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Born:
1879
Cincinnati, Ohio
Died:
1934
Santa Fe, New Mexico
Biography:
Gerald Cassidy, known for his subjects of the Southwest including
Indian portraits and for his lithography, was born in Covington,
KY., and grew up in Cincinnati, Ohio. He studied at the mechanic
Institute in Cincinnati and with Frank Duveneck at the Cincinnati
Art Academy. He worked as an Art Director at a lithography firm
in New York City and during this time, studied briefly at the National
Academy of Design and the Art Students League.
Diagnosed with tuberculosis at age 20, Cassidy went to a sanitarium
in New Mexico, a move that introduced him to life in the West.
He first earned his living by painting portraits of Indians and
scenes of the Southwest that were intended to be reproduced on
postcards. When his health got better, he moved to Denver and there
established his reputation as a lithographer by doing work that
was used for magazine illustrations, murals, and ads.
In 1912, he married the sculptor and writer Ina Sizer Davis, who
became a noted author of numerous articles on New Mexico art colonies.
The couple settled in Santa Fe where Cassidy began a project to
document the culture of Pueblo Indians. The commission to do this
work came from Edgar L Hewitt, Director of the School of American
Archaeology. Hewitt regarded the life of the Indians as the counterpoint
to the materialism of white civilization. Cassidy became so committed
to this project that he decorated his home with altar paintings
from the ruined Nambe mission church.
In Santa Fe, he was only the third artist of English origin to
establish residency there. During this time, he changed his signature
from Gerald Ira Diamond Cassidy to Gerald Cassidy, placing the
Tewa Indian sun symbol (symbol of circle with four lines) between
his first and last name. He also painted many landscapes and large
historic murals for commercial buildings including the Indian Arts
Building.
A highlight of his career occurred in 1915 when he was awarded
the Grand Prize and Gold Medal for his murals in the Indian Arts
Building, at the Panama-California International Exposition, San
Diego, California
Nineteen years later, in 1934, Cassidy met an untimely death from
lead poisoning while working on a mural for the Federal Building
in Santa Fe.
His work is represented in national and international museums
including the Freer Collection, Washington, D. C., Museum of Fine
Arts, Santa Fe, NM, San Diego Museum, San Diego, CA, City Art Museum,
Baroda, Bombay, India, City Art Museum, Berlin, Germany, and The
Luxembourg, Paris.
Credit: Michael David Zellman, "300 Years
of American Art", Peter Falk, "Who Was Who in American
Art", Edan Hughes, "Artists in California
1786-1940"
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