Emil Bisttram
Emil J. Bisttram | |
---|---|
Born |
Nadlac, Romania | April 7, 1895
Died |
February 26, 1976 80) Taos, New Mexico | (aged
Nationality | American |
Education |
Howard Giles Diego Rivera |
Alma mater |
New York School of Fine and Applied Art National Academy of Design Cooper Union The Art Student's League |
Known for | Painting |
Style | Dynamic Symmetry |
Movement |
Transcendental Painting Group Taos Art Association |
Emil Bisttram (1895–1976) was an American artist who lived in New York and Taos, New Mexico, and was known for his modernist work.
Bisttram was born in Hungary, near the Romanian border, in 1895. When he was 11 years old, his family immigrated to New York City. Emil grew up in the tenement buildings that had become the destination for so many Eastern European immigrant families. He was a talented artist, and after a few years began his schooling at the National Academy of Art and Design, then Cooper Union, Parsons, and The Art Student's League. He began teaching soon after completing school, first at the New York School of Fine and Applied Arts, and then at the Master Institute of the Roerich Museum.
Bisttram first visited Taos in the summer of 1930. He later fell in love with the scenery and moved there. In 1931 he won a Guggenheim Fellowship to study mural painting. The fellowship enabled Bisttram to travel to Mexico where he studied mural painting with the world famous muralist Diego Rivera. Numerous mural commissions were to follow throughout his career (the Department of Justice in Washington D.C., The Taos County Courthouse, New Mexico, and the Federal Courthouse in Roswell, New Mexico.) After returning to Taos in 1932, Bistrram started the Heptagon Gallery and the Taos School of Art.[1] In 1938, Bisttram founded the Transcendental Painting Group with Raymond Jonson and several other Santa Fe artists.
In 1952, Bisttram co-founded the Taos Art Association, and later in 1959 won the Grand Prize for painting at the New Mexico State Fair.
In 1970, Emil Bisttram served as a judge and monitor for a statewide arts grant competition for art to be placed in the newly constructed County Courthouse building, designed by architect Bill Menningbach of Taos. Ken Drew, a local sculptor, won the competition. Bisttram oversaw the project for the next two years, and in June 1972 Drew completed the installation. Then-Senator Joseph Montoya and other dignitaries from Santa Fe officiated at the dedication ceremonies. In 1975, his birthday, April 7, was declared "Emil Bisttram Day," a New Mexico state holiday.
Public Collections
His work can be found in the following public collections:[2]
- New Mexico Museum of Art
- Albuquerque Museum
- Philadelphia Museum of Art
- Phoenix Art Museum
- Smithsonian American Art Museum
- Los Angeles County Museum of Art
- Metropolitan Museum of Art
- Nora Eccles Harrison Museum of Art - Utah State University
References
- ↑ Udall, Sharyn; Connors, Andrew (1986). Art in New Mexico, 1900-1945 :Paths to Taos and Santa Fe. Washington D.C.: National Museum of American Art, Smithsonian Institution. p. 192. ISBN 0896595986.
- ↑ "Emil James Bisttram". artnet. Retrieved 7 April 2014.
Sources
- Pintores Press; 1st edition (1988). The transcendental art of Emil Bisttram by Emil Bisttram . ISBN 978-0-934116-07-7