James Dean Pruner was an American painter, printmaker, draftsman, zinemaker, sculptor, and poet. Born in Lyons, Kansas, he also lived in Hays, Ellinwood, St. John, and in rural Stafford County, Kansas, where he farmed and maintained a studio. His works include a diverse range of subjects and styles, but with several consistent themes, including human relationships, animals and the land, and problems he associated with modern life, nuclear warfare, and technology. He produced more than 300 paintings, thousands of ink drawings, prints and etchings, silk-screened cards and posters, and more than 50 sculpture and assemblage pieces during his lifetime. Pruner's works can be found in the collection of the Spencer Museum of Art at The University of Kansas, at The Stone Gallery in Hays, KS, and in numerous private collections.
"My sense of humor and ability to communicate thru non-traditional avenues connect and interrelate, creating art which smiles at the anxiety, frustration, and pressure of 20th century living. I twist historical themes, use personal symbols, reconstruct my knowledge of the masters, and receive inspiration from friends.
"I am influenced by de Kooning's means of producing an image. The gesture, rapidity, and spontaneity are important in my quest to capture this likeness. I use historically visual remains; reinterpret and produce. From Rembrandt's "Dutch Masters" to Diebenkorn's "Ocean Park Series" my paintings emerge and continue to grow.
"The "Story of Love" is a series of exotic landscape paintings. The work fuses the necessity of speed with the harmony of color. In this age of mass sterilization and dissatisfaction the "Story of Love" portrays my efforts to reach a different realization. The bittersweet destination of these paintings directs my fantastic notions of survival."
1970s and 1980s
"At 36, he'd become one of the Midwest's most distinctive painters and a colorful figure among the area's no-frills farm folk," writes Doug Hitchcock for Borderline magazine. After completing his MA, Pruner moved to Ellinwood, KS, where he rented a small studio that he shared with another artist. When his studio-mate destroyed the studio, Pruner moved to rural Stafford County, where his mother owned 40 acres of land. On this remote property, Pruner moved a 1950s-era bus, which he converted into his studio and living space. He painted continuously, while also cultivating a small-scale farm and building a living space for himself. Pruner also produced a series of prints at The Lawrence Lithography Workshop, in Lawrence, Kansas, with Michael Sims. His works from this period indicate a consistent iconography, drawn from dreams and magic, and inspired by the landscape colors that surrounded him. "His paintings almost vibrated with bright, clashing colors, or deep, rich hues. The paint itself appeared to glow, as if illuminated from within. He achieved this by using thin layers of oil paint on a white ground: applying enough pigment to suggest color, letting just enough ground peek through to brighten the surface." In 1987, Pruner withdrew from the gallery circuit he had frequented in Arizona, California, and Kansas. He began experimenting with carving stone, and created assemblages that were inspired by his friendship with William S. Burroughs, who was living in Lawrence, Kansas. He produced small paintings which replaced his former iconography with new figures; skeletons presided over chaotic scenes, and the window he had painted in many earlier works disappeared. Many of his images reflected on nuclear war and a devastated natural world.
Disappearance and death
In December 1987, Pruner disappeared from his home in Stafford County, Kansas. His body was found in April 1988.
Writings and zines
Pruner was an avid writer, filling notebooks with his poetry and maintaining regular correspondence with many friends and family members. His poems addressed concerns about modern technology and alienation. Their titles include, "A Lesson in Being Alone," "America At War," "The Computer Age," "Mother Earth," "Peace Preserves," "Stand Back War Mongers," and "Western Man." Pruner produced several zines, including:
Hard-Nosed Harry
One Day Close to Hell
TV: Modern Man, Primitive Man
His images also illustrate the 1989 William S. Burroughs and Diane di Prima publication Stiletto One: A Ship of Fools.
Selected exhibitions
1998
James Dean Pruner Retrospective, at Moss-Thorns Gallery of Art, Fort Hays State University, Hays, Kansas
1987
Group exhibition with Jeff Bertoncino, Carole Foster Blake, Leonel Góngora, and Agnese Udinotti, at Udinotti Gallery, 8756 Wonderland Ave., Los Angeles, California 90046
The History of Man, at Sven & Me, 120 S. Main St., Lindsborg, Kansas
1986
Stone Foundation, Hays, Kansas
1985
A Cold Winter in Great Bend, KS, Kellas Gallery, 7 East 7th St., Lawrence, Kansas, 66044
3D, Stone Gallery, 107 W. 6th St., Hays, Kansas
Man and Moon: J. Pruner Paintings, Improvisation, 8162 Melrose Ave., Los Angeles, California
1982
James Dean Pruner, Scissors/Paper/Stone Gallery, 1101 1/2 Mass St., Lawrence, Kansas
Udinotti Gallery, 4215 N. Marshall Way, Scottsdale, Arizona 85251
The James Dean Pruner Project
Tell It To The Horses: The James Dean Pruner Project, a monographic publication and corresponding solo exhibition of James Dean Pruner's work is planned for 2016-2017 and is being coordinated by Laura A. L. Wellen of Houston, Texas, with support from Pruner's family.