Ron Hagerty: Sculptor

Ron Hagerty: Sculptor

Ron Hagerty: Sculptor
Text by Lucy Diggs

RON HAGERTY

is best known for his extraordinary metal sculptures. In his world, it’s all precarious. Things meant to be useful become ornamental, people are scanty, windblown like dry seedpods whirling in a West wind; boats become fish, an outing to a beach flies off into space, a prisoner on the outside of a prison needs a stamp on his hand to be re-admitted. There’s a wildness, a kookiness, a not-quite-rightness, reversals and ellipses, strange yet somehow familiar flowers and beasts.

Dancers pose on a pair of rusted roller skates, she in a gravity-defying backbend, her hair flying, arms open and flung out as if to receive the sun, the rain, manna from heaven, he in an arabesque, arms angled as if he’s about to carom off, the both of them wildly out of proportion with the skates.

This is Ron’s world, full of hilarity and excitement, strange visions and thrill-seeking sometimes so high-risk as to become ominous.

Ron was a born artist, and in first grade he had a hard time learning to read because he didn’t see the point and, being given paper and pencil, did the obvious thing with it. Drawing. But his true calling was three-dimensional work and in his early years he made small structures from driftwood, stone, sticks, and fanciful wheeled contraptions made from old wheelbarrows, scavenged bicycle parts, baling wire, rusted barrel hoops, etc., harbingers of his mature work.

He grew up in southern California in Palos Verde on the beautiful Palos Verde peninsula which in those days was still a wild open country edged with some of the best surfing beaches in California. He attended Woodbury College and Chouinard Art Institute in Los Angeles, then he headed north in a van which was an ordinary Chevy van greatly altered by him to be a three-in-one: road vehicle, cozy little home, and metal-working shop. After some perambulations hither and yon he settled in Arizona and lived for many years at 105 Cattle Track in Scottsdale which today is Cattle Track Compound, a lively arts center that hosts performances, workshops, meetings, gallery exhibits and has artists of various disciplines residing and working there.

“It ain’t me, it’s them,” he liked to say, neatly encapsulating how far he was from anything ordinary or usual. Accordingly he went his own way and did his own thing; and garnered many accolades. His sculptures are wildly inventive, and a provocative mixture of solid hunks of metal and a welter of fine lines that have a lacy insubstantial quality embodying one of his favorite sayings: “Everything is everything else.”

About the Author

Lucy Diggs

is the author of three books published by Atheneum: two novels for young adults, Everyday Friends and Moon In the Water, and a book for younger children, Selene Goes Home, illustrated by Caldecott Award-winning author-illustrator, Emily Arnold McCully. She has written two previous publications for Cattle Track Press, Old Dyes, New Quilts, and Cattle Track Couture.

When she is not writing she is working in her organic garden or playing tennis. Additionally, she creates with fabric, dyeing organic cotton cloth using all-natural dyes which she then makes into quilts, and wearable art.

She lives in the country near Healdsburg, California.

Published by Cattle Track Arts & Preservation
112 pages –  Available in softcover

Southwest Rising

Southwest Rising

Southwest Rising

Southwest Rising: Contemporary Art and the Legacy of Elaine Horwitch
Dr. Julie Sasse, Chief Curator at Tucson Museum of Art and Historic Block

A new book by Dr. Julie Sasse, Chief Curator at Tucson Museum of Art and Historic Block, celebrates one of the most powerful and influential art dealers in Arizona and New Mexico art history. Southwest Rising: Contemporary Art and the Legacy of Elaine Horwitch, co-published by Cattle Track Arts & Preservation and Tucson Museum of Art.

Elaine Horwitch was a major force in contemporary art in the Southwest from the late 1960s until her death in 1991. She was responsible for launching the careers of hundreds of artists from the Southwest and the nation.

With a spotlight on Horwitch’s colorful life, galleries, and artists, this book surveys art in Arizona and New Mexico from the middle of the nineteenth century through the early 1990s, revealing the artistic journeys and accomplishments of hundreds of artists, gallerists, and art professionals who contributed to the Southwest’s rich cultural heritage. Written by Julie Sasse, who worked at Elaine Horwitch Galleries for fourteen years, Southwest Rising is a combination of biography, memoir, and art historical overview of the arts and the rise of contemporary art in Arizona and New Mexico.

About the Author

Julie Sasse is the author of more than forty published art books, exhibition catalogs, and essays, including James Havard (Hudson Hills Press, 2006), Trouble in Paradise: Examining Discord Between Nature and Society (Tucson Museum of Art, 2008), Contemporary Art of the Southwest (Schiffer, 2012), and The Art of MF Cardamone (Pomegranate Press, 2016). Dr. Sasse is the chief curator at the Tucson Museum of Art, where she has organized more than 100 solo and group exhibitions of regional, national, and international artists.

Also available for purchase through Tucson Museum of Art

Co-published by Cattle Track Arts & Preservation and Tucson Museum of Art 
559 pages –  9x2x6 in – 4.5lbs – Available in hardcover or paperback

Small Worlds

Small Worlds

“Small Worlds / Small Paintings”
by Philip C. Curtis
Cattle Track Press 2009

A collection of sixty-eight (68) little-known works. Beginning in 1957, Philip C. Curtis utilized the same technique and dream-like vision in these small jewels as his large-scale work. Curtis often used found objects like tin boxes, canes, daguerreotype cases and cameos in addition to the gessoed panels to reveal the same fanciful, mysterious and magical world.

combined with

“Small Drawings”
by Philip C.Curtis
Cattle Track Press 2009

Letterpress printing by Brent Bond
Handset type by Crystal Phelps
Limited edition portfolio of 250
6 7/8” x 5”
Four relief prints, each stamped with an estate seal, these gestural sketches often were the beginning of his paintings

Presented by The Philip C. Curtis Charitable Trust for the Encouragement of Art and Cattle Track Press

Robert Rauschenberg Foundation Logo
“This project was supported in part by funding received from the
Robert Rauschenberg Foundation.”