Jack Edward Barber | |
---|---|
![]() | |
Born |
Arkansas City, Kansas, U.S. | September 1, 1918
Died | April 24, 2003 | (aged 84)
Education |
Kansas City Art Institute Whitworth University ( BFA) Brigham Young University ( MFA) |
Occupation | Artist |
Jack Edward Barber (September 1, 1918 – April 24, 2003) [1] was an American artist working in oil, egg tempera, acrylics, watercolor, lithography, and sculpture.
Jack Edward Barber was born in Arkansas City, Kansas, but raised in Ponca City, Oklahoma. After graduating from Ponca City High School, Barber attended the Kansas City Art Institute from 1938 to 1940, where he studied painting under Thomas Hart Benton, lithography under John de Martelly, and sculpture under William Wallace Rosenbauer. As was the case for many of his students, Benton's influence on Barber's art was significant and life-long. Barber often spoke about being a student in Benton's classes, and his perspective of Benton as a teacher was solicited for inclusion in several books about Benton. [2] [3] In 1993, two of Barber's paintings were part of a special exhibit sponsored by the Albrecht-Kemper Museum of Art. Following the exhibit, both of Barber's paintings and one of his lithographic prints were included in a book, Under the Influence: The Students of Thomas Hart Benton. [4] Barber later continued his art education by earning a Bachelor of Fine Arts degree at Whitworth University, and a Master of Fine Arts (MFA) degree at Brigham Young University.
Although World War II interrupted Barber's art education at the Kansas City Art Institute, he was one of several "soldier artists" assigned to paint murals at Fort Sill's U.S. Army Reception Center in Oklahoma. [5] [6] After the War, however, Barber found that Abstract Expressionism had replaced the American Regionalist style of painting that was the focus of the training he had received under Benton. This shift made it difficult for Barber to find gainful employment using his artistic skills. Although he continued to paint as an avocation, Barber did not return full-time to art for more than twenty years. This hiatus from art was not unique to Barber. Many of Benton's Kansas City Art Institute students whose art careers were interrupted by World War II did not return to art until later in life. [7]
After completing a Bachelor of Fine Arts degree in 1967, Barber was hired as the head of the art department at Oregon City High School where he taught drawing, painting, watercolor, printmaking, and sculpture. After his retirement in 1985, Oregon City High School established an outstanding student artist award in his name. [8]
Almost all of Barber's landscapes and seascapes were initially painted or sketched on-site (i.e. en plein air). Barber's MFA thesis was a study of methods of plein air painting on the Oregon Coast. [16] In the introduction to his thesis, Barber shared the following observation about the value of plein air painting: "Painting out-of-doors, where the artist can respond to the influence of the elements, is most rewarding in terms of successful production. This does not imply that changes will not be made in the studio nor that nature will not be altered by design for effect; but the subject matter is of great importance. In other words, painting is not purely for design alone, but the design is for the purpose of enhancing the subject matter."
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Jack Edward Barber | |
---|---|
![]() | |
Born |
Arkansas City, Kansas, U.S. | September 1, 1918
Died | April 24, 2003 | (aged 84)
Education |
Kansas City Art Institute Whitworth University ( BFA) Brigham Young University ( MFA) |
Occupation | Artist |
Jack Edward Barber (September 1, 1918 – April 24, 2003) [1] was an American artist working in oil, egg tempera, acrylics, watercolor, lithography, and sculpture.
Jack Edward Barber was born in Arkansas City, Kansas, but raised in Ponca City, Oklahoma. After graduating from Ponca City High School, Barber attended the Kansas City Art Institute from 1938 to 1940, where he studied painting under Thomas Hart Benton, lithography under John de Martelly, and sculpture under William Wallace Rosenbauer. As was the case for many of his students, Benton's influence on Barber's art was significant and life-long. Barber often spoke about being a student in Benton's classes, and his perspective of Benton as a teacher was solicited for inclusion in several books about Benton. [2] [3] In 1993, two of Barber's paintings were part of a special exhibit sponsored by the Albrecht-Kemper Museum of Art. Following the exhibit, both of Barber's paintings and one of his lithographic prints were included in a book, Under the Influence: The Students of Thomas Hart Benton. [4] Barber later continued his art education by earning a Bachelor of Fine Arts degree at Whitworth University, and a Master of Fine Arts (MFA) degree at Brigham Young University.
Although World War II interrupted Barber's art education at the Kansas City Art Institute, he was one of several "soldier artists" assigned to paint murals at Fort Sill's U.S. Army Reception Center in Oklahoma. [5] [6] After the War, however, Barber found that Abstract Expressionism had replaced the American Regionalist style of painting that was the focus of the training he had received under Benton. This shift made it difficult for Barber to find gainful employment using his artistic skills. Although he continued to paint as an avocation, Barber did not return full-time to art for more than twenty years. This hiatus from art was not unique to Barber. Many of Benton's Kansas City Art Institute students whose art careers were interrupted by World War II did not return to art until later in life. [7]
After completing a Bachelor of Fine Arts degree in 1967, Barber was hired as the head of the art department at Oregon City High School where he taught drawing, painting, watercolor, printmaking, and sculpture. After his retirement in 1985, Oregon City High School established an outstanding student artist award in his name. [8]
Almost all of Barber's landscapes and seascapes were initially painted or sketched on-site (i.e. en plein air). Barber's MFA thesis was a study of methods of plein air painting on the Oregon Coast. [16] In the introduction to his thesis, Barber shared the following observation about the value of plein air painting: "Painting out-of-doors, where the artist can respond to the influence of the elements, is most rewarding in terms of successful production. This does not imply that changes will not be made in the studio nor that nature will not be altered by design for effect; but the subject matter is of great importance. In other words, painting is not purely for design alone, but the design is for the purpose of enhancing the subject matter."
{{
cite book}}
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (
link)
{{
cite web}}
: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (
link)