Siddhesh Joshi (Editor)

Gregory Gerrer

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Education
  
Sacred Heart College

Church
  
Roman Catholic Church


Name
  
Gregory Gerrer

Died
  
1946

Gregory Gerrer

Born
  
July 23, 1867 (
1867-07-23
)
Lautenbach, Alsace

Other names
  
Robert Francis Xavier Gerrer

Ordained
  
September 19, 1900 at Buckfast Abbey

Offices held
  
Founder and Director, St. Gregory’s Museum and Art Gallery

Rev. Gregory Gerrer, OSB (July 23, 1867 – August 24, 1946) was a Benedictine Priest at Sacred Heart Abbey (later, St. Gregory's Abbey), artist, art historian and museum founder.

Contents

Art career

From 1900 to 1904, Gerrer studied art in Rome. Shortly after the election of Pope Pius X, Gerrer participated in a competition of artists to paint the official portrait of the new pope. When Pius saw the finished portrait by Gerrer, he selected it to be his portrait. Pius said that he choose it because the artist painted the him true to life and did not minimize his facial warts.

Gerrer also painted portraits of two World War I Choctaw code talkers, Otis Leader and Joseph Oklahombi.

The largest collection of his paintings are at the Mabee-Gerrer Museum of Art in Shawnee, Oklahoma. His work is also in the Vatican art collection, Rome, Snite Museum of Art in South Bend, Indiana, and Fred Jones Jr. Museum of Art in Norman, Oklahoma.

Gerrer was a co-founder and first president of the Association of Oklahoma Artists.

Notable Portraits

  • Pope Pius X
  • Joseph Oklahombi
  • Otis Leader
  • John Benjamin Murphy
  • Honors

    Gerrer was inducted into the Oklahoma Hall of Fame in 1931.

    The University of Notre Dame conferred an honorary Doctor of Laws degree to Gerrer.

    References

    Gregory Gerrer Wikipedia