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Howard Cook

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Name
  
Howard Cook


Howard Cook Paramour Fine Arts List of Prints for Howard Cook


Died
  
June 24, 1980, Santa Fe, New Mexico, United States

Education
  
Art Students League of New York (1919–1922)

Awards
  
Guggenheim Fellowship for Creative Arts, US & Canada

Howard Norton Cook (1901–1980) was an American artist, particularly known for his wood engravings and murals. Cook spent much of the 1920s in Europe and returned to live in Taos, New Mexico.

Contents

Howard Cook Paramour Fine Arts List of Prints for Howard Cook

Cook first came to Taos, New Mexico in 1926 commissioned by The Forum to make a series of woodcuts to illustrate Death Comes for the Archbishop that would be published serially in the periodical. In Taos he was introduced to artist Barbara Latham by Victor Higgins. The couple married in May 1927. From 1928 to 1935, they traveled: to Europe, Mexico and the American South. Cook worked under the WPA producing murals for include courthouses in Pittsburgh and Springfield, Massachusetts. He also produced a 16 panel fresco,The Importance of San Antonio in Texas History, in a San Antonio post office, for which he was paid $12,000 in 1937. In 1938, the couple settled near Taos on the Talpa ridge. This became their base until 1976. During World War II, Cook was an artist for the US Navy. In 1943 he was appointed Leader of a War Art Unit and served in the Solomon Islands in the Asiatic-Pacific Theater.

Howard Cook RSP American Fine Prints Etchings and Lithographs Howard

In 1967, Cook became the first artist in the Roswell Museum and Art Center's Artist-in-Residence program. The couple started to spend their winters in Roswell, New Mexico, where they eventually moved in 1973. Due to Cook's ill health, the couple moved to Santa Fe in 1976. Cook died in 1980.

Howard Cook Paramour Fine Arts List of Prints for Howard Cook

Howard cook primary school


Public Collections


  • Metropolitan Museum of Art
  • Whitney Museum of American Art
  • Fogg Art Museum
  • Harvard University
  • Baltimore Museum of Art
  • Art Institute of Chicago
  • Biblioteque Nationale
  • British Museum
  • Albuquerque Museum
  • Smithsonian American Art Museum


  • References

    Howard Cook Wikipedia