1950s Art of Renee Radell

 

Artist Bio highlights.  1950s art for Renee Kaupiz was a time of transition from watercolor painting to oil painting, even while attending Detroit Society of Arts & Crafts. Similarly, the 1950s was also a period of maturation from youth into womanhood through marriage to Lloyd Radell.  The young couple moved from Detroit to Michigan suburbs where they took on the challenges of family building, eventually reaching five children.

 

With the richness of oil painting, Radell embraced figurative art.  Her subject matter effortlessly moved from Americana and family life, to religion and a growing concern and passion for societal issues. Her rising star in the 1950s art environment caused Edgar P. Richardson, Director of the Detroit Institute of Arts and Director of the Archives of American Art, to comment in his catalog forward for Radell’s first one person oil painting exhibition in 1959:

 

“Her art today is not a charming and “artistic” one; it is one of passion and power, which one looks at carefully and with the most serious attention.”

 

(scroll down for Renee Radell 1950s Art timeline)

A painting of a young man in yellow shirt.
1950
A painting of two people and a house
1951
A man in uniform is posing for the camera.
1952
A painting of people sitting at a table
1953
A painting of an abstract scene with orange and green colors.
1954
A painting of a woman laying on her stomach
1955

Receives museum purchase award from Dearborn Museum or Art for watercolor painting.

A painting of a man in yellow shirt and striped pants.
1956

Wins 1st prize and purchase award for oil painting in National Religious Art Exhibition at Ecclesiastical Arts Guild of Detroit.

A painting of three fish on paper
1957
A brick house with trees in the background.
1958

Moves to Lake Orion, Michigan where she lives and works for the next 25 years in a country home and studio built by Lloyd.

A painting of two people standing next to each other.
1959