Asheville Art Museum hosts A Retrospective of Paintings by John Baeder

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Tuesday, 05 August 2008 05:51

John Baeder - Al Mac’s Diner, 1991 - Oil on canvas, 30 x 48 inches - Collection of the Philbrook Museum of Art, Tulsa


Asheville, NC - 'Pleasant Journeys and Good Eats Along the Way' : A Retrospective of Paintings by John Baeder  surveys John Baeder’s (1938-) 35-year obsession with roadside architecture, especially America’s diners. On exhibition at the Asheville Art Museum through 26 October, 2008. This exhibition is organized by the Morris Museum of Art, Augusta, GA.

Originally attracted to classic postcard images of Mom and Pop restaurants, Baeder spent most of his career depicting these beloved unpretentious restaurants. He has said he sees these paintings as pleas for preservation and diners are part of the American landscape that fit into an urban context like modern folk heroes.

Before the era of fast food, American travelers looked to diners to provide “meals like mother makes,” a descriptive phrase found in Baeder’s very first diner painting. Home cooking was especially appealing to weary tourists who took to the American highway in increasing numbers between the 1920s and the 1960s.

Baeder’s paintings capture items and events once commonplace that have now almost disappeared. With hand-lettered placards, neon signs, old cars and polished chrome, these images invite the viewer to absorb the simplicity of roadside architecture and discover the values of hearth and home in unexpected places.

While growing up, he lived with his parents, grandparents and sister in the Biltmore Hotel, Atlanta, GA. Baeder claims his earliest memory of a diner was at age 5 during World War II. 

John Baeder Blue Beacon, Newark, NJ, 1980 Oil on canvas, 42 x 66 inches Courtesy of Alice A. Zimmerman After becoming the director of a large advertising agency, Baeder began collecting American postcards from the 1920s to the 1940s. Upon realizing his attraction had to do with the angles and composition of the photographs, he spent hours studying the postcards and later decided to paint images based on those postcards.

In 1972, Baeder began making black and white paintings and became increasingly entranced with details. He painted his first color painting in 1974 and has continued to create brilliant images of diners ever since.

John Baeder currently lives and works in Nashville, TN. His work has been featured in one-man and group exhibitions throughout the United States. His work is in the permanent collections of many corporations and institutions including the Whitney Museum of American Art, High Museum of Art, Yale University, Rhode Island School of Design and the Coca-Cola Company.

Visit the Asheville Art Museum at : www.ashevilleart.org



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