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Richard Gordon Kendall (also spelled Kendell; 17 November 1933 Paris, Texas – 30 January 2008 Paris, Texas) was an American self-taught artist who, beginning around 1995, began to be chronicled as an extraordinary outsider artist – in a folk artist. Kendall was discovered around 1995 by Jay Wehnert, an influential curator and collector of outsider art, who became an advocate of Kendall's works. According to Wehnert and other art critics, Kendall's works exhibit extraordinary use of mediums, given that, from about 1995 to about 1998, he was living in makeshift shelters on the streets of Houston. One of Wehnert's objectives was to give Kendall notable recognition as an artist – which Kendall eluded. Wehnert lost contact with Kendall in 1998 and Kendall died in 2008. As recent as 2019, Kendall's works have been exhibited by the Dutton Gallery of New York.

Life
Jay Wehnert – a collector and curator of outsider, self taught, visionary, folk, and contemporary art for over 37 years – "discovered" Richard Gordon Kendall around 1995. During the time that the two corresponded – until about 1998 – Kendall was living on the Streets of Houston. Kendall told Wehnert that he made drawings of the city's architecture to keep himself "sharp." Kendall's repetition of content, creative use of found materials, and distinctive style, Wehnert found, "had all of the hallmarks of self-taught genius."

Growing up
Richard Gordon Kendall was born November 17, 1933, in Paris, Texas, to Lenious Kendall (aka Linnius "Bud" Kindell; 1886–1968) and Myrl Reynolds (maiden; 1895–1973). His original birth certificate gave his name as Charles Gordon Kendall. But his mother filed a corrected birth certificate, sworn and subscribed August 12, 1944, re-stating his birth name as Richard Gordon Kendall.

Kendall graduated in 1954 from Gibbons High School – a segregated high school for African Americans in Paris, Texas, which finally closed in 1966. Kendall was on the 1953–1954 basketball won the Prairie View Conference AA State Championship. Travis Gosnold Givens (1891–1974) was principal of Gibbons from 1936 to 1967. Newton Woods, Jr. (né Newton James Woods Jr.; 1924–2002), a graduate of the Tuskegee Institute, became head basketball coach in 1953. Woods was a science teacher.

In the 1990s, Kendall lived at 769 Ash Street in Paris.

Selected exhibitions

 * Richard Gordon Kendall and Frank Jones: Haunts – Dutton, Lower East Side, New York, September 25, 2015 - October 8, 2015
 * Self Taught: Margins Beyond, featuring the work of self taught artists, including Frank Jones (1900–1969), Richard Gordon Kendall, Ike Morgan, and Johnnie Swearingen from the Intuitive Eye collection - Kirk Hopper Fine Art, Kirk Hopper Fine Art, Dallas, Texas, January 14, 2017 - February 11, 2017
 * Lone Stars: A celebration of Texas Culture – Webb Gallery (Julie and Bruce Webb), Waxahachie, Texas, May 6, 2018 - August 26, 2018
 * The Outsider Art Fair, New York, New York, January 17–20, 2019 – Sonia Dutton (daughter of Denis Dutton), Dutton Gallery, exhibited the drawings of two Texas artists, Richard Gordon Kendall and Frank Jones

Extant works

 * Bank of American Building at Christmas, by Kendall (circa 1995) (see Bank of America Center, Houston)
 * Church, by Kendall (circa 1995)
 * Untitled, Building with Clock, by Kendall (circa 1995)

Family
Richard had a brother, Lindsey Kendell (né Lenius Kendell; 1926–1952) — who, as a private serving with the 55th Ordnance Ammunition Company of the 8th Army in North Korea during the Korean War — died from non-combat causes while serving with the 55th Ordnance Ammunition Company of the 8th Army in South Korea during the Korean War.