Jack Hooper (artist)

Jack Hooper (Jack Meredith Hooper or Jack M. Hooper) (August 26, 1928 - January 24, 2014) was an American painter, muralist, sculptor, printmaker and art educator. Hooper was a major figure on the Southern California art scene,[1][2] belonging to that generation of Los Angeles painters who matured during the late 1950s and the 1960s, painters such as John Altoon, Sam Amato, Robert Irwin, Lee Mullican, William Brice and Billy Al Bengston.[3] He was an innovator in the use of new materials, most importantly plastic in art.[4] He is known for abstract expressionist, mural and figurative painting.[5] Hooper has exhibited in art museums and galleries nationally and internationally including solo shows in Europe, Mexico and the United States.[1][2][6] Modeling renown UCLA art professor and figurative artist, Jan Stussy,[7] the last 20 years of his life were spent in rural Mexico, where he drew and painted every single day until his death.[5]

Jack Hooper
Jack Hooper circa 1980
Born
Jack Meredith Hooper

August 26, 1928
DiedJanuary 24, 2014(2014-01-24) (aged 85)
Laguna de Santa Maria del Oro, Mexico
NationalityAmerican
EducationAA, Art, Los Angeles City College
BA, Painting, magna cum laude, Mexico City College
Académie Julian
Académie de la Grande Chaumière
MA, Painting, University of California, Los Angeles
Known forPainting, Muralist, Sculpture, Printmaking
MovementAbstract expressionism, Mexican Muralism, Bay Area Figurative Movement, Generación de la Ruptura

Early life and education

Born in 1928 to a family of modest means, Jack Hooper was close to his mother and aunt, a widow with whom they lived in Silver Lake, Los Angeles during the Great Depression.[8] Recognized as gifted in art by family,[8] he began art training in a Work Projects Administration (WPA) school at the age of twelve.[9] After graduating from public high school, Hooper served as a communications officer in the United States Army Air Corps in Antarctica and Jamaica at the end of WW II.[10] In contrast to his future professional colleagues, Roland Reiss and Robert Irwin, who held art-related positions in Training Aids and Special Services in the military,[7] throughout his years of service, 1946-1949, he continued to paint and sent watercolor postcards home using a mini watercolor set sent to him by his sister.[11] Using G.I. Bill education benefits after his military service, he earned an A.A., Art in 1951 from Los Angeles City College.[10]

Undergraduate Study

But as a young artist, he sought a first-rate art education, and was therefore ultimately drawn to the vibrant art scene of Mexico[12] and "The American College South Of The Border".[13][14] "Mexico City in the 1950s has been compared to the Paris of the 20s 'where ideas, art, literature and revolution could be discussed' on and off campus, in the classrooms, the sidewalk cafés, and the all-night parties."[13] This was a period of intense artistic and political dynamism for Hooper, influenced by Diego Rivera, Jose Clement Orozco and David Alfaro Siqueiros,[12] the fathers of Mexican Muralism.

Hooper studied and graduated with a B.A., Painting in 1952, magna cum laude from Mexico City College.[10][15] Following in the footsteps of Mexican muralist and MCC mural techniques and art history professor, Arnold Belkin,[13] Hooper served as a mural assistant to Siqueiros in 1952 on "The Future Triumph of Medical Science Over Cancer" (1958) at Institute of Social Security Oncology Hospital.[10][16][17] He did advanced studies under Siqueiros in raw synthetic paint media and their application to mural and easel painting.[10][16] Siqueiros and Hooper pushed the use of acrylic paint rather than oil paint and experimented with sgraffito in painting murals.[8] "I became close to Siqueiros, the leader of the Communist Party of Mexico, who was subject to frequent arrests by the authorities".[12] Hooper knew many of the artists of the period, including Frida Kahlo who would become the subject of many of his portraits and studies over the coming decades.[18][19]

Study Abroad - Europe

Upon the recommendation of UCLA instructor Stanton Macdonald-Wright to study to be a painter at the prestigious fine art schools in Europe, like he had done at the age of 19,[7][20] Hooper attended the Académie Julian[21] and did independent study at the Académie de la Grande Chaumière from 1952-1953.[9][10] Both painting academies located in the 6th arrondissement of Paris were alternatives to the École des Beaux-Arts.[12] His advanced studies were under André Planson, Pierre Jérôme, Roger Chapelain-Midy and Jean Bouchaud[10] who were members of the Académie des Beaux-Arts, medalists at Salon of French Artists or Prix de Rome, and Knights or Officers of the French National Order of the Legion of Honour. Henri Matisse and cubist sculptor, Jacques Lipchitz were among the many great artists associated with the Académie Julian[22] who Hooper, like Macdonald-Wright,[20] considers to have been important influences in his development.[5] Further independent study was done at Department of Graphic Arts of the Louvre,[10] a daily haunt of Macdonald-Wright's.[20] His first one-man show was at Galerie du Dragon, Paris.[2]

Graduate Study

After working in Paris, Rome and London with extensive travel and independent study throughout Europe from 1954-1955,[2][10][16] Hooper returned to the US in 1956 to pursue graduate study in at University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA).[10] He found a natural affinity with the transforming post-World War II Southern California art scene. In Los Angeles, there were three major currents for new ideas led by Lorser Feitelson, Rico Lebrun and Stanton Macdonald-Wright.[7] Lebrun did figurative work, highly romantic, affected by Picasso.[7] Feitelson represented constructivism, or non-objective art. Macdonald-Wright with Jan Stussy and Gordon Nunes at UCLA as his protégés,[7] practiced Synchromism. "They were part of the 1st generation of artists released from the requirements of completely representational paintings. Perhaps they accomplished what they did because no one in this 'new world' cared about the maintenance of artistic traditions. This group was uniquely free to pursue an artistic spirit which was fresh, challenging and explosive." (art dealer Frank Goss)[23]

Many colleges had grown large art faculties to deal with the influx of veterans.[7] UCLA hired impressive new instructors Frederick S. Wight, Sam Amato, William Brice (a protégé of Rico Lebrun) and John Paul Jones. Fellow graduate students included Roland Reiss, Craig Kauffman, James McGarrell, Les (William) Kerr, Ray Brown, Idelle (Feinberg) Weber,[7] all of whom became prominent modern artists and some art professors. During summer 1956, Hooper did special study with and became a studio assistant to Rico Lebrun.[10][16] It was in this West Coast Modernist School that Hooper received his M.A., Painting in 1958.[9][15]

Early career

Teaching

While working toward his master's degree, Hooper became a teaching assistant at UCLA in 1956 and was appointed Associate in Art, Drawing & Painting in 1957.[9][10][16] In 1958, he received joint appointment as Art Associate and Art Coordinator and Liaison Officer for University Extension,[9][10] founded by his mentor Jan Stussy.[24] He showed his work in group and solo exhibitions at Southern California museums and galleries, including UCLA Art Galleries with fellow faculty. He received the prestigious Art in America Award, "New Talent in America" (painting) (1958).[10][25] Hooper was among 13 cash prize winners of the 1959 annual Los Angeles County Museum Exhibition of "Artists of Los Angeles and Vicinity,"[26] whose jury included famed Bay Area Figurative Movement painter, Elmer Bischoff.[27] Art critic and curator Jules Langsner wrote of his solo show at Bertha Lewinson Gallery, "It is in the drawings of voluptuous females that Hooper is seen to greater advantage. His skimming, undulating line is at once sinuous and decisive."[28]

In the summers of 1960 and 1962, Hooper was a Visiting Professor of Art at the University of Colorado, Boulder.[9][10] While there, he began a multi-year exploration and application of innovative artist materials, mainly coating and "otting" materials used in industry, to easel and mural painting with Roland Reiss, who held the senior painting teaching position, and the sculptor, De Wain Valentine.[7][10][29] He returned to UCLA for an Assistant Professor of Art appointment in 1961.[10] An eight-year relationship with Mount Saint Mary's College in Los Angeles began in 1962 when he was appointed Assistant Professor Art,[6][30] and later became the Chairman of the Art Department and the Director of Galleries.[2][10] In September 1964, Hooper curated the first exhibition of paintings and sculpture by famed artist Lee Mullican in Southern California since 1961,[31][32] among many other gallery shows at Mount St. Mary's.

Innovations

During 1962-1966, Hooper directed "Sculpture Walls Architectural Murals" in Los Angeles and executed 14 murals.[33] Further explorations of the ancient technique of "Sgraffito" using heavy industrial spray equipment and layers of scraped wet plaster led to over 3000 square feet of murals for public and private structures in the Los Angeles area, with over 30 tons of materials.[10] Art critics applauded his pioneering use of new and innovative materials, such as polyurethane foam and epoxy, in work shown at regional and national group and solo exhibitions. Arnold Gassan, writes about Hooper and his peers' leadership in plastic arts, "The revolution is primarily technical, and is of ultimate importance to all working artists. The introduction of plastics into expressive forms may well be as significant as the medieval introduction of oil in painting".[1] Artforum featured him in a special Issue on "Sculpture in California" for his plastic relief paintings and reviewed his work seven times in four years.[34][35][36][37][38][39][40] "Probably the handsomest piece in the show is Jack Hooper's large bas-relief-painting...Hooper's plastic organizations remains powerfully two-dimensional and painterly."[39] In 1965, Long Beach Museum of Art awarded him a purchase prize for "Emergence," a painting relief using plastics exhibited at "Three California Painters."[41][42]

Hooper participated in, among others, traveling invitational shows at the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York, San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, Amon Carter Museum of Art, Oakland Art Museum and Long Beach Museum of Art.[10] Catalogues of national exhibitions that featured his work were "Fifty California Artists," [43] "The Artist's Environment: West Coast,"[44] "Arts of Southern California - VIII: Drawing,"[45] "Art Across America Far West" and "Fifty Paintings by Thirty-Seven Artists of the Los Angeles Area."[46] Richard Diebenkorn, Sam Francis, Morris Graves, Clyfford Still, Mark Tobey, Nathan Oliveira and Mark Rothko.[43][47] were among the over 100 invited artists in these shows. Primus Stuart Gallery began representing Hooper in 1961, and later David Stuart Galleries, whose list of artists included Joan Brown, Emerson Woelffer and Peter Voulkos.[33][48] A year earlier at the age of 32, his work became a part of the Historical Archives of Contemporary Art of São Paulo Biennial, Brazil.[5][49]

At the end of this time, he co-founded Aesthetic Research Center (A.R.C.) with architect, Frank Gehry, to foster collaboration between professionals in all fields of technology and the creative arts.[5][10] Congruent with this focus, he resigned his post at Mount Saint Mary's College in 1969 to pursue and reorient his professional career in painting.[3][5] In the following years, his teaching mantra "a great painting is captured in a single brushstroke" would recapture his heart as a painter and his return to the human form.[8]

Selected Teaching/ Lectures and Appointments

  • 1975-77 Visiting Professor of Art, University of California Santa Cruz, CA[33]
  • 1975-77 Co-founder and Instructor, Santa Cruz Art Center, Santa Cruz, CA
  • 1967 Guest Lecturer, "Selective Eye: A practical approach to the acquisition of art" Series, KCET, Channel 28 and National Education TV Network, Los Angeles, CA
  • 1966 Guest Lecturer, "Lights on the Landscape", American Institute of Landscape Architects Conference, Los Angeles, CA
  • 1965 Invited Juror, First International Art Festival, Westwood Art Association, Los Angeles, CA[50]
  • 1965 Guest Lecturer, Brentwood Art Festival, Brentwood Country Club, Los Angeles, CA
  • 1964 Artistic Director, Sabrina Gallery, Los Angeles, CA[10]
  • 1963-69 Chairman, Department of Art, Mount Saint Mary's College, Los Angeles, CA[10]
  • 1962-66 Director, Sculpture Walls Architectural Murals, Los Angeles, CA[33]
  • 1962 Assistant Professor of Art, Mount Saint Mary's College, Los Angeles, CA[10]
  • 1962 Visiting Professor of Art, University of Colorado, Boulder, CO (Summer)[10]
  • 1961 Assistant Professor of Art, Drawing & Painting, University of California, Los Angeles, CA[10]
  • 1960 Visiting Professor of Art, University of Colorado, Boulder, CO (Summer)[10]
  • 1958 Art Associate and Art Coordinator and Liaison Officer, University Extension (joint appointment), University of California, Los Angeles, CA[10]
  • 1957 Associate in Art, Drawing & Painting, University of California, Los Angeles, CA[10]
  • 1956 Teaching Assistant, University of California, Los Angeles, CA[10]

Awards

  • 1983 First Prize for Graphics, Central California Biennial, Pacific Grove Art Center, CA
  • 1965 Purchase Award, "Emergence" relief sculpture, Long Beach Museum of Art, CA[41][42]
  • 1959 Junior Art Council Award, Annual Exhibition—"Artists of Los Angeles and Vicinity," Los Angeles County Museum of Art, CA[26]
  • 1958 Art in America Award, "New Talent in America" (painting)[10][25]
  • 1957 Honorable Mention, "Invitational Collage Exhibit", Exodus Gallery, San Pedro, CA[16]
  • 1957 Honorable Mention, "The First Annual Los Angeles Area Drawing Exhibition," Exodus Gallery, San Pedro, CA[16]

Selected solo shows

  • 2016 Galleria Tile, San Francisco, CA
  • 2008 "The Figurative Work of Jack Hooper, " Thomas Reynolds Gallery, San Francisco, CA[51]
  • 1996 Marina Gallery, Puerto Vallarta, Mexico
  • 1995 Galeria Uno, Puerto Vallarta, Mexico
  • 1991 Stremmel Gallery, Reno, NV
  • 1987 "JACK HOOPER: Portraits of the Family," Vorpal Gallery, San Francisco. CA[52]
  • 1986 San Jose Institute of Contemporary Art, San Jose. CA[19]
  • 1984 Vorpal Gallery, San Francisco. CA and New York (SoHo), NY
  • 1982 Vorpal Gallery, New York (SoHo), NY
  • 1981 Vorpal Gallery, San Francisco. CA
  • 1980 Los Robles Gallery, Palo Alto, CA
  • 1978 Santa Cruz Municipal Gallery, Santa Cruz, CA
  • 1976 Re-Vision Gallery, Santa Monica, CA
  • 1975 "Twenty Year Retrospective", Mary Porter Sesnon Gallery, College Five and Eloise Pickard Smith Gallery, Cowell College University of California at Santa Cruz, CA (catalogue)[3][53][54]
  • 1974 Re-Vision Gallery, Santa Monica, CA[10]
  • 1968 Mount Saint Mary's College Galleries, Los Angeles, CA
  • 1966 Canyon Gallery, Los Angeles, CA[10]
  • 1965 "Recent Drawings Jack Hooper," Sabrina Gallery, Los Angeles, CA[2]
  • 1964 "Jack Hooper: Relief Paintings," David Stuart Galleries, Santa Monica, CA[40]
  • 1963 Roberts Art Gallery, Santa Monica, CA[10]
  • 1962 "Hooper," Primus-Stuart Galleries, Los Angeles, CA[6][9][38]
  • 1960 Long Beach Museum of Art, Long Beach, CA
  • 1959 "Hooper," Bertha Lewinson Gallery, Los Angeles, CA[28]
  • 1953 Falk-Raboff Gallery, Beverly Hills, CA[10]
  • 1953 Galerie du Dragon, Paris, France[16]

Selected group exhibitions

  • 1995 "Private Garden," Stremmel Gallery, Reno, NV[55]
  • 1984 "Crocker-Kingsley Annual Show," Crocker Art Museum, Sacramento, CA
  • 1983 Riverside Museum, Riverside, CA
  • 1982 Haggin Museum, Stockton, CA
  • 1982 "Sixth Hawaii National Print Exhibition," Honolulu Museum of Arts, Honolulu, HI[33]
  • 1974 Triad Gallery, Los Angeles, CA
  • 1966 "Los Angeles Collectors' Show" - Fresno Art Center, Fresno, CA[56]
  • 1965 Colorado Springs Fine Arts Center, Colorado Springs, CO[57]
  • 1965 "Los Angeles Collectors' Show" - Fresno Art Center, Fresno, CA
  • 1965 Eighteenth Annual Creative Arts Exhibition: Work from L.A. Galleries," Henderson Fine Arts Gallery, University of Colorado, Boulder[58]
  • 1965 "New Images, New Materials," Mount Saint Mary's College, Los Angeles, CA[37]
  • 1965 "Art Across America Far West Regional Exhibition," San Francisco Museum of Art. Honor: 15 painters from Southern California were selected by James Elliott, Chief Curator, Los Angeles County Museum, to represent the Southwest in this one of four regional exhibitions from which works were selected for the larger traveling show.[10]
  • 1965 "Plastic Relief Painting Exhibition. Jack Hooper – Roland Reiss – Terry Krumm – De Wain Valentine." University of Colorado, Boulder. Traveled to New York University and Mount Saint Mary's College, Los Angeles, CA (catalogue)[1]
  • 1965 "Three California Painters," Long Beach Museum of Art, CA[36]
  • 1963 Oakland Museum of Art, CA
  • 1963 "Points of View", Festival of the Arts: Arts at Mid-Century, San Fernando Valley State College, Northridge, CA
  • 1963 Primus-Stuart Galleries, Los Angeles, CA[39]
  • 1962 "Fifty California Artists" (Organized by the San Francisco Museum of Art with the Collaboration of the Los Angeles County Museum), Whitney Museum of American Art, New York. Traveled to: Walker Art Center, Minneapolis, MN; Albright-Knox Art Gallery, Buffalo, NY; Des Moines Art Center, IA. (catalogue)[6][34][43]
  • 1962 "The Artist's Environment: West Coast," Amon Carter Museum of Art, Fort Worth, TX. Organized by and shown at the UCLA Art Galleries, Los Angeles, CA; Traveled to Oakland Art Museum, CA. (catalogue)[6][10][44]
  • 1961 "Arts of Southern California - VIII: Drawing," Long Beach Museum of Art, CA. Traveled to: Everhart Museum of Art, Scranton, PA; Columbia Museum of Art, SC; Georgia Museum of Art, Athens, GA; Columbus Museum of Art & Crafts, GA; Eastern Illinois State College, Charleston, IL.; La Jolla Art Center, CA; Texas State College for Women, Denton, TX: University of Nebraska, Lincoln, NE (catalogue)[45]
  • 1961 Santa Monica Municipal Art Gallery, CA[35]
  • 1960 San Francisco Museum of Art, CA[10]
  • 1960 Seattle Art Museum, WA[10]
  • 1960 "Fifty Paintings by Thirty-Seven Artists of the Los Angeles Area," UCLA Art Galleries, Dickson Art Center, Los Angeles, CA Traveled to: Dallas Museum of Contemporary Art, TX; Des Moines Art Center, IA; Marion Koogler McNay Art Institute, San Antonio, TX; Museum of New Mexico, Santa Fe; Roswell Art Museum, NM. (catalogue)[10][46]
  • 1960 "10 Painters from UCLA," UCLA Art Galleries, Dickson Art Center, Los Angeles, CA (catalogue)
  • 1960 "Artist and Teacher," San Jose State College, CA[59]
  • 1959 Annual Exhibition—"Artists of Los Angeles and Vicinity," Los Angeles County Museum of Art, CA (catalogue)[26]
  • 1958 "Arts of Southern California—II: Painting," Los Angeles County Museum of Art, Los Angeles, CA (catalogue)[10][60]
  • 1959 "Eleven Artists of the Art Department Faculty," UCLA Art Galleries, Dickson Art Center, Los Angeles, CA (catalogue)[61]
  • 1958 "3 Young Artists: Glines, Lunetta, Hooper," Exodus Gallery, San Pedro, CA[16]
  • 1957 "The First Annual Los Angeles Area Drawing Exhibition," Exodus Gallery, San Pedro, CA[16][62]
  • 1951 Escuela Nacional de Artes Plásticas, Mexico City, Mexico[16]

Selected public collections

  • de Young and Legion of Honor, Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco, CA[18]
  • Stanford University Museum, CA[33]
  • Long Beach Museum of Art, CA[41]
  • University of California at Los Angeles, CA[33]
  • University of California at Santa Cruz, CA[33][53][63]
  • The Lannan Foundation, FL[33]
  • The Arnovick Foundation, Los Altos, CA[3]
gollark: I also don't like that Matrix is an unusably complex protocol requiring giant and resource-hungry server software even for small installs.
gollark: All the federated chat things seem to be doomed to never get any use because something something network effects and somewhat less convenient user experience.
gollark: It seems like much of biology is accursedly complicated interlocking evolved systems, but also a bunch of recent shortcuts let you leverage the mechanisms it already has to do things quite conveniently.
gollark: Maybe you need a few examples to prompt it with.
gollark: Humans are missing lots of senses other animals have. IR/UV vision, good smell, magnetic compass support, the weird electric field detector in I think sharks, polarised light sensing from cuttlefish, working low light vision (via actually having a sane eye design), probably others.

References

  1. Gassan, Arnold (1965). Plastic Relief Painting Exhibition. Jack Hooper – Roland Reiss – Terry Krumm – De Wain Valentine. Boulder: Colorado Memorial Center Art Gallery. p. 4. ASIN B002ROFA98.
  2. Recent Drawings Jack Hooper. Exhibition brochure. Los Angeles: Sabrina Gallery. 1965.
  3. Von Hartmann, Gene (1975). "Introduction". Jack Hooper: Works from the Jane and Peter G. Arnovick Collection with Additional Works Lent by the Artist. Exhibit Catalogue. Felton, CA: Big Tree Press. pp. 9–10. OCLC 21545828.
  4. Gassan, Arnold (1965). Plastic Relief Painting Exhibition. Jack Hooper – Roland Reiss – Terry Krumm – De Wain Valentine. Introduction Essay. Boulder: University of Colorado Memorial Art Center Gallery. p. 2. ASIN B002ROFA98.
  5. Davis, Jane. "Jack Hooper". Ariane Fine Art Gallery. Ariane Fine Art Gallery. Archived from the original on 2016-08-21. Retrieved April 2016. Check date values in: |access-date= (help)
  6. Scott, III, Joseph (1962-11-19). "Three Paintings at National and Local Exhibitions by Jack Hooper" (Press release). Los Angeles: Mount St. Mary's College.
  7. Karlstrom, Paul. "Oral History Interview with Roland Reiss, 1997 Aug.-1999 June" (Originally recorded on 7 sound cassettes. Reformated in 2010 as 11 digital wav files.). Archives of American Art (Transcript and MP3 files). Session 1: August 22, 1997, tape 2, side A and B; Session 2: September 8, 1997, tape 1, side A and B. Archives of American Art, Smithsonian Institution. Retrieved 13 June 2016.
  8. Till Hooper, Vanessa. "History of Jack Hooper." Telephone interview. 02 June 2016.
  9. "Hooper", Exhibition brochure for one-man show (Print)|format= requires |url= (help), Los Angeles: Primus-Stuart Galleries, 1962
  10. von Hartmann, Gene (1975). "Biography". Jack Hooper: Works from the Jane and Peter G. Arnovick Collection with Additional Works Lent by the Artist. Exhibit Catalogue. Felton, CA: Big Trees Press. pp. 14–15. OCLC 21545828.
  11. Till Hooper, Vanessa, and Jessica Hooper. "History of Jack Hooper." Personal interview. 13 Apr. 2016.
  12. Russell-Larson, Leslye. "Jack Hooper, Painter". Les Arts Gallery. Les Arts Gallery. Retrieved 2016-04-06.
  13. Quinn, Joseph M. (2006). "The Mexico City College Story, The History: 1940 - 1963". Joseph M. Quinn. Retrieved 2016-04-12.
  14. "Exhibition is Big Hit; Attracts Art Notables: High Caliber of Work Submitted Makes Judging Difficult" (PDF). Mexico City Collegian. 3 (19). Mexico, D.F. 1950-08-18. p. 1. Retrieved 2016-05-04 via La Catarina, student publication of Universidad de las Américas Puebla.
  15. Berkeley, University of California (1959-06-10). "Certificates, Degrees and Honor: Graduate Division, Southern Section, Degrees Conferred: The Degree of Master of Arts upon". University of California Register, 1957-1958 with Announcements for 1958-1959. Degrees and Honors, University of California, Los Angeles, The Thirty-Ninth Commencement, June 12, 1958. II. Berkeley: University of California Press. p. 79. Retrieved 2016-05-04.
  16. 3 Young Artists: Glines, Lunette, Hooper. Exhibition catalogue. San Pedro: Exodus Gallery. 1958. p. 3.
  17. Soto-Perez-de-Celis, Enrique (2008-11-04). "The Future Triumph of Medical Science Over Cancer: a mural for oncology". Canadian Medical Association Journal. 179 (10): 1039–1040. doi:10.1503/cmaj.080339. ISSN 0820-3946. PMC 2572666.
  18. Hooper, Jack (1984). "Frida Kahlo" (JPG). FAMSF Explore the Art. Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco (published 2015-05-09). Retrieved 2016-04-06.
  19. Scarbrough, Carl (1986-02-27). "Artist Takes Expressionist Nudes to the Barest Terms in Local Exhibit". Spartan Daily. 86 (22). San Jose, CA: San Jose State University. p. 6. Retrieved 2016-06-29 via SJSU ScholarWorks.
  20. "Stanton Macdonald-Wright and Brash, Bold Synchromism". LAMA BLOG. Los Angeles Modern Auctions (LAMA). 2014-09-26. Retrieved 2016-06-23.
  21. "Jack Hooper biography, arianefineartsgallery.com". Archived from the original on 2016-10-05. Retrieved 2016-10-04.
  22. Russell, John (1989-03-19). "ART VIEW; An Art School That Also Taught Life". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2016-06-13.
  23. Anderson, Alissa J. "FRANCIS DE ERDELY (1904-1959) - West Coast Modernist". Sullivan Goss, an American Gallery. Sullivan Goss, Ltd. Retrieved 2016-06-23.
  24. Puglia, M.D., Donald E. (July 2012). "Significant Content: Jan Stussy and the Mendocino Art Center" (PDF). Mendocino Arts. Mendocino Arts Center. XLIII (2): 8–10. Retrieved 2012-06-23.
  25. Blessing, George A (1957-12-11), Art in America Award, "New Talent in America" (Award letter), New London, CT
  26. Elliott, James (1959). Annual Exhibition of Artists of Los Angeles and Vicinity. Exhibition catalogue. Los Angeles County Museum. pp. 6, 8, 16, 23. Retrieved 2016-06-30.
  27. "July Museum Prizes, Awards Announcement". Newspapers.com. Van Nuys, California: The Van Nuys News. 1959-07-30. p. 13. Retrieved 2016-06-14.
  28. Langsner, Jules (September 1959). "Art News from Los Angeles". Review. ARTnews. New York, NY: ARTnews: 50.
  29. Learner, Tom; Rivenc, Rachel; Richardson, Emma (2011). From start to finish : De Wain Valentine's Gray column (PDF). Published on the occasion of an exhibition organized by the Getty Conservation Institute and held at the J. Paul Getty Museum at the Getty Center, Los Angeles, September 13, 2011–March 11, 2012. Los Angeles: Getty Conservation Institute. V. J. Paul Getty Museum. pp. 7–8. ISBN 978-0-9834922-1-4. Retrieved 2016-06-10.
  30. Cirello, Natalie (1962-09-12). "Full text of "View 1962-1963"". archive.org (Newsletter. Art Club President reporting on Art Department.). Volume XIX— No. I. Los Angeles: Mount Saint Mary's College. p. 4. Retrieved 2016-06-21.
  31. Phillips, Joann (1977). "Los Angeles Art Community: Group Portrait of Lee Mullican". archive.org (Completed under the auspices of the Oral History Program University of California, Los Angeles). The Regents of the University of California. Retrieved 2016-06-14.
  32. "Full text of "View 1964-1965"". archive.org (Newsletter. Art Club President reporting on Art Department.). Volume ***— No. 1. Los Angeles: Mount St. Mary's College. 1964-09-15. p. 4. Retrieved 2016-06-18.
  33. Who's Who in American Art: 2001-2002 (24th ed.). Marquis Who's Who. 2002-02-01. p. 550. ISBN 9780837963020. Retrieved 2016-04-11.
  34. Bogat, R. (December 1962). "Fifty California Artists". Artforum. San Francisco: Artforum. I (7): 23–6.
  35. "Sculpture in California: Jack Hooper". Artforum. San Francisco: Artforum. II (2): 58. August 1963. Retrieved 2016-04-14. Illustration: "Work #1, March 1963," various plastics
  36. Laddey, Virginia (May 1965). "Exhibition at Long Beach Museum of Art (California), "Three California painters"". Artforum. San Francisco: Artforum. III (8): 50. Retrieved 2016-04-14.
  37. Opliger, Curt (December 1965). "Exhibition at Mount Saint Mary's College, Los Angeles, "New images, new materials"". Artforum. San Francisco: Artforum. IV (4): 14–16. Retrieved 2016-04-14. Illustration: "Primeval clouds" (polyester and epoxy)
  38. Hopkins, Henry T. (September 1962). "Exhibition at Primus-Stuart Gal (Los Angeles)". Artforum. San Francisco: Artforum. I (4): 12. Retrieved 2016-04-14.
  39. Wholden, Rosalind G. (March 1963). "Exhibition at Primus-Stuart Gal (Los Angeles), group". Artforum. San Francisco: Artforum. II (9): 51. Retrieved 2016-04-14.
  40. Allen, Virginia (April 1964). "Exhibition at Stuart Gal (Los Angeles)". Artforum. San Francisco: Artforum. II (10): 45. Retrieved 2016-04-14. Illustration (p 46): "Primary forms III" (mixed media)
  41. Laddey, Virginia (1965-06-20). "Museum Receives Art Gift". Independent Press-Telegram. p. 159. Retrieved 2016-06-28 via Newspapers.com.
  42. Wong, Jason (1965-07-20), Accession of Work and Biographical File for Permanent Collection (Letter from Long Beach Museum of Art to Jack Hooper)
  43. Goodrich, Lloyd; Culler, George D. (1962). Fifty California Artists. Exhibition catalogue. San Francisco, CA: San Francisco Museum of Art. ASIN B000NV62AI. OCLC 18408355.
  44. Wight, Frederick S. (1962). The Artist's Environment: West Coast. Exhibition catalogue. Fort Worth, TX: Amon Carter Museum Of Western Art., & University of California, Los Angeles. pp. 58, 60, 131. ASIN B001E38GKS. LCCN 62020199. OCLC 558048290. Retrieved 2016-06-30.
  45. Donson, Jerome Allan (1962). Arts of Southern California - VIII: Drawing. Exhibition Catalog. Long Beach, CA: Long Beach Museum of Art. ASIN B008GEA9BW. Retrieved 2016-06-14.
  46. Hopkins, Henry T. (1960-01-01). Fifty Paintings by Thirty-Seven Painters of the Los Angeles Area. Exhibition catalogue. Los Angeles: UCLA Art Galleries. ASIN B002SSAJBW. Retrieved 2016-06-14.
  47. "Amon Carter Museum of American Art Exhibition History" (PDF). Amon Carter Museum of American Art. 2016-06-30. p. 1. Retrieved 2016-06-30.
  48. Stuart, David (1961-11-24), Invitation for Representation (Letter from Primus Stuart Gallery to Jack Hooper)
  49. Pappone, Marie (1960-10-27), Request for Information for Historical Archives of Contemporary Art of the São Paulo Art Biennial (Letter from São Paulo Museum of Modern Art to Jack Hooper)
  50. "International Show". The Tustin News. Tustin, CA. 1966-01-06. Retrieved 2016-06-21 via Newspapers.com.
  51. "Visual Arts". SFGate. Hearst Communications, Inc. 2008-04-03. Retrieved 2016-06-14. Thomas Reynolds—Works by Jack Hooper.
  52. "Santa Cruz Sentinel from Santa Cruz, California". Out-of-town. Santa Cruz Sentinel. Santa Cruz, CA. 1987-04-17. p. 91. Retrieved 2016-06-14 via Newspapers.com. JACK HOOPER "Portraits of the Family," an exhibitlon of paintings continues through May 10 at the Vorpal Gallery, 393 Grove St. San Francisco.
  53. "Seven Matisse Works Donated To UCSC". Newspapers.com. Santa Cruz, CA: Santa Cruz Sentinel. 1975-04-13. p. 19. Retrieved 2016-06-14.
  54. "Dual Gallery Exhibit". Santa Cruz Sentinel. Santa Cruz, CA. 1975-04-06. p. 20. Retrieved 2016-07-01 via Newspapers.com.
  55. "Husband and Wife Share Space at Stremmel with Unique Results". Reno Gazette-Journal. Reno, NV. 1995-06-11. p. 30. Retrieved 2016-07-03 via Newspapers.com.
  56. John, J. (1967-11-01), Exhibition Thank You (Letter from Rex Ranch to Jack Hooper)
  57. Fred, Bartlett (1965-11-24), Drawing Exhibition Thank You (Letter from Colorado Springs Fine Arts Center to Jack Hooper)
  58. Day, Robert E. (1965). Eighteenth Annual Creative Arts Exhibition. Exhibition Catalogue. Boulder: University of Colorado. p. 3.
  59. French, John (1960-01-11), Invitation to Participate in "Artist and Teacher" Exhibition, 1960 Winter Festival of Arts (Letter from San Jose State College to Jack Hooper)
  60. Donson, Jerome Allan (1958). Arts of Southern California—II: Painting. Exhibition catalogue. Long Beach, CA: Long Beach Museum of Art. ASIN B000PIFHU0. Retrieved 2016-06-30.
  61. Wright, Frederick S. (1959). Eleven Artists of the Art Department Faculty. Exhibition catalogue. Los Angeles, CA: The UCLA Art Gallery. p. 3.
  62. WILLIAMS, VERA (1957-08-18). "Local Galleries Exhibit Works of Californians". Independent Press-Telegram. Long Beach, CA. p. 53. Retrieved 2016-07-01 via Newspapers.com.
  63. UCSC Photography Services (1975-03-25). "Jane and Peter Arnovick of Los Altos donate seven Henri Matisse lithographs and works by Jack Hooper to Cowell College" (JPG). University of California, Santa Cruz Digital Collections. Santa Cruz, CA. Retrieved 2016-06-29.
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