Karl Priebe

American painter From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Karl Priebe (July 1, 1914 – July 5, 1976) was an American painter from Milwaukee, Wisconsin whose studies and paintings of birds, exotic animals, and African-American culture won him national and international recognition.[2]

Born(1914-07-01)July 1, 1914
DiedJuly 5, 1976(1976-07-05) (aged 62)
KnownforPainter
Quick facts Born, Died ...
Karl J. Priebe
Karl Priebe, c. 1950
Born(1914-07-01)July 1, 1914
DiedJuly 5, 1976(1976-07-05) (aged 62)
EducationLayton School of Art
School of the Art Institute of Chicago
Known forPainter
Notable workMadonna and Child
MovementSurrealism
AwardsPrix de Rome: 1941[1]
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Biography

Karl John Priebe was born in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, to Emil Priebe (1873–1949) and Catherine Wacker (1876–1955). He graduated from the Layton School of Art, where he studied under Gerrit V. Sinclair, before moving on to the School of the Art Institute of Chicago, which he graduated from in 1938. After serving on the anthropology staff of the Milwaukee Public Museum (1938–42) and as director of the Kalamazoo Institute of the Arts (1943–44), he moved to New York City, becoming one of the few Wisconsin artists of his generation whose paintings were shown at major public and private galleries, among them the Museum of Modern Art.[3]

Priebe (second from left) with Frank Roy Harriott, Edward Atkinson, and Tom Kemp in January 1948, photographed by Carl Van Vechten

While in Manhattan, Priebe befriended many artists, including photographer Carl Van Vechten, with whom he maintained a long correspondence.[4] Vechten sent a number of his photographs to Priebe, including after the latter's return to Milwaukee. Priebe's collection of photographs by Van Vechten eventually amounted to 4,000 items.[5]

Priebe drew the inspiration for his works from numerous locations. After he became an instructor at the Layton School of Art, his paintings of exotic animals brought him further recognition and can be attributed to his numerous trips to the Milwaukee County Zoo.[6][7][8] He first became interested in African-American culture when, as an art student in Chicago, he taught a class in a settlement house largely attended by African Americans. His Black figures, he recalled later, were not intended as portraits, but were taken from his memories of people he saw in the settlement house.[9] Throughout his creative life, Priebe was known for his love of Black culture. He was a longtime friend of jazz singers Billie Holiday and Pearl Bailey, writer Langston Hughes, painter Charles Sebree, and musician Dizzy Gillespie.[10][11][12]

In 1941, Priebe was awarded the Rome Prize for Visual Arts by the American Academy in Rome, though, because of the onset of WWII, he was unable to use the grant to study in Europe.[13] Along with painters Gertrude Abercrombie, John Wilde, Marshall Glasier, Dudley Huppler, and Sylvia Fein, he made up a loose group of artists known as the Wisconsin Magic Realists.[7][14][15][16]

The last public exhibition of Priebe's works took place at Marquette University in February 1976, featuring over a hundred works.[17]

Personal life

Karl Priebe with Nancy Berghaus in 1975

Priebe was gay.[8][12][18][19] In 1944, Priebe had a brief romantic relationship with writer Owen Dodson.[20]

Between 1945 and 1955, he shared his life with New York writer Frank Roy Harriott.[21]

In his later years Priebe suffered from a number of ailments. In November 1975, he had one of his eyes surgically removed, and his health began to decline. He died from cancer at his home in Milwaukee on July 5, 1976, at the age of 62.[3]

See also

References

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