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Born:
1875
Fresno, California
Died:
1946
Tucson, Arizona
Biography:
Born on a ranch near Fresno, California in the San Joaquin Valley,
Maynard Dixon became a noted illustrator, landscape, and mural
painter of the early 20th-century American West, especially the
desert, Indians, early settlers, and cowboys.
He lived most of his life in the West, living at times in Mount
Carmel, Utah; Tucson, Arizona; and the desert of California near
Mecca and Indio. His close friends were artists Jimmy Swinnerton,
John Hilton, and Clyde Forsythe. He settled in California and adopted
the sun drenched palate of the California school. His last years
he suffered horribly from asthma.
He was from a family of Virginia emigrants whose lineage was tied
to English aristocracy. Living part of his youth in Colorado, Dixon
made drawings of western life from the time he was seven years
old. A sickly youngster whose activity had to be restricted, Dixon
was inspired by illustrators, especially Remington, with whom he
got in touch and who gave him positive critiques of his work.
In 1893, he moved with his family to Alameda,
and that same year, his first illustration was published and
was in "Overland
Monthly".
He briefly attended the Mark Hopkins Art
Institute where he learned art fundamentals, but discontent with
academics, he left after three months, deciding to travel and
paint from nature. He took his first full-time job in 1895, becoming
an illustrator for the "San
Francisco Morning Call" and four years later he joined the
San Francisco "Examiner". He also wandered and sketched
all over the West and Northwest---Colorado, Arizona, New Mexico,
and Utah and exhibited regularly with the San Francisco Art Association.
In 1905, Dixon married artist Lillian West Tobey, and the next
year his studio with most of his early work was destroyed by the
San Francisco earthquake and fire. He and his wife moved to Sausalito.
One of the first critics to laud him was
Charles Lummis, first city editor of the "Los Angeles Times," and well known
writer who crusaded for western settlement. At the encouragement
of Lummis, Dixon had first visited Arizona in 1900 and 1902, and
seeing that state, Dixon proclaimed "he had found his country."
He visited Hubbell's Trading Post and painted the Navajo Indians
at Canyon de Chelly on a commission from Hubbell. He returned to
Arizona again and again including in 1907 to Tucson where he did
a series of western murals for the newly-built Southern Pacific
Railroad Depot.
From 1907 to 1912, Dixon studied and illustrated
with "Century" "Scribner's" and "Mc
Clure's" magazines in New York and earned honors including
membership in the Salmagundi Club and National Academy of Design.
During this time of living in the East, he received in 1909 an
invitation to travel northwest from an admirer of his work, Charles
Moody, and from this experience spent time in Coeur D'Alene, Idaho,
and in Cutbank, Montana. There he worked as a cowboy for the C
Cattle Company, punching cows and living with wranglers and studying
Indians and western life generally. He sketched about one-hundred
fifty cowboys and landscape of the one-hundred square miles that
they roamed.
In 1912, he returned to California, and gave up commercial art
for mural and easel painting. In 1915, during the Panama Pacific
Exposition, he had a nervous breakdown, and two years later divorced
his wife. In 1920, he married Dorothea Lange, a photographer, and
this marriage lasted until 1935. In 1937, he married Edith Hamlin,
an artist, and they purchased property in 1939 at Mount Carmel,
Utah and built their home and studio there. It was their intention
to invite artists from around the country to come to create fine
art and enjoy the ambience and spirit of the area. That is now
the mission of the Thunderbird Foundation for the Arts, located
on the same property. However, Dixon was unable to spend much time
at Mount Carmel because he needed a drier climate for his health,
so he and his wife lived primarily in Tucson, Arizona, where he
died on November 14, 1946.
Dixon's style was painting bold masses of color with simplicity
of line, a technique that led him into mural painting in which
he excelled much of his professional life. In Los Angeles, he also
did murals for the new Southwest Museum founded by Charles Lummis,
and in 1946, he did sketches for a large mural of the Grand Canyon
for the Santa Fe Railway's Los Angeles office. But he died before
he completed the work, and his widow, Edith Hamlin and his friend
Buck Weaver finished it.
Credit: Edan Hughes, "Artists in California,
1786-1940", James Ballinger, "Visitors to Arizona,
1846 to 1980"
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