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Robert D. Cocke

Robert D. Cocke (born 1950) is an American painter based in Arizona, known for enigmatic invented landscapes and still lifes.[1][2][3] He emerged in the 1980s, producing expressionistic figurative paintings with a socio-critical dimension that drew on Chicago Imagism, Funk art and surrealism.[1][4][5] In the 1990s, he turned to unpopulated, panoramic vistas combining classical painting technique and surreal features, which critics have described as hyperreal, hallucinatory and otherworldly.[6][7][1] Curator Julie Sasse has written that despite dramatic changes in style and subject matter, his work has asserted "a consistent desire to address not only human relationships, but also the relationships between humankind and the natural world."[8]

Robert D. Cocke
Born1950
Salzburg, Austria
NationalityAmerican
EducationUniversity of Iowa, University of Arizona
Known forPainting, landscape art, figurative art
SpouseGayle J. Novak (1951–1998)
PartnerJane Kirkeby
AwardsNational Endowment for the Arts, Western States Arts Federation, Ford Foundation, Arizona Commission on the Arts
Robert D. Cocke, Rendezvous, oil on canvas, 48" x 48", 2016.

Cocke has exhibited at the Tucson Museum of Art,[9] Brooklyn Museum[10] and San Antonio Museum of Art,[11] and his work belongs to the public collections of the Smithsonian American Art Museum, Crocker Art Museum and Phoenix Art Museum, among others.[12][13] He has been recognized with awards from institutions including the National Endowment for the Arts, Western States Arts Federation and Ford Foundation.[14][15] Cocke lives in Oracle, Arizona with his partner, Jane Kirkeby.[9][15]

Life and career edit

Cocke was born in 1950 to James and Marjorie Cocke, Americans living in Salzburg, Austria during James's service as a lieutenant colonel in the U.S. Army. In 1960, the family settled in Tucson, Arizona.[16] He studied art at the University of Arizona (BFA, 1972), before attending the University of Iowa, where he earned an MA in studio art in 1974 and an MFA in 1975.[16][15] His early influences included René Magritte, Giorgio de Chirico, Imagism, and Bay Area Funk artists Robert Arneson and William T. Wiley.[16][1] Soon after graduating he began a teaching career at Dakota State College and Northwest Missouri State University. In 1983, he moved back to Arizona for a professor position at Arizona State University, where he taught until retiring in 2005.[15][2]

Cocke's work began to receive wide recognition in the 1980s, through several surveys, including the traveling "Third Western States Exhibition" (1986–8; Brooklyn Museum, San Jose Museum of Art),[17] "Visions of America, 1787-1987" (ACA Galleries, New York),[18] "Evidence: Contemporary Narrative Painters of the Southwest" (San Antonio Museum of Art, 1989),[11] and Arizona Biennial (1986, 1988).[19][20] Later in his career he appeared in "Transcending Earth and Sky" (San Diego State University, 2000), "Big City: Cityscapes and Urban Life from the Collection" (Phoenix Art Museum, 2006), and "Trouble in Paradise" (Tucson Museum of Art, 2009).[6][9][8]

 
Robert D. Cocke, Miami, oil on canvas, 36" x 42", 1984.

Work and reception edit

Critic Peter Frank wrote that Cocke emerged in the 1980s as a "peculiarly Western-style funk-expressionist painter" whose imagery was by turns "exuberant and nightmarish … and marked by an odd, contemplative sense of groundedness."[1] Writers identified this early work by its emotionally charged, underground-comic painting style, harsh palettes (sinister blues, dark purples and acid hues), strident tonal qualities and enigmatic space, while relating its disquieting vision of contemporary environmental and moral collapse to the art of Philip Guston and William Wiley.[5][11][21][22]

In works such as Miami (1984) or Inheritance (1985), Cocke depicted eerie, surreal scenarios of urban neglect and paradises lost.[5][23][4] Their Bosch-like compositions were packed with repressed and corrupted figures, architectonic forms, apocalyptic fires, acrid smoke, and shattered remnants of science and culture that suggested wide-ranging allusions and metaphors.[5][11][22] Discussing later works, such as The Quest for Knowledge (1989), Robert Cauthorn identified a more introspective, spiritual dimension amid the desolation: "Cocke's work is a study in planes of existence: virtue vs. corruption, the natural world vs. technology … The battleground for these factions is our spirit."[22]

 
Robert D. Cocke, Once Upon a Time, oil on canvas, 26" x 26", 2008.

In the mid-1990s, Cocke turned from the figure and social commentary to serene landscapes and panoramic vistas painted from memory rather than observation, which explored the genre's evocative possibilities in a pure manner.[7][8][24][25] Influenced by the Hudson River School, these paintings revealed a "dual desire to mirror nature and depart from it,"[7] combining a precision and clarity that critics likened to classical painters Jan van Eyck and Pieter Breughel and an unsettling Edenic quality reminiscent of 19th-century Luminism.[1] Their invented scenes both distilled Cocke's experience and wonder at the Arizona wilderness and evoked parallel worlds through eerie plant life and geological features, curious clouds suggesting creatures and other forms, unnatural patterns and palettes that edged the work toward surrealism and more mysterious realities.[6][24][2] Robert L. Pincus wrote, "There's something covertly mystical about Cocke's desert images. Clouds form patterns that verge on language … His landscapes are visionary, in a restrained sort of way."[24]

In later exhibitions, such as "Near and Far" (Tasende Gallery, 2005), Cocke demonstrated a complex use of space and scale, combining grand vistas and intimate details in small (5" tall by two feet) paintings that reviews noted for a surprisingly operatic and expansive effect despite their size.[26][1][27] During this period, Cocke reintroduced signs of human presence into his landscapes—usually unconventional objects (antique toys, stones, seedpods, keys, penny banks, lipsticks) in enigmatic, stream-of-conscious arrangements that sat in tension with their natural settings.[3][27] In these paintings, such as Once Upon a Time (2008), he sought to evoke non-explicit associations, relationships and narratives in viewers, akin to poetry.[3][28] His later paintings (e.g., Rendezvous, 2016) often depict miniature worlds or forlorn tableaus set against distant cities, landscapes or figures, which critics suggested evoke tender sadness or resignation, relieved by the freedom conveyed by vast skies.[29][30]

Public collections and awards edit

Cocke's work belongs to the public collections of the Smithsonian American Art Museum,[12] Cedar Rapids Museum of Art,[31] Crocker Art Museum, Phoenix Art Museum, South Dakota Memorial Art Center,[32] University of Iowa Stanley Museum of Art, and Tucson Museum of Art,[33][34] among others.[13][35] He has received awards and grants from the Ford Foundation, Arizona Commission on the Arts, Phoenix Art Museum/The Contemporary Forum, and National Endowment for the Arts/Western States Arts Federation, and juried awards from the Contemporary Arts Center, Mesa and Yuma Art Center, among others.[14][15]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g Frank, Peter. "Robert D. Cocke," ARTnews, June 2005, p. 128–9.
  2. ^ a b c Martin, Merritt. "Cocke of the Walk," Dallas Observer, August 30, 2007. Retrieved June 6, 2022.
  3. ^ a b c Reynolds, Gretchen. "Seriously Funny – Robert Cocke," Southwest Art Magazine, May 2008, p. 108–9.
  4. ^ a b Andresen, Charles. "Phoenix/Tucson Letter," Artspace, Summer 1985, p. 61.
  5. ^ a b c d Cauthorn, Robert S. "Cocke paints a world that most would avoid" The Arizona Daily Star January 26, 1986.
  6. ^ a b c Yapelli, Tina. Transcending Earth and Sky, San Diego, CA: San Diego State University, 2000.
  7. ^ a b c Pincus, Robert L. "2 Kinds of Inspiration," The San Diego Union-Tribune, October 2, 2003, p. 43.
  8. ^ a b c Sasse, Julie. Trouble in Paradise: Examining Discord between Nature and Society, Tucson, AZ: Tucson Museum of Art, 2009. Retrieved June 6, 2022.
  9. ^ a b c Tweedy, Duncan. "Apocalypse, WOW!: Robert Cocke" Tucson Lifestyle Home & Garden, April 2009.
  10. ^ Muchnic, Suzanne. "'Western States' Shows a Murky View of the State of the Sun Belt," Los Angeles Times, December 26, 1987. Retrieved June 6, 2022.
  11. ^ a b c d Edwards, Jim. Evidence: Contemporary Narrative Painters of the Southwest, San Antonio, TX: San Antonio Museum of Art, 1989.
  12. ^ a b Smithsonian American Art Museum. Out There, Robert Cocke, Artwork. Retrieved June 6, 2022.
  13. ^ a b University of Iowa. "Alumni News," School of Art and Art History. Retrieved June 6, 2022.
  14. ^ a b Princenthal, Nancy and Jennifer Dowley. A Creative Legacy: A History of the National Endowment for the Arts, 1966-1995, New York: H.N. Abrams/National Endowment for the Arts, 2001. Retrieved May 6, 2022.
  15. ^ a b c d e Knight, Robert E. Robert D. Cocke: Paintings 1980–2009, Oracle, AZ: Robert Cocke, 2010. Retrieved June 6, 2022.
  16. ^ a b c Yapelli, Tina. "interview with the Artist," Robert D. Cocke: Paintings 1980–2009, Oracle, AZ: Robert Cocke, 2010. Retrieved June 6, 2022.
  17. ^ Brooklyn Museum. "Western States, 03rd Biennial," Exhibitions. Retrieved June 6, 2022.
  18. ^ Woodall, Helen. Visions of America, 1787-1987: 200 Years of American Genre in Commemoration of the Bicentennial of the United States Constitution, New York: ACA Galleries, 1987. Retrieved June 6, 2022.
  19. ^ Tucson Museum of Art. Arizona Biennial, 1986, Tucson, AZ: Tucson Museum of Art, 1986.
  20. ^ Tucson Museum of Art. Arizona Biennial, 1988, Tucson, AZ: Tucson Museum of Art, 1988.
  21. ^ Kotik, Charlotta. "America Isn’t a Country—It's a World," Third Western States Exhibition, Brooklyn, NY: Brooklyn Museum, 1987.
  22. ^ a b c Cauthorn, Robert S. "Cocke Clutches Heart of Powerful Show" The Arizona Daily Star September 15, 1989, p. F7.
  23. ^ Portwood, Pamela. "Tucson Letter," Artspace, Summer 1986.
  24. ^ a b c Pincus, Robert L. "Landscapes: Old passion with a new, darker side" The San Diego Union-Tribune, March 23, 2000, p. E-4.
  25. ^ Patterson, Ann. "Art Oasis in the Desert," Art and Antiques, December 1999, p. 120.
  26. ^ ArtScene. "Continuing and Recommended: Robert Cocke," March 2005, p. 19–20.
  27. ^ a b Regan, Margaret. "Scenes of the Southwest,” Tucson Weekly, May 9, 2013.
  28. ^ Regan, Margaret. "To Hounds," Tucson Weekly, April 26, 2018. Retrieved June 7, 2022.
  29. ^ James, David. "Good Art is Rare. The Best Art is Merciful," The Vail Voice, June 9, 2018. Retrieved June 6, 2022.
  30. ^ Schumacher, Mary Louise. Our Gallery Night & Day Picks," Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, October 14, 2010. Retrieved June 6, 2022.
  31. ^ Nollen, Diana. "Cedar Rapids Museum of Art fall pairing brings outdoors indoors," The Gazette, October 16, 2016. Retrieved June 7, 2022.
  32. ^ South Dakota Memorial Art Center. South Dakota Memorial Art Center News, South Dakota State University, Spring 1978.
  33. ^ Tucson Museum of Art. Robert Cocke, Events, Object. Retrieved June 7, 2022.
  34. ^ Tucson Museum of Art. Robert Cocke, The Quest for Knowledge, Object. Retrieved June 7, 2022.
  35. ^ University of Arizona Museum of Art. "Fate and Fulfillment: Selections from the William Small Collection," 2014. Retrieved June 6, 2022.

External links edit

  • Robert D. Cocke, Tory Folliard
  • Robert D. Cocke, Valley House Gallery
  • Robert D. Cocke, Etherton Gallery
  • Robert D. Cocke, R.B. Stevenson Gallery

robert, cocke, born, 1950, american, painter, based, arizona, known, enigmatic, invented, landscapes, still, lifes, emerged, 1980s, producing, expressionistic, figurative, paintings, with, socio, critical, dimension, that, drew, chicago, imagism, funk, surreal. Robert D Cocke born 1950 is an American painter based in Arizona known for enigmatic invented landscapes and still lifes 1 2 3 He emerged in the 1980s producing expressionistic figurative paintings with a socio critical dimension that drew on Chicago Imagism Funk art and surrealism 1 4 5 In the 1990s he turned to unpopulated panoramic vistas combining classical painting technique and surreal features which critics have described as hyperreal hallucinatory and otherworldly 6 7 1 Curator Julie Sasse has written that despite dramatic changes in style and subject matter his work has asserted a consistent desire to address not only human relationships but also the relationships between humankind and the natural world 8 Robert D CockeBorn1950Salzburg AustriaNationalityAmericanEducationUniversity of Iowa University of ArizonaKnown forPainting landscape art figurative artSpouseGayle J Novak 1951 1998 PartnerJane KirkebyAwardsNational Endowment for the Arts Western States Arts Federation Ford Foundation Arizona Commission on the ArtsRobert D Cocke Rendezvous oil on canvas 48 x 48 2016 Cocke has exhibited at the Tucson Museum of Art 9 Brooklyn Museum 10 and San Antonio Museum of Art 11 and his work belongs to the public collections of the Smithsonian American Art Museum Crocker Art Museum and Phoenix Art Museum among others 12 13 He has been recognized with awards from institutions including the National Endowment for the Arts Western States Arts Federation and Ford Foundation 14 15 Cocke lives in Oracle Arizona with his partner Jane Kirkeby 9 15 Contents 1 Life and career 2 Work and reception 3 Public collections and awards 4 References 5 External linksLife and career editCocke was born in 1950 to James and Marjorie Cocke Americans living in Salzburg Austria during James s service as a lieutenant colonel in the U S Army In 1960 the family settled in Tucson Arizona 16 He studied art at the University of Arizona BFA 1972 before attending the University of Iowa where he earned an MA in studio art in 1974 and an MFA in 1975 16 15 His early influences included Rene Magritte Giorgio de Chirico Imagism and Bay Area Funk artists Robert Arneson and William T Wiley 16 1 Soon after graduating he began a teaching career at Dakota State College and Northwest Missouri State University In 1983 he moved back to Arizona for a professor position at Arizona State University where he taught until retiring in 2005 15 2 Cocke s work began to receive wide recognition in the 1980s through several surveys including the traveling Third Western States Exhibition 1986 8 Brooklyn Museum San Jose Museum of Art 17 Visions of America 1787 1987 ACA Galleries New York 18 Evidence Contemporary Narrative Painters of the Southwest San Antonio Museum of Art 1989 11 and Arizona Biennial 1986 1988 19 20 Later in his career he appeared in Transcending Earth and Sky San Diego State University 2000 Big City Cityscapes and Urban Life from the Collection Phoenix Art Museum 2006 and Trouble in Paradise Tucson Museum of Art 2009 6 9 8 nbsp Robert D Cocke Miami oil on canvas 36 x 42 1984 Work and reception editCritic Peter Frank wrote that Cocke emerged in the 1980s as a peculiarly Western style funk expressionist painter whose imagery was by turns exuberant and nightmarish and marked by an odd contemplative sense of groundedness 1 Writers identified this early work by its emotionally charged underground comic painting style harsh palettes sinister blues dark purples and acid hues strident tonal qualities and enigmatic space while relating its disquieting vision of contemporary environmental and moral collapse to the art of Philip Guston and William Wiley 5 11 21 22 In works such as Miami 1984 or Inheritance 1985 Cocke depicted eerie surreal scenarios of urban neglect and paradises lost 5 23 4 Their Bosch like compositions were packed with repressed and corrupted figures architectonic forms apocalyptic fires acrid smoke and shattered remnants of science and culture that suggested wide ranging allusions and metaphors 5 11 22 Discussing later works such as The Quest for Knowledge 1989 Robert Cauthorn identified a more introspective spiritual dimension amid the desolation Cocke s work is a study in planes of existence virtue vs corruption the natural world vs technology The battleground for these factions is our spirit 22 nbsp Robert D Cocke Once Upon a Time oil on canvas 26 x 26 2008 In the mid 1990s Cocke turned from the figure and social commentary to serene landscapes and panoramic vistas painted from memory rather than observation which explored the genre s evocative possibilities in a pure manner 7 8 24 25 Influenced by the Hudson River School these paintings revealed a dual desire to mirror nature and depart from it 7 combining a precision and clarity that critics likened to classical painters Jan van Eyck and Pieter Breughel and an unsettling Edenic quality reminiscent of 19th century Luminism 1 Their invented scenes both distilled Cocke s experience and wonder at the Arizona wilderness and evoked parallel worlds through eerie plant life and geological features curious clouds suggesting creatures and other forms unnatural patterns and palettes that edged the work toward surrealism and more mysterious realities 6 24 2 Robert L Pincus wrote There s something covertly mystical about Cocke s desert images Clouds form patterns that verge on language His landscapes are visionary in a restrained sort of way 24 In later exhibitions such as Near and Far Tasende Gallery 2005 Cocke demonstrated a complex use of space and scale combining grand vistas and intimate details in small 5 tall by two feet paintings that reviews noted for a surprisingly operatic and expansive effect despite their size 26 1 27 During this period Cocke reintroduced signs of human presence into his landscapes usually unconventional objects antique toys stones seedpods keys penny banks lipsticks in enigmatic stream of conscious arrangements that sat in tension with their natural settings 3 27 In these paintings such as Once Upon a Time 2008 he sought to evoke non explicit associations relationships and narratives in viewers akin to poetry 3 28 His later paintings e g Rendezvous 2016 often depict miniature worlds or forlorn tableaus set against distant cities landscapes or figures which critics suggested evoke tender sadness or resignation relieved by the freedom conveyed by vast skies 29 30 Public collections and awards editCocke s work belongs to the public collections of the Smithsonian American Art Museum 12 Cedar Rapids Museum of Art 31 Crocker Art Museum Phoenix Art Museum South Dakota Memorial Art Center 32 University of Iowa Stanley Museum of Art and Tucson Museum of Art 33 34 among others 13 35 He has received awards and grants from the Ford Foundation Arizona Commission on the Arts Phoenix Art Museum The Contemporary Forum and National Endowment for the Arts Western States Arts Federation and juried awards from the Contemporary Arts Center Mesa and Yuma Art Center among others 14 15 References edit a b c d e f g Frank Peter Robert D Cocke ARTnews June 2005 p 128 9 a b c Martin Merritt Cocke of the Walk Dallas Observer August 30 2007 Retrieved June 6 2022 a b c Reynolds Gretchen Seriously Funny Robert Cocke Southwest Art Magazine May 2008 p 108 9 a b Andresen Charles Phoenix Tucson Letter Artspace Summer 1985 p 61 a b c d Cauthorn Robert S Cocke paints a world that most would avoid The Arizona Daily Star January 26 1986 a b c Yapelli Tina Transcending Earth and Sky San Diego CA San Diego State University 2000 a b c Pincus Robert L 2 Kinds of Inspiration The San Diego Union Tribune October 2 2003 p 43 a b c Sasse Julie Trouble in Paradise Examining Discord between Nature and Society Tucson AZ Tucson Museum of Art 2009 Retrieved June 6 2022 a b c Tweedy Duncan Apocalypse WOW Robert Cocke Tucson Lifestyle Home amp Garden April 2009 Muchnic Suzanne Western States Shows a Murky View of the State of the Sun Belt Los Angeles Times December 26 1987 Retrieved June 6 2022 a b c d Edwards Jim Evidence Contemporary Narrative Painters of the Southwest San Antonio TX San Antonio Museum of Art 1989 a b Smithsonian American Art Museum Out There Robert Cocke Artwork Retrieved June 6 2022 a b University of Iowa Alumni News School of Art and Art History Retrieved June 6 2022 a b Princenthal Nancy and Jennifer Dowley A Creative Legacy A History of the National Endowment for the Arts 1966 1995 New York H N Abrams National Endowment for the Arts 2001 Retrieved May 6 2022 a b c d e Knight Robert E Robert D Cocke Paintings 1980 2009 Oracle AZ Robert Cocke 2010 Retrieved June 6 2022 a b c Yapelli Tina interview with the Artist Robert D Cocke Paintings 1980 2009 Oracle AZ Robert Cocke 2010 Retrieved June 6 2022 Brooklyn Museum Western States 03rd Biennial Exhibitions Retrieved June 6 2022 Woodall Helen Visions of America 1787 1987 200 Years of American Genre in Commemoration of the Bicentennial of the United States Constitution New York ACA Galleries 1987 Retrieved June 6 2022 Tucson Museum of Art Arizona Biennial 1986 Tucson AZ Tucson Museum of Art 1986 Tucson Museum of Art Arizona Biennial 1988 Tucson AZ Tucson Museum of Art 1988 Kotik Charlotta America Isn t a Country It s a World Third Western States Exhibition Brooklyn NY Brooklyn Museum 1987 a b c Cauthorn Robert S Cocke Clutches Heart of Powerful Show The Arizona Daily Star September 15 1989 p F7 Portwood Pamela Tucson Letter Artspace Summer 1986 a b c Pincus Robert L Landscapes Old passion with a new darker side The San Diego Union Tribune March 23 2000 p E 4 Patterson Ann Art Oasis in the Desert Art and Antiques December 1999 p 120 ArtScene Continuing and Recommended Robert Cocke March 2005 p 19 20 a b Regan Margaret Scenes of the Southwest Tucson Weekly May 9 2013 Regan Margaret To Hounds Tucson Weekly April 26 2018 Retrieved June 7 2022 James David Good Art is Rare The Best Art is Merciful The Vail Voice June 9 2018 Retrieved June 6 2022 Schumacher Mary Louise Our Gallery Night amp Day Picks Milwaukee Journal Sentinel October 14 2010 Retrieved June 6 2022 Nollen Diana Cedar Rapids Museum of Art fall pairing brings outdoors indoors The Gazette October 16 2016 Retrieved June 7 2022 South Dakota Memorial Art Center South Dakota Memorial Art Center News South Dakota State University Spring 1978 Tucson Museum of Art Robert Cocke Events Object Retrieved June 7 2022 Tucson Museum of Art Robert Cocke The Quest for Knowledge Object Retrieved June 7 2022 University of Arizona Museum of Art Fate and Fulfillment Selections from the William Small Collection 2014 Retrieved June 6 2022 External links editRobert D Cocke Tory Folliard Robert D Cocke Valley House Gallery Robert D Cocke Etherton Gallery Robert D Cocke R B Stevenson Gallery Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Robert D Cocke amp oldid 1144159930, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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