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Felice House

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Felice House
Born
NationalityAmerican
EducationSchuler School of Fine Arts, The University of Texas
Known forPainting, Photography
Websitefelicehouse.com

Felice House is an American figurative painter and Professor of Art at Texas A&M University. She is most known for her oil-painting portraits of famous Western characters re-imagined as women.

Early life and education

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House grew up in Massachusetts in a family of artists.[1] Her grandmother is a weaver, her father worked in computer graphics, and her mother is a painter.[2]

House attended an international Baháʼí Faith boarding high school in Canada. Her classmates represented 57 different countries and race and gender equality were central discussions in the curriculum.[3] House has noted that her early academic experience there has influenced her art.[3]

House studied painting at the Schuler School of Fine Arts in Baltimore, Maryland[1] and earned her Master of Fine Arts degree in painting from the University of Texas in 2011.[4][5]

She is an artist, as well as an assistant professor of art at Texas A&M University.[6][3][7]

Works

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House is most known for her portrait series, Re/Western and Face West, which both take classic cowboy characters played by actors like James Dean, John Wayne, Clint Eastwood,[8] Alan Ladd,[3] and Gary Cooper,[2] and re-imagine them as women.[2] House has said that she is drawn to the Western film genre, but is frustrated by the gender norms played out in traditional Western narratives.[8] By painting well-known leading characters as women, House challenges the male-dominated nature of the Western film industry.[9][8][7] She also hopes to juxtapose male cowboy archetypes against the roles offered to women in those films, which tend to be passive characters or sexist tropes.[6][1]

House has exhibited paintings in galleries and museums across the United States and Canada including Maryland, Georgia, Colorado, Louisiana, Tennessee, New Mexico, Texas, and Nova Scotia.[10] She has also shown her work in the U.K.[5]

Style

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House paints her portraits on canvases that are slightly larger than life so that viewers must look up to see the whole subject.[1][2]

For her cowgirl portraits, she asks family members, friends, colleagues, and strangers in her community to pose for her.[7][5] She often paints subjects to be non-confrontational, with gazes off in the distance.[1]

References

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  1. ^ a b c d e Rizzo, Cailey (February 19, 2017). "Painter Felice House Reimagines Classic Cowboys as Women". Vice.
  2. ^ a b c d Connelly, Laura (January 18, 2017). "Paintings of female cowboys offer a feminist view of the Wild West". Creative Boom.
  3. ^ a b c d Lopez, Richard (August 12, 2019). "Artist Felice House's Western art puts women in power". Midland Reporter Telegram.
  4. ^ "Faculty biography". Texas A&M University Division of Research.
  5. ^ a b c Edelman, Amelia (March 8, 2017). "Artist Replaces Classic Cowboys With Women & It's Amazing". Refinery29.
  6. ^ a b Porter, Evan (March 7, 2017). "An artist replaced the men in these classic Westerns with women. The images are awesome". Upworthy.
  7. ^ a b c Lopez, Rich (August 15, 2019). "The All-Cowgirl Exhibition Face West Flips the Gender Norms of Westerns". Cowboys & Indians.
  8. ^ a b c Sierzputowski, Kate (February 27, 2017). "Artist Felice House Reimagines Scenes from Classic Western Films with Female Cowboys as Leads". Colossal.
  9. ^ "Re-Western: Gender-Flipping Paintings by Felice House". Inspiration Grid. July 31, 2018.
  10. ^ "RE•WESTERN: Portraits by Felice House". Hypertext Magazine. February 5, 2016.