George Dureau photograph of Troy Joshua Brown George Dureau photograph of Troy Joshua Brown George Dureau photograph of Troy Joshua Brown George Dureau photograph of Troy Joshua Brown. Dedication to Donny, his brother,  and signature. George Dureau photograph of Troy Joshua Brown / detail of smudge on print. George Dureau photograph of Troy Joshua  Brown  / title of print George Dureau photograph of Troy Joshua Brown Portrait of George Dureau (for reference only) Portrait of George Dureau (for reference only) Portrait of George Dureau (for reference only) Portrait of George Dureau (for reference only) Photographer George Valentine Dureau & muse, friend, 'lover', one of his favourite subjects; Joshua Troy Brown.

SOLD. George Dureau (1930-2014) Authentic B&W Signed Photograph of Troy Joshua Brown 1983

George Dureau (1930-2014), American. Portrait of Troy Joshua Brown. Authentic silver gelatin (darkroom printed) vintage photograph. Please condition report in next chapter.

Print measures 8 x 10 inches, Image 6.5 x 6.5 inches. Unframed. Signed of aging; one pin hole at top centre, one pin one at bottom centre. Each corner of print has creases, within the white border. Unknown smudge mark under signature on left side, white border.

Acquired directly by the trustee of the Dureau estate, his brother Don Dureau, whom I am now friends with.

Handwritten by Dureau in black ink on front, bottom, white border: “Troy Joshua Brown, For Donny, George Dureau” (Donny is George’s brother)

Written by Dureau on verso in pencil at bottom; “Troy Brown, 1983, 10,15 Inch”. 

SOLD.

Private Collection, Antwerp, Belgium.

 

Background on Troy:

”There is a short paragraph about Troy Brown in Philip Gefter’s book George Dureau, The Photographs, published in 2016. The paragraph, listed on page 9, follows:

 
“In 1982, Dureau met a street hustler named Troy Brown, a handsome, white, classically proportioned young man who would prove to be anything but the wholesome boy next door. Dureau would photograph Brown off and on for years, while they also carried on a tumultuous relationship of a romantic nature. Brown was the irascible muse who required rescue, often from his own sordid demons.”
 
As far as we are aware, this is the extent of the information available on Troy Brown and his life. We believe Troy is still alive and living in the French Quarter of New Orleans, but we are not certain. ”
 – Estate of George Dureau, August 2023
 

Research:

https://www.newyorker.com/culture/photo-booth/a-new-orleans-photographers-eye-for-male-beauty-and-imperfection

https://www.mutualart.com/Artwork/Troy-Brown-Headshot/F24E34C4B9041753

https://www.artnet.com/artists/george-valentine-dureau/troy-brown-rCjtWrkq_QoIF-X6ufzf7A2

https://artsandculture.google.com/asset/troy-joshua-brown-george-dureau/ggFgOLYFTljGfQ?hl=en

https://www.dazeddigital.com/photography/gallery/22473/9/george-dureau-the-photographs

https://www.worthpoint.com/worthopedia/george-dureau-american-orleans-1930-1965884889

https://www.worthpoint.com/worthopedia/1983-signed-george-dureau-silver-486965405

https://www.mutualart.com/Artwork/Robert-Mapplethorpe-Shirtless–1-/61F3FA9C3D900870C72FD78376F1AC5B

https://www.artnet.com/artists/george-valentine-dureau/troy-brown-kneeling-8L4U4yqYwCSq3Dqy0wMk9w2

https://www.artnet.com/artists/george-valentine-dureau/troy-joshua-brown-7rl6qsfwpY5P65GB2RK7kw2

https://www.worthpoint.com/worthopedia/george-dureau-w-photo-dureau-840900875

https://www.artnet.com/artists/george-valentine-dureau/9

 

Troy Joshua Brown

Troy Brown

 

 
George Dureau
Born December 28, 1930
New Orleans, Louisiana, United States
Died April 7, 2014 (aged 83)
   
Education LSU and Tulane University
Known for Painter, Photographer

 

George Valentine Dureau (December 28, 1930 – April 7, 2014) was an American artist whose long career was most notable for charcoal sketches and black and white photography of poor white and black athletes, dwarfs, and amputees. Robert Mapplethorpe is said to have been inspired by Dureau’s amputee and dwarf photographs, which showed the figures as “exposed and vulnerable, playful and needy, complex and entirely human individuals.”

 

Biography

Dureau was born to Clara Rosella Legett Dureau and George Valentine Dureau in the Lakeview neighborhood of New Orleans, Louisiana. He was raised in nearby Bayou St. John. He graduated with a fine arts degree from LSU in 1952, after which he began architectural studies at Tulane University. He briefly served in the U.S. Army. Before being able to survive as an artist, he worked for Kreeger’s, a New Orleans department store, as a display designer/window dresser. For the vast majority of his life, he lived in the French Quarter, where he was well known for his eccentricity and hospitality. His friend and student, Robert Mapplethorpe restaged many of his earlier black and white photographs. Dureau died of Alzheimer’s disease.

 

Works

Some of his pieces are held at the Ogden Museum of Southern Art. Several of his works are displayed publicly throughout New Orleans, most notably, the pediment sculpture for Harrah’s New Orleans, and his cast-bronze sculptures stand sentinel at the entrance gates of New Orleans City Park. His depiction of a Mardi Gras parade dominates one wall in Gallier Hall. “Black 1973–1986,” an exhibition of black and white photographs concentrating on young black men at the Higher Pictures gallery in New York City, garnered rave reviews.

 

Selected publications

  • Lucie-Smith, Edward (1985). George Dureau New Orleans: 50 Photographs. London: GMP Publishers Ltd. ISBN0-907040-47-0.
  • Gefter, Philip (2016). George Dureau, The Photographs. New York: Aperture. ISBN978-1-59711-284-0.

 

References

  1. ^ “Dureau, George (1930–2014)”. glbtq. December 28, 1930. Archived from the original on March 30, 2014. Retrieved April 8, 2014.
  2. ^ Harrity, Christopher (December 28, 1930). “Artist Spotlight George Dureau”. Advocate.com. Retrieved April 8, 2014.
  3. ^ Jump up to: ab MacCash, Doug (April 7, 2014). “George Dureau, New Orleans master painter and photographer, has died”. The Times-Picayune. NOLA.com. Retrieved April 8, 2014.
  4. ^ Gruber, Richard J. “George Dureau,” 64 Parishes.com
  5. ^ George Dureau: ‘Black 1973–1986’

 

PRESS:

https://www.newyorker.com/culture/photo-booth/a-new-orleans-photographers-eye-for-male-beauty-and-imperfection

https://www.nola.com/entertainment_life/arts/george-dureau-new-orleans-master-painter-and-photographer-has-died/article_5bb418e9-c06e-57d8-b600-5e5bad5382e3.html

https://www.prospect5.org/artists/george-dureau

 

 

GEORGE DUREAU OBITUARY

George Valentine Dureau, Jr., renowned New Orleans painter, photographer, and sculptor, died at age 83 on Monday, April 7, 2014 at Waldon Health Care Center in Kenner, LA. George was born December 28, 1930, in New Orleans, and lived most of his life here. New Orleans was his spiritual as well as his physical home, and he embodied the carefree and bohemian aspects of his birthplace. He was well loved by all who knew him, and he was known by many. In addition to his amazing artistic talents, he was also a bon vivant and a raconteur par excellence, making him a welcome guest at New Orleans parties and other gatherings of people from high society as well as from the hoi polloi. He was nothing if not an egalitarian, comfortable with people from all walks of life. George grew up on Bayou St. John, but the French Quarter was his natural habitat, where he had several beautiful apartments with studio and gallery space over many decades. Practically everyone in the Quarter knew George and was used to seeing him riding his bike up and down the narrow streets, with his long dark hair flying.

 

George’s artistic talent emerged early; he won his first art prize at about age 12. He studied art at Louisiana State University in Baton Rouge, and also took some classes at Tulane University School of Architecture. In addition to many exhibitions of his work at museums and galleries in New Orleans, he has also had shows in many other places, including New York, Washington DC, Atlanta, Los Angeles, Portland, London, and Paris. In October of 2011, the Ogden Museum of Southern Art presented George with its Opus Award, given each year to a member of the arts community whose life’s work constitutes a major contribution to the cultural landscape of the South. The Ogden also mounted a very well-received retrospective exhibit of his work that same year. Many of George’s paintings feature classical and mythological themes, and he often depicted himself, his beloved mother, Clara, and many of his friends in them. His photographs were initially done as studies for his painting, but were recognized as beautiful and haunting portraits in their own right. His subjects were usually his friends or became his friends, and his portraits of them made the viewer look at the human body and its variations in a new way and see beauty and dignity that might not usually be associated with the images he chose.

 

George was born to Clara Legett Dureau and George Valentine Dureau, Sr., both deceased. He is survived by a half-brother, Donald Dureau, of Dallas, TX, and a step-brother, Theodore Jay Gordon, of Old Lyme, CT, an aunt, Marion Legett, of New Orleans, and eight first cousins: Dr. Benjamin J. Legett, Jr. (June); Mary Lynn Bonck; Carol Legett Fouquette; Laurie Legett Bazin; Judy Legett Martin (Bob); Patricia Legett Plache (Robert); Gaynell Legett; and Linda Legett Abele (Rod). George was beloved by his family and many friends, not the least of whom is Katie Nachod. She knew George for only seven years, but she devotedly oversaw his care during the last few years of his life. George’s family and friends are eternally grateful to her and to all the members of the Friends of George group who provided encouragement and support to her in this labor of love. Thanks also go to the caregivers at Carrington Place in Algiers and at Waldon Health Care Center in Kenner who helped make George’s last months as comfortable as possible.

 

There will be a public memorial service to celebrate George’s life and art on Good Friday, April 18, at the Ogden Museum of Southern Art from 1:00-3:00 p.m. In lieu of flowers, George’s family would prefer donations in George’s memory to the Ogden Museum of Southern Art, 925 Camp St. New Orleans, LA 70130 or to the New Orleans Museum of Art, One Collins Diboll Circle, City Park, New Orleans, LA 70124. David Cuthbert, a longtime friend of George’s and a longtime writer for the Times-Picayune, recently described George as a “larger than life artist, a man who is a bountiful and generous human being, ready to share himself and his talent with great joie de vivre.” George will live on for a long time in the hearts of the many people who loved him, and he will live on forever in his art. 

Published by The New Orleans Advocate from Apr. 15 to Apr. 17, 2014.

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