American, 1934-2020)

Night and Day, Premonition, 2015

Oil on canvas; 40 x 60 inches
Gift of Linda and William Reaves, The Linda and William Reaves Collection of Texas Art at UHV, 2022

Night and Day, Premonition is an abstract work delicately rendered in shades of blue, green, and red. With these three colors, applied with a feathery touch, Stout creates a sense of depth and space. The geometric swaths of paint, with their hard edges and abrupt junctures, create a structure, a room perhaps. Its angles are confused. Its shadows are elusive. The perspective is disjointed. This prismatic structure does not conform to any rational or intuitive spatial logic. Yet, there is balance, a rhythm, amidst the disorder. Light and dark, day and night, confront each other. As suggested by the title, Night and Day, Premonition shows a realm on the cusp of change. When looking at this work, as if waiting for a bomb to explode or the sun to set, the viewer awaits anxiously for what might happen.

Stout was born in Beaumont in 1934. While in high school, Stout spent his summers studying at the Art Academy of Cincinnati. He attended the School of the Art Institute of Chicago on a full scholarship. He graduated with a BFA in 1957. In 1958, Stout had his first solo exhibition at the Beaumont Art Museum. The following year, he took a faculty position at the Museum School of the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston. Stout earned an MFA from the University of Texas at Austin in 1969. He served as a professor of art at the University of Houston from 1969 until his retirement in 1996. Stout’s art is represented in the collections of the Butler Institute of American Art, the McNay Art Museum, the Menil Collection, and the MFAH.

Location

University of Houston-Victoria

STEM Building

Other Artworks by this Artist

Great Emblem, 1967