As of May 28, 2025

Kelly Fearing

Lot 71075
Arkansas, 1939
Watercolor on paper

11.5 x 15.375 in

Lot 71075
Arkansas, 1939
Watercolor on paper
11,5 x 15,4 in

Estimate: US$ 3,000 - 5,000
€ 2,600 - 4,400
Auction: 6 days

Heritage Auctions

City: Dallas, TX
Auction: Jun 21, 2025
Auction number: 8214
Auction name: Texas Art Signature® Auction

Lot Details
Kelly Fearing (American, 1918-2011) Arkansas, 1939 Watercolor on paper 11-1/2 x 15-3/8 inches (29.2 x 39.1 cm) (sight) Signed and dated lower right: Kelly Fearing / 39 Property from the collection of Arthur and Elizabeth Weinman PROVENANCE: Private collection, Fort Worth. When looking back at the life of William Kelly Fearing (1918-2011) some familiar sayings apply. One of them is: He marched to a different drummer. His earliest aspirations pointed him toward a life in fine art, but also to a career in gymnastics, dancing, and professional ballet. Another is: He did it his way. Fearing taught art at the University of Texas at Austin for forty years, retiring in 1987. Afterwards, his career as a painter and printmaker continued uninterrupted almost up until the time of his death. A third saying, courtesy of George Bernard Shaw, may describe Fearing's outlook the best: Some men see things as they are and say why. I dream things that never were and say why not. In a voluminous oeuvre of drawings, paintings, and prints, Kelly Fearing allowed us into his private realm-a place that straddled a physical world we recognize and a harmonious, unseen dimension that we hope, and suspect is there. One adjective placed on Fearing's work is the word 'mystical.' A marvelous retrospective, organized in 2002 by the University of Texas at Austin Creative Research Laboratory, was titled "The Mystical World of Kelly Fearing." For him, mysticism, the conviction that ultimate spiritual reality is attainable and knowable, was serious business. He took a leave of absence from his duties in Austin in the 1970s to spend a period of reflection with Bhagwan Shree Rajneesh at the Bhagwan's ashram in Poona, India. For a time, Fearing continued to wear the orange robes of discipleship. When mystics and seekers of the truth first surfaced in his paintings in the late 1940s, they were placed there out of kinship with the artist. Fearing embraced the central theme that would dominate his art for the rest of his life; how could he express wonder and admiration for the physical world and, at the same time, question his place in it? Using painterly figures clothed in robes or wearing nothing at all, Fearing confronted the conundrum of vulnerability. He frequently invoked the imagery and symbolism of sea and sky, earth and rock, and the cycle of life, but these symbols represented a natural order that was permanent and independent of human presence. These things would exist whether Fearing's figures were in them or not. Human existence must somehow draw into balance with all other forces of nature, and finding the balance point became Fearing's challenge to his peers and to us. As a teacher and author, Kelly Fearing influenced countless young people who looked to art as their career choice. As an artist, he enjoyed statewide respect and the enduring support of collectors. For those of us who came to know him late in his life, Kelly Fearing's depth of experience, approachability, and willingness to share of himself made his art, and that of his generation, real and indispensable components of Texas culture. It is impossible to look upon one of Kelly Fearing's exquisitely painted owls, or fishes, or four-legged creatures and not wish that we had known him sooner. HID12401132022 © 2024 Heritage Auctions | All Rights Reserved www.HA.com/TexasAuctioneerLicenseNotice
Private collection, Fort Worth.
Framed under glass. A few faint spots of foxing, visible under close inspection. Toning throughout the sheet. Framed Dimensions 17.75 X 21.5 Inches
Lot Details
Kelly Fearing (American, 1918-2011) Arkansas, 1939 Watercolor on paper 11-1/2 x 15-3/8 inches (29.2 x 39.1 cm) (sight) Signed and dated lower right: Kelly Fearing / 39 Property from the collection of Arthur and Elizabeth Weinman PROVENANCE: Private collection, Fort Worth. When looking back at the life of William Kelly Fearing (1918-2011) some familiar sayings apply. One of them is: He marched to a different drummer. His earliest aspirations pointed him toward a life in fine art, but also to a career in gymnastics, dancing, and professional ballet. Another is: He did it his way. Fearing taught art at the University of Texas at Austin for forty years, retiring in 1987. Afterwards, his career as a painter and printmaker continued uninterrupted almost up until the time of his death. A third saying, courtesy of George Bernard Shaw, may describe Fearing's outlook the best: Some men see things as they are and say why. I dream things that never were and say why not. In a voluminous oeuvre of drawings, paintings, and prints, Kelly Fearing allowed us into his private realm-a place that straddled a physical world we recognize and a harmonious, unseen dimension that we hope, and suspect is there. One adjective placed on Fearing's work is the word 'mystical.' A marvelous retrospective, organized in 2002 by the University of Texas at Austin Creative Research Laboratory, was titled "The Mystical World of Kelly Fearing." For him, mysticism, the conviction that ultimate spiritual reality is attainable and knowable, was serious business. He took a leave of absence from his duties in Austin in the 1970s to spend a period of reflection with Bhagwan Shree Rajneesh at the Bhagwan's ashram in Poona, India. For a time, Fearing continued to wear the orange robes of discipleship. When mystics and seekers of the truth first surfaced in his paintings in the late 1940s, they were placed there out of kinship with the artist. Fearing embraced the central theme that would dominate his art for the rest of his life; how could he express wonder and admiration for the physical world and, at the same time, question his place in it? Using painterly figures clothed in robes or wearing nothing at all, Fearing confronted the conundrum of vulnerability. He frequently invoked the imagery and symbolism of sea and sky, earth and rock, and the cycle of life, but these symbols represented a natural order that was permanent and independent of human presence. These things would exist whether Fearing's figures were in them or not. Human existence must somehow draw into balance with all other forces of nature, and finding the balance point became Fearing's challenge to his peers and to us. As a teacher and author, Kelly Fearing influenced countless young people who looked to art as their career choice. As an artist, he enjoyed statewide respect and the enduring support of collectors. For those of us who came to know him late in his life, Kelly Fearing's depth of experience, approachability, and willingness to share of himself made his art, and that of his generation, real and indispensable components of Texas culture. It is impossible to look upon one of Kelly Fearing's exquisitely painted owls, or fishes, or four-legged creatures and not wish that we had known him sooner. HID12401132022 © 2024 Heritage Auctions | All Rights Reserved www.HA.com/TexasAuctioneerLicenseNotice
Private collection, Fort Worth.
Framed under glass. A few faint spots of foxing, visible under close inspection. Toning throughout the sheet. Framed Dimensions 17.75 X 21.5 Inches

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