The Taos News

Marvin Lee Moon, 87, of Taos

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Left this plane of consciousn­ess on November 29, 2020. He will be interred at the City of Lubbock Cemetery. He was born September 7, 1934 to Bill and Mary (Graves) Moon in Perryton, TX. His parents instilled in him a work-ethic that bordered on legendary. An artist and art educator he was drawn to the visual arts initially through his love of comics and cartoons... which he copiously copied and studied. He graduated high school at sixteen and attended West Texas State University, where he received his BFA. After graduation he did a stint in the Army and was lucky to be stationed at the Presidio in San Francisco during its heyday. Upon his return to civilian life he was fortunate enough to reconnect with his good friend Betty Mills, who had a young son named Steven. On December 12, 1959 they married, and along with their son, started their new life together. A few years later, while Marvin worked as an illustrato­r at the Amarillo Airbase, a second son was born (Greg). Marvin wanted more security for his family, so it was decided that he would go back to school to get his MFA and a PhD in Art Education. This six-year odyssey took the family to Highlands University (NM), California, and eventually Penn State (PA), which had the top Art Education Department in the country at that time. His dissertati­on combined

his love of science/ empirical data with his interest in the metaphysic­al. His thesis stated (and statistica­lly connected) the amount of measurable creativity and measurable ESP a person has, led to a direct correlatio­n between the two. Marvin then accepted a teaching position at Texas Tech University’s Art Department in 1973. With his position at the university, Dr. Moon was now an integral part of academia. He eschewed the politics of university life and concentrat­ed on teaching and his own artwork. He was chairman of the doctoral committee for the Art Education Department. He also was active in the Texas Art Education Associatio­n, of which he was also an officer. He was the editor of the organizati­on’s magazine, TRENDS, for twelve years. The TAEA awarded him Art Educator of the Year in 1979 and the Distinguis­hed Fellow Award in 1997. He was also awarded as an outstandin­g contributo­r by the Western Region of the National Art Education Associatio­n. His work literally touched thousands of students and fellow art educators. Marvin’s success in his own artistic career was largely based in Taos, NM. He showed there from the 1970s and was humbled to be part the history of this important art colony. He was fortunate to visit Taos as a college student where he met Bistram, Brett, Egri, and many of the artists of that era before he really knew how important they were. During his career he amassed 23 one-man shows and over 170 invitation­al/ juried shows (in these exhibition­s he received twenty-nine awards, including six first places prizes). His catalogue raisonne’ had almost 600 paintings (and that was just his output past the age of 40). He has hundreds of collectors and has work in important collection­s such as the Harwood Museum of Art in Taos. He was also an art entreprene­ur as a partner in the Dos Lunas Gallery in Taos in the late 90s. Marvin’s love for New Mexico is shared by his wife, Betty, who first saw Taos on their honeymoon. They both got to see way more of the world than they would have dreamed as kids growing up in the Texas panhandle. Trips to Spain, Great Britain, Alaska, Mexico, and the Holy Land were high-points of their experience­s. Even while struggling through graduate school they made sure that their children had an opportunit­y to see every historical site and museum (especially during their time in Pennsylvan­ia where they went from Maine to the Carolinas visiting these places). Marvin was a man of strong faith and he set an excellent example for those around him. His passion, steadfastn­ess, and persistenc­e were a testament to setting goals and achieving them. His straight forward manner was a refreshing attribute to those who could appreciate his candor. He WILL be missed. Marvin leaves behind Betty, his wife of 61 years; his sons Steven (Lubbock) and Greg (Vanessa, Taos, NM), his grandson Bill Moon (Lubbock), in-laws, nieces, nephews, and a host of friends/ fellow artisans/ educators/ students. A memorial service will be planned for the future when we can all celebrate his life together. If you want to remember him in some fashion the family asks that you contribute to a community cause of your choosing.

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