The Louisiana State Museum, Louisiana Museum Foundation, and Lieutenant Governor Billy Nungesser are excited to announce Rodrigue: Before the Blue Dog, a new exhibition at the Cabildo in New Orleans. This new exhibit presents more than fifty of Rodrigue’s unique paintings alongside Louisiana State Museum artifacts related to Cajun culture.
Before George Rodrigue’s Blue Dog paintings catapulted him to international fame, the artist was already known for his dark, often ghostly, depictions of the Cajun landscape, culture, and people. Born and raised in New Iberia, Rodrigue returned to the region after attending art school in Los Angeles with a new appreciation of its distinctiveness. “Each time I’d come back to Louisiana,” Rodrigue explained, “I’d see something different that I hadn’t noticed growing up. I started painting, and I saw all this stuff leaving us, things I wanted to capture in the Cajun country, and so I decided to call myself a Cajun artist.”
“George Rodrigue spent the first three decades of his artistic career capturing the landscapes, stories, and people of his native New Iberia and the region he called home. Perhaps no artist was as committed as Rodrigue to preserving and celebrating Cajun cultural heritage. These paintings graphically interpret the history of the Cajun culture in Louisiana, providing a treasure trove of information for future generations,” said Lieutenant Governor Billy Nungesser.
While his artistic vision was undeniably unique, Rodrigue’s interest in his Cajun heritage was part of a broader cultural movement in the 1960s and 1970s, the Cajun Revival. Like Rodrigue, others of his generation sensed the passing of a distinctive culture and set out to document and revitalize its language, traditions, music, and food.
This revival not only increased ethnic pride among Cajuns but also created a new interest in Acadian culture outside the region. When, for example, Louisiana musicians including Dewey Balfa introduced Cajun music to a national audience at the 1964 Newport Folk Festival in Rhode Island, they were met with standing ovations. Similarly, Paul Prudhomme’s penchant for blackening red fish led to a craze for Cajun-inspired cuisine across America. This exhibition will explore how Rodrigue’s work reflected and advanced this movement.
Watch a short reel produced by @LASTATEMUSEUM
The exhibition is loosely divided into six thematic areas, all related to Cajun culture: landscapes, language and legends, families and communities, music, foodways, and way of life. It will also include Rodrigue’s fifteen-painting series, the Saga of the Acadians. Painted between 1985 and 1989, the series traces the history of the Acadians as they traveled from France to what is now Nova Scotia to south Louisiana after the Grand Derangement of 1755.
The final section of the exhibition explores Rodrigue’s iconic Blue Dog within its Cajun context. While working on an illustration for a book of ghost stories, Rodrigue found inspiration for the famous canine in stories he heard about the loup-garou, a legendary werewolf-like creature that populated many Cajun folktales. Watchdog, the first “Blue Dog” painting, is among the exhibition’s highlights.
Click Photos to Enlarge
Museum Hours, Admission & General Information
Rodrigue: Before the Blue Dog will be displayed from November 23, 2024, through September 28, 2025, in the Cabildo, located at 701 Chartres Street in New Orleans. The Cabildo is open Tuesday through Sunday, 9:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. Admission to the museum is $10 for adults, $8 for students, seniors, and active military, and free for children six and younger.
George Rodrigue was an acclaimed American artist from Louisiana, renowned for his Blue Dog series, which gained international fame in the 1990s. His work, deeply rooted in his Cajun heritage, often explored themes of Louisiana culture and folklore, reflecting a unique blend of traditional storytelling and contemporary art. Beyond his artistic achievements, Rodrigue was a philanthropist, supporting arts education through the George Rodrigue Foundation of the Arts, established to inspire and empower the next generation of artists.
About the Cabildo
The Cabildo was built under Spanish rule between 1795 and 1799, following the Great New Orleans Fire of 1788 which completely destroyed the structure that stood on the property. Designed by Gilberto Guillemard, who also designed the neighboring St. Louis Cathedral and the Presbytère, the Cabildo was the site of the Louisiana Purchase transfer ceremonies in 1803, which finalized the United States’ acquisition of the Louisiana Territory and doubled the size of the fledgling nation.
The Cabildo served as the center of New Orleans government until 1853 when it became the headquarters of the Louisiana State Supreme Court, where the landmark Plessy v. Ferguson decision originated in 1892. The building was transferred to the Louisiana State Museum in 1908 and has since served to educate the public about Louisiana history.
In 1988 the Cabildo was severely damaged in an inferno and, within five years, the landmark was authentically restored with 600-year-old French timber framing techniques. It was reopened to the public in 1994, featuring a comprehensive exhibit on Louisiana’s early history.
This remarkable building’s tumultuous past is reason enough to pay it a visit, but the historical treasures within make it an absolute must-see.