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George Rodrigue - Wikipedia In 2009, Rodrigue formed the George Rodrigue Foundation of the Arts (GRFA), a non-profit organization which advocates the importance of the visual arts in children's development
George Rodrigue Studios - Artwork, Blue Dogs, Online Shop Born and raised in southwest Louisiana, “Cajun Country,” George Rodrigue preserved on his canvas what he feared was his dying heritage — including its land, people, traditions and mythology
We Buy Rodrigue Original Works — ORLEANS GALLERY George Rodrigue passed away in October of 2013, but his works, and the Blue Dog, remain a symbol of Louisiana Culture and a status symbol among Louisiana natives spread around the world
Blue - The Life and Art of George Rodrigue | PBS George Rodrigue, his story, his artistic contribution, his entire life, are a vivid part of the Louisiana landscape, and continue to be an important part of the art world in America and beyond
George Rodrigue- A Retrospective – Art of the American South Rodrigue stands with other famous artists like Andy Warhol and Marcel Duchamp who took an idea and commercialized it, translating the blue dog to something the public as a whole recognized
Biography - George Rodrigue Born and raised in Cajun Country, Louisiana, U S A , artist George Rodrigue portrayed on his canvas what he feared was his dying heritage---including its land, people, traditions, and mythology
George Rodrigue - Artnet George Rodrigue was an American painter known for his iconic and long-running Blue Dog series of paintings Beginning in the late 1980s, Rodrigue painted a reoccurring character of a blue dog with yellow eyes, always in the same pose but placed in a variety of settings
Biography of George Rodrigue Born and raised in Cajun Country, Louisiana, U S A , artist George Rodrigue portrayed on his canvas what he feared was his dying heritage—-including its land, people, traditions, and mythology
George Rodrigue: The Cajun Landscape — LSU Museum of Art Rodrigue was born and raised in New Iberia, Louisiana, the heart of Cajun country The oak tree was a primary feature inspiring many landscape paintings in the early 1970s, which evolved to include Cajun people and traditions For more than four decades, Rodrigue sought to depict his Cajun heritage through his work