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DALLAS PRIVATE COLLECTIONS
June 15 - Septemberr 3
1967
r'orty-six paintings, combines, and sculptures have been
to the Dallas Museum of Fine Arts
loahed/by sixteen Dallas collectors for a special summer
exhibition which opens Saturday, July 15 and continues through
September 3. Chronologicdlly, the exhibit spans the past
century, i th an unusually large representation of works
done since 1950.
The summer exhibition assembled through the generosity
of local collectors is becoming a museum tradition, the
present one representing the fourth year for this kind of
shoe at the museum. Collectors who have loaned works this
year are Ir. and M rs. Alfred L. Bromberg, Mr. and f;rs. James
H. Clark, k3r., Mr. and i rs. :rdmund J. Kahn, .r. and 'Mrs.
Stephen . Nahn, :rs. Arthur L. Kramer, Jr., Mr, and Mrs.
Edward marcus, 2r. and Irs. Stanley Yarcus, Mr. and Mrs.
Frederick . -Mayer, Tr. and Vrs. John D. 1,'rchison,
Yr. and Mrs. Raymond D. Nasher, ';r. ; nslie Oglesby, Jr.,
Mr. and irs. George Perutz, Mr. and irs. Lawrence S.
Pollock, Sr., Mr. and Ilrs. Lawrence 3. !'ollock, Jr.,
ie. and n.rs. Jack C. Vaughan, and )rs. George 1. Works, Jr.
The works in the exhibition fall into two principal groups,
those by artists who may be called the forerunners and
developers of 20th century art, and those by artists currently
at work and themselves extending forms and media of expression
in the visual arts. Falling in the first category are such