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6/29/12 Art imitates art: Series honors family - San Antonio Express-News 1/3 www.mysanantonio.com/life/article/Art-imitates-art-Series-honors-family-3663913.php Home News Sports Spurs Business Life Food A&E Obituaries Shopping Coupons Jobs Autos Homes Classifieds Index ▼ 1 of 8 Tweet Tweet 1 0 Recent Headlines New Media Spice Girls unite to launch musical ‘Viva Forever' 'Dos Pocitos' is a moving, thought-provoking border tale New name, site, logo and lineup for Playhouse Fourth of July summer blast Art imitates art: Series honors family By Steve Bennett Updated 05:43 p.m., Tuesday, June 26, 2012 VIEW: Larger | Hide San Antonio's Franco Mondini-Ruiz is transforming a large canvas into an homage to "bluebonnet painter" Julian Onderdonk. Photo: Steve Bennett, San Antonio Express-New s / SA In cool contemporary-art circles, bluebonnet paintings are excoriated as the work of weekend hacks. But San Antonio artist Franco Mondini-Ruiz, who is the epitome of cool with his mixture of high concept and lowbrow, turns that conceit on its head with his latest series of works, on view at the Institute of Texan Cultures through Aug. 31. "Almost an Onderdonk," the latest exhibition in curator Arturo Almeida 's Texas Contemporary Artists Series , pays tribute to the first family of Texas painting, specifically Julian Onderdonk, the early-19th-century Impressionist known as the "Bluebonnet Painter." Onderdonk, whose work hung in the Oval Office during the presidency of George W. Bush , has become largely misunderstood as a sort of Thomas Kinkade painter of "prettiness." But, as his sister, artist Eleanor Onderdonk , put it: "In many of his canvases, Julian uses dramatic contrast - blasts of strong volume, with deep rolling orchestration, far removed from Latest Entertainment Slideshows 1-3 of 10 Fourth of July summer blast Night After Night, June 28, 2012 Pub Craw l: Filling Station Tap Room Most Read | Most Commented | Most Emailed Theron Finally Reveals Buzz Cut 1. Lackland tainer bragged of sex, w itnesses say 2. Bexar inmate kills himself w ith plastic spoon 3. Woj: Spurs shopping Blair 4. At No. 59, Spurs select Missouri guard Denmon 5. SAPD officers subdue ‘w ild’ man 6. Inmate's spoon suicide detailed 7. Case of missing S.A. man leaves family in dark NEWS I-35 reopened north of S.A. ENTERTAINMENT Register Sign In Traffic Weather Subscriber Services e-edition San Antonio, TX Scattered Clouds Friday, June 29, 2012 86 °F mySA Web Search by YAHOO! Businesses Movies Music TV Restaurants Stage Celebrity Books Comics & Games Horoscope Tickets Readers' Choice Share Share Comments (0) Larger | Smaller Printable Version Email This Font

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6/29/12 Art imitates art: Series honors family - San Antonio Express-News

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Recent Headlines

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Spice Girls unite to launch musical ‘Viva

Forever'

'Dos Pocitos' is a moving, thought-provoking

border tale

New name, site, logo and lineup for

Playhouse

Fourth of July summer blast

Art imitates art: Series honors familyBy Steve Bennett

Updated 05:43 p.m., Tuesday, June 26, 2012

VIEW: Larger | Hide

San Antonio's Franco Mondini-Ruiz is transforming a large canvas into an homage to "bluebonnet painter" Julian Onderdonk. Photo:

Steve Bennett, San Antonio Express-New s / SA

In cool contemporary-art circles, bluebonnet paintings

are excoriated as the work of weekend hacks.

But San Antonio artist Franco Mondini-Ruiz, who is

the epitome of cool with his mixture of high concept

and lowbrow, turns that conceit on its head with his

latest series of works, on view at the Institute of Texan

Cultures through Aug. 31.

"Almost an Onderdonk," the latest exhibition in curator

Arturo Almeida's Texas Contemporary Artists Series,

pays tribute to the first family of Texas painting,

specifically Julian Onderdonk, the early-19th-century

Impressionist known as the "Bluebonnet Painter."

Onderdonk, whose work hung in the Oval Office

during the presidency of George W. Bush, has become

largely misunderstood as a sort of Thomas Kinkade

painter of "prettiness."

But, as his sister, artist Eleanor Onderdonk, put it: "In many of his canvases, Julian uses

dramatic contrast - blasts of strong volume, with deep rolling orchestration, far removed from

Latest Entertainment Slideshows1-3 of 10

Fourth of July

summer blast

Night After Night,

June 28, 2012

Pub Craw l: Filling

Station Tap Room

Most Read | Most Commented | Most Emailed

Theron Finally Reveals

Buzz Cut

1. Lackland tainer bragged of sex, w itnesses say

2. Bexar inmate kills himself w ith plastic spoon

3. Woj: Spurs shopping Blair

4. At No. 59, Spurs select Missouri guard Denmon

5. SAPD off icers subdue ‘w ild’ man

6. Inmate's spoon suicide detailed

7. Case of missing S.A. man leaves family in dark

NEWS

I-35 reopened north of S.A.

ENTERTAINMENT

Register Sign InTraffic Weather Subscriber Services e-edition

San Antonio, TXScattered Clouds

Friday, June 29, 2012

86°F

mySA Web Search by YAHOO! Businesses

Movies Music TV Restaurants Stage Celebrity Books Comics & Games Horoscope Tickets Readers' Choice

ShareShare

Comments (0)

Larger | Smaller

Printable Version

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Font

6/29/12 Art imitates art: Series honors family - San Antonio Express-News

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any 'prettiness' which is ascribed by the undiscriminating to my brother's work."

A discriminating artist, Mondini-Ruiz gets it.

His four landscapes in "Almost an Onderdonk" - which include an homage to Porfirio Salinas

(another president's - LBJ's - favorite artist) - are respectful of the man who said, "San Antonio

offers an inexhaustible field for the artist."

Mondini-Ruiz was inspired by a 2008 book, "Julian Onderdonk: American Impressionist"

(Dallas Museum of Art Publications). He picked up the lavishly illustrated coffee-table volume a

couple of years ago in the Witte Museum gift shop while working on what will be his second

book, "Postcards from Home: A Painter's History of San Antonio," the follow-up to 2005's "High

Pink: Tex-Mex Fairy Tales."

"You may be a bit jaded, just from the context, but I picked up this book, and there are some

very nice reproductions in there," Mondini-Ruiz said recently. "I started to appreciate how

beautiful the paintings were. Some are very sweeping, and they have a nice patina to them.

About a year later - that's how the process works - these paintings began to bubble out."

Onderdonk took his easel straight to the source by painting plein-air, a French term meaning "in

the open air," a practice he learned from his mentor, the American master William Merritt

Chase. Mondini-Ruiz initially fretted over how to approach the work.

"How do you even go about starting a bluebonnet painting?" asks the artist, who grew up in the

Hill Country, home of bluebonnets and wildflowers. "I thought it would be outside my reach,

that it would be this very formal, very Victorian technique that would take me a long time

to learn."

An instinctual painter, Mondini-Ruiz quit worrying and got to work.

"My paintings are kind of sculptural and willful," the 51-year-old artist says. "I don't know

proper techniques of painting. I will a painting. I'll use my fingernails if I have to. And I do."

Using a big house-painting brush, Mondini-Ruiz layers at least three colors on the canvas - in

the case of the monumental "Love That Landscape," white, orangey red and baby blue - before

grounding it in greenish black and finger-smudging clouds in white. Then, he takes a big,

soaking-wet brush, dips it into blobs of color - red, blue, green, yellow - squirted on a paper plate

and flicks droplets onto the canvas. Voilà! Wildflowers.

"I do it my way, and these paintings practically paint themselves," says the former attorney who

turned to art "because I had to create something meaningful, something beautiful,

something interesting."

He first gained notice in the mid-'90s with "Infinito Botanica," a 1996 Artpace installation that

became an art shop on South Flores and has been re-created by the artist from Los Angeles to

New York.

In 2000, Mondini-Ruiz was selected for the prestigious Whitney Biennial. In 2004, he was

awarded the Rome Prize for a residency at the American Academy in Rome. He has since staged

shows from the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art to El Museo del Barrio in New York.

"I've known Franco a long time," says Almeida, who manages the University of Texas at San

Antonio's art collection, which now includes two purchases from the "Almost an Onderdonk"

series. "I've seen him grow over the years. He's very focused. He has a good vision. He's

executing it, and now he's very successful."

Mondini-Ruiz, who jokes that he's an "artist better known for sticking diamond rings in

doughnuts and calling it high art," has become a confident, much-in-demand painter.

His work ranges from the "Goya gowns," airy, empty dresses floating on a dark background, to

highly sentimentalized Romantic European landscapes to panoramic views of "Vanishing

Mexico." Onderdonk seems to be a logical step in the process.

"This is my interpretation of the San Antonio that I want people to love and hold onto," he says.

"It's my interpretation of my dream of San Antonio. It's bold and modern, has some humor to it

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and hopelessly romanticizes the past."

The irony is that Mondin-Ruiz is being completely unironic.

"The irony of it is that bluebonnets back in Onderdonk's day were considered high art," Almeida

says. "Now, with Franco, they've come full circle."

[email protected]

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