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YESTERYEAR
And the rest is ... art history
Camouflage painting courses helped art program survive struggles More than 65 years ago, North Texas Agricultural College (now UTA) Dean E.E. Davis had a grand idea. He wanted to create an art department at NTAC before The University of Texas had one.
"This camouflage painting was very important to the War Department, and it brought more and more students into the art classes," Plummer said. The move is widely credited with saving the department. After the war, the department added faculty and continued to grow as the school's name changed to Arlington State College in 1949. In 1961, two years after ASC became a four-year university, the department relocated to a separate building from music and drama and began to flourish. By fall 1969, one of Joyner's longtime dreams became reality when the University instituted a bachelor of fine arts degree. Joyner retired that year and was honored with the title of professor emeritus. He died in 1996 at age 95, but his legacy lives on. Housed in the UTA Special Collections Division of the Central Library are photographs, paintings, posters and other items donated by the Joyners. Today, UTA's Department of Art and Art History offers studies in more than 15 areas, including sculpture, screenwriting, painting, metals and glass. All can be traced to Dean Davis' plan and the dedicated efforts of Howard Joyner. And Davis' timing was pretty good, too. The big university in Austin established an art department in 1938--one year after the little school in Arlington. — Jim Patterson
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