Richard Coons

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Born(1929-12-13)December 13, 1929
Los Angeles, CA
DiedNovember 28, 2003(2003-11-28) (aged 73)
Bishop, CA
KnownforLandscapes, marines
MovementCalifornia Impressionism, Realism
Richard R. Coons
Born(1929-12-13)December 13, 1929
Los Angeles, CA
DiedNovember 28, 2003(2003-11-28) (aged 73)
Bishop, CA
Known forLandscapes, marines
MovementCalifornia Impressionism, Realism
SpouseWynne Benti
Marilyn Summers
ChildrenLeann, Cheryl, Jill

Richard Rowland Coons (December 13, 1929 – November 28, 2003) was a California landscape and marine painter and author of the book Robert Clunie: Plein-Air Painter of the Sierra. He owned Coons Gallery in Bishop, California, the original art studio and residence built by the artist Robert Clunie.

Coons was one of three sons born to William 'Bill' Coons and Grace Eva Manley on December 13, 1929 in Los Angeles, California. In November 1928, William Coons was hired by the City of Los Angeles Department of Water and Power as a member of the survey crew for the proposed Colorado River Aqueduct. The recently organized Metropolitan Water District of Southern California would be the agency authorized to oversee the construction of the aqueduct. Due to a delay in the start of the project, William Coons was temporarily assigned to field survey work in eastern California’s Owens Valley, where Los Angeles had large land and water holdings. The family moved back and forth between Culver City in Los Angeles and the Owens Valley towns of Bishop, Big Pine and Independence.[1] By 1941, the family settled in Long Beach. Richard and his brothers joined the Sea Scouts. In response to the home front war effort, Richard became a civil defense volunteer, messenger class. Near their home on Elm Street was an extensive area of open marshland adjacent to the mouth of the Los Angeles River. Overgrown with willow trees and waterfowl, it was an ideal place to practice survival skills.

The brothers bought a 14-foot sailboat and portaged it from in a backyard berth several blocks, over curbs, through sand, to its launch into Alamitos Bay. For the next several summers, Richard secured work on fishing boats. Unconsciously, the observing eye of the artist within was storing away an inventory of memory, of the sea in all its capricious shades, the play of light or shadow on water.[1]

Several times every year, the family returned to Bishop, California in the Owens Valley, to visit relatives. In 1946, at the end of his sophomore year in high school, Richard asked his parents if he could live with relatives in Bishop while finishing high school. They agreed, as his father's work would take them up to Bishop again.

When the family reunited in Bishop, Bill Coons worked with Mammoth Mountain Ski Area founder, Dave McCoy as a hydrographer. McCoy dreamed of finding a slope suitable for skiing and ultimately one on which a rope tow could be built. Richard often accompanied them, sitting in the back seat of their car, as they traveled on what are now abandoned roads, looking for a slope "good for skiing." Richard was on the Bishop Union High School's ski team coached by Tony Milici,[2] Mammoth Mountain Ski Area's first Vice President.

Early artistic influence

Career

References

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