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Mitchell Siporin

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Name
  
Mitchell Siporin


Mitchell Siporin A New Deal for the Arts

Education
  
School of the Art Institute of Chicago (1928–1932)

Awards
  
Guggenheim Fellowship for Creative Arts, US & Canada

Born
  
5 May 1910 (age 65-66), New York, New York, United States

Died
  
1976 (aged 65-66), Newton, Massachusetts, United States

Similar
  
Philip Evergood, Edgar Britton, Ben Shahn

Harvard Art Museums: David Alfaro Siqueiros, Reginald Marsh, Mitchell Siporin


Mitchell Siporin (1910–1976) was a Social Realist American painter.

Contents

Mitchell Siporin Mitchell Siporin Artists Modernism in the New City

Biography

Mitchell Siporin Spanish Civil War Drawn from Goya 1941 by Mitchell

Mitchell Siporin was born in New York City to Hyman, a truck driver, and Jennie Siporin, both immigrants from Poland, and grew up in Chicago. He did illustrations for Esquire and other magazines. Through the Works Progress Administration, he worked as a painter. Together with Edward Millman, he painted "the largest single mural project awarded for a post office by the Section of Fine Arts" in the Central Post Office in St Louis, Missouri. He married Miriam Tane in Manhattan to November 9, 1945. From 1946 to 1949, he served in the army in North Africa and Italy. In 1949, he won the Prix de Rome in painting.

Mitchell Siporin wwwchicagomodernorgimagesartSiporinjpg

In 1951, he founded the Department of Fine Arts at Brandeis University. In 1956, he became the first curator of the Brandeis University Art Collection.

Works

Mitchell Siporin Mitchell Siporin for FORTUNE 1942 and 1948

Additional works by Siporin can be found in the Art Institute of Chicago, the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the Whitney Museum of American Art, the Museum of Modern Art in New York City and Albert G. Lane Technical High School in Chicago.

In 1947 his painting End of an Era won the Logan Medal of the Arts at the 51st Annual Exhibition in Chicago.

He was Jewish.

References

Mitchell Siporin Wikipedia