Label
Hilda Rubin Pierce
1921 - 2015
The Big Pavilion from the West Bank of the Kalamazoo River, Saugatuck
c. 1950 | oil on masonite board
Notes: As a teenager, Hilda Rubin studied art in Vienna with expressionist painter, Oskar Kokoschka, before fleeing the country as a Jewish refugee following the German invasion, or Anschluss, of Austria in 1938. Traveling alone, at age 16, Hilda first went to London and then, in 1939, found asylum with relatives in Chicago. There, she took art classes at Hull House and studied at the Art Institute of Chicago. Her Chicago mentors included artists, Rudolph Weisenborn, Rudolph Pen, and Harry Mintz. A profile of Rubin from the journal, American Artist, described Hilda traveling and painting at art colonies along Lake Michigan in the summers during the 1940s.
Rubin continued to paint and teach art in Highland Park, Illinois. She exhibited paintings at the Art Institute of Chicago, Sherman Gallery, Mandel Brothers, and summer art fairs. Married to Norman Pierce, a Chicago radio announcer and film producer, Hilda moved to La Jolla, California in the mid 1970s.
This colorful image shows the Big Pavilion on a typical summer day. The brush strokes are filled with bold expression. There is activity portrayed, but one gets a strange sense of being in a “private” place. Possibly a well-kept secret?
Collection: Saugatuck Douglas History Center
Gift of: Fred Mundinger
Accession: 2018.12.01