Porfirio Salinas

Porfirio Salinas
Born (1910-11-06)November 6, 1910
Bastrop, Texas
Died April 18, 1973(1973-04-18) (aged 62)
San Antonio, Texas
Education Robert W. Wood José Arpa
Known for Landscape Painting
Movement Early Texas,
American Impressionism

Porfirio Salinas (November 6, 1910 – April 18, 1973) was an Early Texas landscape painter who is recognized for his depictions of the Texas Hill Country in the springtime.[1] He was one of the first Mexican American artists to become nationally recognized for his paintings. He was described by The New York Times as United States President Lyndon B. Johnson's favorite painter.[2] Works by Salinas are in the Texas State Capitol, the Texas Governor's Mansion and in a number of museums including the Witte Museum in San Antonio, Texas and the Panhandle-Plains Historical Museum.[3]

Early history

Salinas was born on November 6, 1910 near Bastrop, Texas.[4] He came from a family of Mexican American tenant farmers, his father Porfirio G. Salinas and his mother Clara G. Chavez Salinas leaving the farm for San Antonio when Porfirio was a child.[5] Salinas was a precocious talent who drew and painted from the time he was a small boy and received encouragement from his teachers. He had little formal education and left school when he was young in order to work in an art supply store. When he was fifteen he met the English-born landscape artist Robert William Wood (1889–1979) at the store.[6] Salinas went to work in Wood's studio in 1925, where he learned the basics of being a professional painter. He stretched Wood's canvasses, learned to frame paintings, how to mix paints and how to prepare canvas under Wood's supervision. Wood was a very capable businessman and the younger painter learned how to sell and market his art from the English painter. Salinas accompanied Wood and the Spanish-born artist and teacher José Arpa (1858–1952) on sketching trips to the hills and valleys surrounding San Antonio where they painted blooming wildflowers in the spring and the Texas Red Oak in the fall. With his talent and hard work he was soon capable of professional work.[6]

Professional career

Salinas began painting professionally in 1930, when he was twenty years old.[5] His early work was influenced by his mentor Robert Wood's paintings.[6] He painted many scenes of Texas Bluebonnets, the state flower, sold to tourists by the artists and galleries in San Antonio, Texas. In 1939, he began working with the art dealer Dewey Bradford (1896–1985), who sold paintings, frames and art supplies in the state capital of Austin, Texas.[6]

National recognition

While Salinas sold his work steadily, by 1960 he was known primarily to Texas collectors and tourists who visited San Antonio. In 1961, this changed rapidly with the election of his collector Lyndon B. Johnson (1908–1973) to the Vice-Presidency of the United States. With his ascension from the United States Senate to being Vice President, Johnson and his wife Lady Bird Johnson (1912–2007) purchased a large French-style chateau from the socialite and heiress Perle Mesta (1889–1975). They decorated the house with French antiques and tapestries that were already in the home, but the foyer was hung with Texas wildflower paintings by Salinas. Lady Bird Johnson was quoted as saying of them that "I want to see them when I open the door, to remind me of where I come from."[7] After the assassination of President John F. Kennedy, Lyndon Johnson became President and his Salinas paintings were brought with him into the White House. He told the Washington press that Porfirio Salinas was "his favorite artist."[2] President Johnson also presented a Salinas painting to President Gustavo Diaz Ordaz of Mexico as an official gift from the United States. The patronage of the President was a tremendous boost to the artist's career and during the 1960s, his work sold briskly for ever higher prices. The Johnsons' Salinas paintings remain in the collection of the LBJ Ranch today and President and Lady Bird Johnson were both advocates and admirers of wildflowers. First Lady Lady Bird Johnson will always remain linked to the subject of wildflowers because of her Beautify America campaign and the Highway Beautification Act which was passed by the United States Congress in 1965. As part of that effort, many miles of Texas roadsides were seeded with Texas Bluebonnets, Lupinus texensis, the flowers that Salinas is known for painting.[6]

Death and posthumous reputation

Salinas was recognized by the city of his birth, Bastrop, Texas in 1960, when he was fifty years old.[8] He had a solo exhibition at the Witte Museum in San Antonio in 1962. His work was widely published by the New York Graphic Society, which added to his national reputation.[8] In 1967 his work illustrated a book titled "Bluebonnets and Cactus" that was published in Austin. Salinas died on April 18, 1973, after a brief illness. He was memorialized in the City of Austin by Porfirio Salinas Day in 1973 and Ruth Goddard wrote a book titled Porfirio Salinas that was published two years after his death. There is a Porfirio Salinas Art Exhibition each year in Bastrop, Texas that is held in the artist's honor. In celebration of the centennial of Porfirio Salinas' birth the Witte Museum mounted an exhibition titled Porfirio Salinas: Painting South Texas that opened on October 16, 2010 running to March 20, 2011.[9]

Artistic production

The professional career of Porfirio Salinas stretched to more than forty years and according to the art historian Jeffrey Morseburg, he is estimated to have painted between two and three thousand works during that time.[6] His work is divided among a number of subjects, but Hill Country landscapes of the Texas Bluebonnets predominate. The Bluebonnet landscape has remained eternally popular with both collectors of historic Texas paintings and contemporary artists. [10] Salinas also painted many scenes of Texas Red Oak trees in the autumn and Prickly pear cactus. There were also scenes of the Texas desert in the Texas Panhandle and of arid West Texas. Salinas made trips to Mexico and painted rural Mexican villages and the volcanoes that are south of Mexico City. For Mexican American audiences, Salinas painted small scenes of Bullfights, Cockfights and Mexican Fandangos.[6]

Personal life

Salinas married Maria Bonillas, a Mexican woman who worked for the Mexican National Railways, in San Antonio in 1943. They had a single child, Christina Maria Salinas, who was born in 1945. Maria Bonillas Salinas helped manage her husband's career. The Salinas home and studio was located at 2723 Buena Vista Street in San Antonio. It consists of a small stone home with a detached studio.[6]

Public collections

References

  1. "Porfirio Salinas". nanetterichardsonfineart.com. Retrieved November 20, 2010.
  2. 1 2 Antonio, Jack Langguthsan (March 15, 1964). "L.B.J.'s Favorite Painter". The New York Times. p. SM75. Retrieved November 20, 2010.
  3. See section Public Collections
  4. Salinas, Porfirio, Jr., Texas State Historical Museum Website
  5. 1 2 Goddard, Ruth (1975). Porfirio Salinas. Austin, Texas: Rock House Press. p. 95. ASIN B0006CJIVO.
  6. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Morseburg, Jeffrey. "Porfirio Salinas & the Hill Country Landscape". texasbluebonnetpainters.com. Retrieved November 20, 2010.
  7. "The Home: Ormes & the Man". Time magazine. November 17, 1961. Retrieved November 20, 2010.
  8. 1 2 Goddard, Ruth, undated pamphlet Bastrop's Porfirio Salinas
  9. "The Witte Museum Celebrates the 100th Anniversary of Artist Porfirio Salinas' Birth" (PDF). San Antonio, Texas: Witte Museum. October 21, 2010. Retrieved November 20, 2011.
  10. Feldman, Claudia (March 31, 2007). "Paintings of the State Flower Range from the Sublime to the Trite". Texas National Press. Retrieved November 20, 2011.
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