Artist
  • Seymour Fogel Bio Image
  • Seymour Fogel

    United States

    Art Brokerage: Seymour Fogel American Artist: August 24, 1911- December 4, 1984. He was an American artist whose artistic output included social realist art early in the century, abstract art and expressionist art at mid-century, and transcendental art late in the century. His drive to experiment led him to work with expected media oil paints, watercolors, and acrylics as well as unconventional media such as glass, plastics, sand, and wax. Education Seymour Fogel was born in New York City on August 24, 1911. He studied at the Art Students League in 1929 and at the National Academy of Design from 1929 to 1932 under such established artists as Leon Kroll and George Brandt Bridgman. CareerrnIn 1932, upon graduation from the National Academy, Seymour Fogel served as an apprentice to the Mexican muralist Diego Rivera, then working on his controversial mural at Rockefeller Center in New York City. From 1934 to 1941 Fogel was awarded several mural commissions by both the Federal Art Project of the Works Progress Administration (WPA) and the Treasury Department's Section of Painting and Sculpture, executing murals in such places as Brooklyn, New York; Safford, Arizona; Cambridge, Minnesota; Washington, D.C. and at the 1939 New York World's Fair. In 1946, Fogel moved to Austin, Texas where he accepted a teaching position at The University of Texas at Austin. He became an integral part of the Texas Modernism movement, along with such artists as Kelly Fearing, Lester and Charles Umlauf. In Texas he executed what have been considered the first abstract murals in the state for the American National Bank (1953), the Baptist Student Center at the University of Texas, the First National Bank in Waco, the First Christian Church in Houston and the Petroleum Club, also in Houston. He pioneered the use of ethyl silicate in his mural commissions. Fogel converted a rustic 19th century barn in South Austin into a ranch-style house with Usonian influences in 1953. The Seymour and Barbara Fogel House, which Fogel called "Southwind", was listed on the National Register of Historic Places on April 2, 2003, both for its association with Fogel and its unique architecture and construction. 1959 Seymour Fogel moved back to New York City where he maintained a studio and established his residence first in Westport and then in Weston, Connecticut. During this time he began to experiment with texturing his paintings with such material as paraffin, cloth, wood and sand. In New York he produced transcendentalist art which he referred to as atavistic. Mural commissions at this time include the U.S. Federal Building in Fort Worth, Texas, the Hoffman La Roche Corporate Towers in Nutley, New Jersey, Public School 306 in Brooklyn, New York and the U.S. Federal Customs Building in Foley Square, New York City in 1968. In the latter stage of his mural career, he used mosaic as his primary medium. In 1974 Seymour Fogel relocated his studio from New York City to his residence in Weston. In this last decade of his life, Fogel focused entirely on atavistic art in a variety of forms: paintings, drawings, collages and both painted and raw wood constructions. Seymour Fogel died on December 4, 1984. Exhibitions Fogel's art was exhibited in numerous museums and galleries, including the Whitney Museum of American Art, the Corcoran Gallery of Art, the Telfair Museum of Art, the Greenville County Museum of Art and the Dallas Museum of Art. Fogel generated a prolific and distinctive body of work. John Baur, director emeritus of the Whitney Museum of American Art, noted Seymour Fogel's art was shown at the Whitney museum many times. Listings wanted by Art Brokerage.

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Wanted: Seymour Fogel

Early paintings 30s - 50sOriginal Painting: Canvas

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