Published ETD Collection
Permanent URI for this collectionhttps://hdl.handle.net/10657/2
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Browsing Published ETD Collection by Subject "1930s"
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Item The Greater Texas and Pan-American Exposition: An Early Staging of Texana Identity(2015-08) Champion, Carmen; Koontz, Rex; Zalman, Sandra; Perales, MonicaThe 1936 Central Centennial Exposition, more widely known as the Texas Centennial Exposition, has been regarded as the single event that placed Texas on the map, introducing the state as a competitive, industrious and dynamic entity, with a robust history. While there is much merit in heralding the importance of the Texas Centennial Exposition, most scholars have dismissed the lesser-known, follow-up exposition to the Centennial, as subsidiary and unsuccessful. The aim of this essay looks to dissect two important, yet overlooked dimensions of the elaborately rich spectacle of the 1937 Greater Texas and Pan-American Exposition. I hope to establish how the architectural envelope and visual display of events formulated a more nuanced Texana identity that falls in line with our contemporary view of Texas today. Secondly, and perhaps more importantly, I will demonstrate how the featured art exhibition, with the ingenious title, Art of the Americas: Pre- Columbian and Contemporary, should be recognized as one of the earliest exhibitions within the region to link a classic Pre-Columbian past with the vibrant, modern era of the late 30s, which was specifically articulated through the climate of Pan-Americanism. By tapping into a myriad of the most important cultural movements of the time to include, Mexican Muralism, the Mexican Renaissance, the American Art Scene, American Regionalism and primarily Pan-Americanism, Texas artists placed themselves beside their contemporaries in Latin America. In doing so, they abandoned the Eurocentric vision offered the year prior at the Texas Centennial, becoming pioneers in purporting Pre-Columbian art, not merely as a source of inspiration for American artists, but as a distinct connection to the vibrant heritage of American art as a whole.