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{{Short description|American artist (1911–2012)}}
{{Other people2|William Barnett (disambiguation)}}
{{other people||William Barnett (disambiguation)}}
{{Infobox artist
{{Original research|date=January 2021}}{{Infobox artist
| name = Will Barnet
| name = Will Barnet
| native_name =
| native_name =
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| caption =
| caption =
| birth_name =
| birth_name =
| birth_date = {{Birth date and age|1911|05|25|mf=y}}
| birth_date = {{Birth date|1911|05|25}}
| birth_place = [[Beverly, Massachusetts]]
| birth_place = [[Beverly, Massachusetts]], US
| death_date = {{Death date and age|2012|11|13|1911|05|25|mf=y}}
| death_date = {{Death date and age|2012|11|13|1911|05|25|mf=y}}
| death_place = [[New York City]]
| death_place = [[New York City]], US
| resting_place =
| resting_place =
| resting_place_coordinates = <!-- {{Coord|LAT|LON|type:landmark|display=inline,title}} -->
| resting_place_coordinates = <!-- {{Coord|LAT|LON|type:landmark|display=inline,title}} -->
| nationality = American
| spouse =
| spouse =
| field = Painting, printmaking
| field = Painting, printmaking
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| works =
| works =
| patrons =
| patrons =
| awards = [[File:Ordre des Arts et des Lettres Chevalier ribbon.svg|50px]] Chevalier de l'[[Ordre des Arts et des Lettres]] (National Medal of Arts [[List of recipients of the National Medal of Arts]])
| awards =
| memorials =
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}}
'''Will Barnet''' (May 25, 1911{{spaced ndash}}November 13, 2012)<ref name="Centenary">{{Cite news|last = Decker|first = Andrew|title = Will Barnet at 100|publisher = ArtfixDaily.com|date = 2011-06-01|url = http://artfixdaily.com/artwire/release/1236-will-barnet-at-100|accessdate = 2011-06-06}}</ref><ref>http://www.pressherald.com/life/Painter-Will-Barnet-dies-at-101.html</ref> was an [[United States|American]] artist known for his [[paintings]], [[watercolors]], [[drawing]]s, and [[printmaking|prints]] depicting the human figure and animals, both in casual scenes of daily life and in transcendent dreamlike worlds.
'''Will Barnet''' (May 25, 1911{{spaced ndash}}November 13, 2012)<ref name="Centenary">{{Cite news|last = Decker|first = Andrew|title = Will Barnet at 100|publisher = ArtfixDaily.com|date = 2011-06-01|url = http://artfixdaily.com/artwire/release/1236-will-barnet-at-100|access-date = 2011-06-06}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web | url=http://www.pressherald.com/life/Painter-Will-Barnet-dies-at-101.html |title = Will Barnet, legendary artist with strong Maine ties, dies at 101|date = 2012-11-13}}</ref> was an American artist known for his [[paintings]], [[watercolors]], [[drawing]]s, and [[printmaking|prints]] depicting the human figure and animals, both in casual scenes of daily life and in transcendent dreamlike worlds.


==Biography==
==Biography==
Born in 1911 in [[Beverly, Massachusetts]], Barnet knew by the age of ten that he wanted to be an artist. As a student, he studied with [[Philip Leslie Hale]] at the [[School of the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston]] and viewed first-hand [[John Singer Sargent]] at work on the murals of the [[Boston Public Library]]. In 1930, Barnet studied at the [[Art Students League of New York]], with [[Stuart Davis (painter)|Stuart Davis]] and Charles Locke, beginning his long association with the school. Here he concentrated on painting as well as printmaking, and, in 1936, he became the official printer for the Art Students League. There, he later instructed students in the graphic arts at the school and taught alongside the likes of [[Yasuo Kuniyoshi]], [[Robert Beverly Hale]] and [[Richard Pousette-Dart]]. Barnet influenced a generation of artists, including [[James Rosenquist]], [[Knox Martin]], [[Paul Jenkins]] and [[Cy Twombly]].<ref>[http://www.frenchculture.org/spip.php?article4874 France Honors Will Barnet with the Order of Arts and Letters]</ref> Barnet continued his love of teaching with positions at the [[Cooper Union]], at [[Yale University]], and at the [[Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts]]. He had three sons, Peter, Richard, and Todd Barnet, by his first wife Mary Sinclair. Barnet later married Elena Barnet, with whom he had a daughter, Ona Barnet.<ref>Robert Doty, ''Will Barnet'' (New York: Harry N. Abrams), 144-145.</ref>
Born in 1911 in [[Beverly, Massachusetts]], Barnet knew by the age of ten that he wanted to be an artist. As a student, he studied with [[Philip Leslie Hale]] at the [[School of the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston]] and viewed first-hand [[John Singer Sargent]] at work on the murals of the [[Boston Public Library]]. In 1930, Barnet studied at the [[Art Students League of New York]], with [[Stuart Davis (painter)|Stuart Davis]] and Charles Locke, beginning his long association with the school. Here he concentrated on painting as well as printmaking, and, in 1936, he became the official printer for the [[Art Students League of New York|Art Students League]]. There, he later instructed students in the graphic arts at the school and taught alongside the likes of [[Yasuo Kuniyoshi]], [[Robert Beverly Hale]] and [[Richard Pousette-Dart]]. Barnet taught and mentored the early careers of artists [[Audrey Flack]], [[Emily Mason]], [[Brett Bigbee]], [[Lois Dodd]], [[Raymond A. Whyte]]<ref>{{Cite web |title=Raymond Whyte - Artists - Spellman Gallery |url=https://www.spellmangallery.com/artists/raymond-whyte |access-date=2024-05-31 |website=www.spellmangallery.com |language=en}}</ref> and [[Jim Rosenquist]].<ref>{{Cite web |date=2020-08-24 |title=Will Barnet as a Teacher |url=https://www.portlandmuseum.org/magazine/barnet-as-a-teacher |access-date=2024-05-31 |website=Portland Museum of Art |language=en-US}}</ref> Barnet influenced a generation of artists, including [[James Rosenquist]], [[Knox Martin]], [[Emil Milan]], [[Paul Jenkins (painter)|Paul Jenkins]], [[Ethel Fisher]] and [[Cy Twombly]].<ref>[http://frenchculture.org/visual-and-performing-arts/news/france-honors-will-barnet-chevalier-order-arts-letters France Honors Will Barnet with the Order of Arts and Letters]</ref> Barnet continued his love of teaching with positions at the [[Cooper Union]], at [[Yale University]], and at the [[Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts]]. He was represented by the [[Bertha Schaefer|Bertha Schaefer Gallery]] in New York City.<ref>{{Cite journal|date=1964|editor-last=Mellow|editor-first=James R.|title=New York: The Art World|journal=Arts Yearbook|location=New York, NY|publisher=The Art Digest, Inc.|volume=7|pages=111}}</ref> Barnet had three sons, Peter, Richard, and Todd Barnet, by his first wife Mary Sinclair. Barnet later married Elena Barnet, with whom he had a daughter, Ona Barnet.<ref>Robert Doty, ''Will Barnet'' (New York: Harry N. Abrams), 144-145.</ref>

==Death==
A longtime resident of the [[National Arts Club]], Barnet died in New York City on November 13, 2012, at the age of 101.


==Works==
==Works==
{{Unreferenced section|date=June 2017}}
Barnet's works, while remaining universal, reference his own personal history complete with images of his wife, his daughter, and their family pets. As James Thomas Flexner wrote, Barnet’s work “makes us experience the interplay between the personal and the universal.” While remaining representational, the simple elegance of the figures and their flat surfaces reflect his exploration with abstraction. He was a key figure in the New York movement called ''Indian Space Painting,'' artists who based their abstract and semi-abstract work on [[Indigenous peoples of the Americas|Native American]] art. For many years he pursued abstraction in painting, then a fashionable trend in the USA. His later work returned to figurative painting. He is probably best known for his enigmatic portraits of family, made from the 1970s onwards, notable the ''Silent Seasons'' series. However, his earlier works maintain an edginess and brooding contemplation that is even more remarkable when compared with the more placid and pretty works which followed his second marriage.
Barnett's works span the various "movements" of their era, from his early social realist work to his final signature style of clean lines and carefully placed volumes of solid color in a kind of minimalist representational approach. His work is concerned with humanity, yet at his core he always remained a formalist, cerebral in his approach to the elements that make up a good picture. In his interviews he articulated his well thought out principles regarding color use, composition and subject matter, in a professorial manner reflecting the theoretical acumen he brought to his teaching. Like many American painters of his generation he was digesting the evolving trends in Europe and integrating the new visual vocabulary into his American style while remaining universal, referencing his own personal history with images of his wife, his daughter, and their family pets. As James Thomas Flexner wrote, Barnet's work "makes us experience the interplay between the personal and the universal." While remaining representational, the simple elegance of the figures and their flat surfaces reflect his exploration with abstraction.


Will's artistic output spans eighty years. Few artists, other than Picasso or Monet, can claim such a long continuous period of inspired art making, nor the logical progression of moving through artistic phases: in the 1930s he was a social realist, in the 1940s a Modernist, in the 1950s an Abstract Expressionist and in the 1960s and onward he settled on a representational minimalism honed from the refinement of his earlier explorations. His early work is decidedly social realist, with sullen portraits done in dark tonalities that suggest both the struggle of the depression era and the hope in the simple love of family life. He moves out of this phase with the improving economy and in the 1940s adds vibrant color and more abstract figures, suggesting a lifting of the depression era malaise. He was a key figure in the 1940s New York movement called ''[[Indian Space Painting]]'', artists who based their abstract and semi-abstract work on [[Indigenous peoples of the Americas|Native American]] art; a striking movement which had a handful of practitioners (notably [[Steve Wheeler (artist)|Steve Wheeler]]).<ref>{{Cite book|title=Making the Americas modern : hemispheric art, 1910-1960|last=J.|first=Sullivan, Edward|isbn=9781786271556|location=London|oclc=993420136|date = 2018-03-27}}</ref> In the 1950s he evolved into his form of Abstract Expressionism, which is more studied and less "spontaneous", creating formally pleasing paintings of well ordered shape and color. His later work returned entirely to figurative painting. He is probably best known for these enigmatic portraits of family, made from the 1970s onwards, notably the ''Silent Seasons'' series, which contrasts his earlier works edginess and brooding contemplation that becomes more remarkable when compared with the more placid and pretty works which followed his second marriage. Within his oeuvre one can chart the evolution of American painting trends of which Will was on the forefront, as well as the joys and vicissitudes of his personal life, with his first marriage ending in divorce and his second marriage providing a more stable family life, reflected in the harmonious compositions of domestic tranquility of his later work.
His works have entered virtually every major public collection in the United States, including, the [[National Gallery of Art]], the [[Metropolitan Museum of Art]], the [[Whitney Museum of American Art]], the [[Museum of Modern Art, New York]], the [[Museum of Fine Arts, Boston]], the [[Philadelphia Museum of Art]], [[Jewish Museum (New York)|The Jewish Museum]], and the [[San Francisco Museum of Modern Art]]. He has been the subject of over eighty solo exhibitions held at the [[Virginia Museum of Fine Arts]], the Museum of American Art of the [[Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts]], the [[National Academy of Design]] Museum, the [[National Museum of American Art]], [[Montclair Art Museum]], the [[Boca Raton Museum of Art]], and [[Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art]], among others.

His works have entered virtually every major public collection in the United States, including, the [[National Gallery of Art]], the [[Metropolitan Museum of Art]], the [[Whitney Museum of American Art]], the [[Museum of Modern Art, New York]], the [[Museum of Fine Arts, Boston]], the [[Philadelphia Museum of Art]], [[Jewish Museum (New York)|The Jewish Museum]], the [[Art Museum of Southeast Texas]], and the [[San Francisco Museum of Modern Art]]. He has been the subject of over eighty solo exhibitions held at the [[Virginia Museum of Fine Arts]], the Museum of American Art of the [[Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts]], the [[National Academy of Design]] Museum, the [[National Museum of American Art]], [[Montclair Art Museum]], the [[Boca Raton Museum of Art]], [[Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art]], and the [[Worcester Art Museum]], among others. Barnett was also an active member of the [[Society of American Graphic Artists]].


==Awards and honors==
==Awards and honors==
Barnet was the recipient of numerous awards, including the first Artist's Lifetime Achievement Award Medal given on the occasion of the National Academy of Design’s 175th anniversary, the [[College Art Association]]’s Lifetime Achievement Award,<ref>{{Cite document | title=College Art Association Announces 2007 Award Winners| publisher=ARTINFO | year=2007 | date= December 20, 2007 | url=http://www.artinfo.com/news/story/26439/college-art-association-announces-2007-award-winners/ | accessdate=2008-05-19 | postscript=<!-- Bot inserted parameter. Either remove it; or change its value to "." for the cite to end in a ".", as necessary. -->{{inconsistent citations}} }}</ref> the Philadelphia Academy of Fine Art’s Lippincott Prize, and the American Academy and Institute of Arts and Letters’ [[Childe Hassam]] Prize. He was an elected member of the National Academy of Design, the Century Association, and the [[American Academy of Arts and Letters]]. Barnet defined an artistic career that, in the words of Robert Doty, “has always gone beyond the limitations of modern art because his work affirms a faith in life. Barnet was awarded the 2011 [[National Medal of Arts]] by President [[Barack Obama]].<ref>{{cite news|url=http://cincinnati.com/blogs/arts/2012/02/13/national-medal-of-arts-awards-145-p-m-today/|title=National Medal of Arts Awards, 1:45 p.m. today|date=February 13, 2012|accessdate=February 13, 2012|first=Janelle|last=Gelfand|publisher=[[The Cincinnati Enquirer]]}}</ref> In 2012, France conferred the insignia of Chevalier of the Order of Arts and Letters on Barnet.<ref>[http://www.frenchculture.org/spip.php?article4874 France Honors Will Barnet with the Order of Arts and Letters]</ref>
Barnet was the recipient of numerous awards, including the first Artist's Lifetime Achievement Award Medal given on the occasion of the National Academy of Design's 175th anniversary, the [[College Art Association]]'s Lifetime Achievement Award,<ref>{{Cite journal | title=College Art Association Announces 2007 Award Winners| publisher=ARTINFO | date= December 20, 2007 | url=http://www.artinfo.com/news/story/26439/college-art-association-announces-2007-award-winners/ | access-date=2008-05-19 }}</ref> the Philadelphia Academy of Fine Art's Lippincott Prize, and the American Academy and Institute of Arts and Letters' [[Childe Hassam]] Prize. He was an elected member of the National Academy of Design, the [[Century Association]], and the [[American Academy of Arts and Letters]]. Barnet defined an artistic career that, in the words of Robert Doty, "has always gone beyond the limitations of modern art because his work affirms a faith in life." Barnet was awarded the 2011 [[National Medal of Arts]] by President [[Barack Obama]].<ref>{{cite news|url=http://cincinnati.com/blogs/arts/2012/02/13/national-medal-of-arts-awards-145-p-m-today/|title=National Medal of Arts Awards, 1:45 p.m. today|date=February 13, 2012|access-date=February 13, 2012|first=Janelle|last=Gelfand|newspaper=[[The Cincinnati Enquirer]]}}</ref> In 2012, France conferred the insignia of [[Ordre des Arts et des Lettres|Chevalier of the Order of Arts and Letters]] on Barnet.<ref>[http://www.frenchculture.org/spip.php?article4874 France Honors Will Barnet with the Order of Arts and Letters] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120204055508/http://www.frenchculture.org/spip.php?article4874 |date=2012-02-04 }}</ref>

==Death==
A longtime resident of the [[National Arts Club]], Barnet died in New York City on November 13, 2012, at the age of 101.


==References==
==References==
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* [http://www.picassomio.com/WillBarnet.html ''Will Barnet Biography'']
* [http://www.picassomio.com/WillBarnet.html ''Will Barnet Biography'']
* [http://www.tfaoi.com/aa/2aa/2aa233.htm ''Will Barnet: A Timeless World''] - [[Portland Museum of Art]]
* [http://www.tfaoi.com/aa/2aa/2aa233.htm ''Will Barnet: A Timeless World''] - [[Portland Museum of Art]]
* [http://www.nytimes.com/2010/10/27/nyregion/27artist.html ''Painting at 99''] - [[The New York Times]]
* [https://www.nytimes.com/2010/10/27/nyregion/27artist.html ''Painting at 99''] - [[The New York Times]]
* [http://watch.njtvonline.org/video/2243937431 ''Will Barnet, Artist''] Video produced by [[NJTV]]
* [http://www.pressherald.com/life/Painter-Will-Barnet-dies-at-101.html Will Barnet, legendary artist with strong Maine ties, dies at 101]
* [http://www.pressherald.com/life/Painter-Will-Barnet-dies-at-101.html Will Barnet, legendary artist with strong Maine ties, dies at 101]
* [http://watch.njtvonline.org/video/2243937431 Will Barnet, Artist] Documentary produced by [[NJTV]]
* [https://www.nytimes.com/2012/11/14/arts/design/will-barnet-painter-dies-at-101.html Will Barnet, Visionary Artist, Dies at 101] ''[[The New York Times]]''

* [http://www.nytimes.com/2012/11/14/arts/design/will-barnet-painter-dies-at-101.html Will Barnet, Visionary Artist, Dies at 101] ''[[The New York Times]]''
{{National Medal of Arts recipients 2010s}}

{{Authority control}}


{{Authority control|VIAF=109322829}}
{{Persondata
| NAME = Barnet, Will
| ALTERNATIVE NAMES =
| SHORT DESCRIPTION = American artist
| DATE OF BIRTH = May 25, 1911
| PLACE OF BIRTH =
| DATE OF DEATH = November 13, 2012
| PLACE OF DEATH = New York
}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Barnet, Will}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Barnet, Will}}
[[Category:20th-century American painters]]
[[Category:20th-century American painters]]
[[Category:American male painters]]
[[Category:21st-century American painters]]
[[Category:21st-century American painters]]
[[Category:Modern painters]]
[[Category:21st-century American male artists]]
[[Category:American modern painters]]
[[Category:Art Students League of New York faculty]]
[[Category:Art Students League of New York faculty]]
[[Category:Art Students League of New York alumni]]
[[Category:Art Students League of New York alumni]]
[[Category:School of the Museum of Fine Arts at Tufts alumni]]
[[Category:American printmakers]]
[[Category:American printmakers]]
[[Category:1911 births]]
[[Category:1911 births]]
[[Category:2012 deaths]]
[[Category:2012 deaths]]
[[Category:Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts faculty]]
[[Category:Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts faculty]]
[[Category:American centenarians]]
[[Category:American men centenarians]]
[[Category:People from Beverly, Massachusetts]]
[[Category:People from Beverly, Massachusetts]]
[[Category:Artists from Massachusetts]]
[[Category:Artists from Massachusetts]]
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[[Category:Cooper Union faculty]]
[[Category:Cooper Union faculty]]
[[Category:Yale University faculty]]
[[Category:Yale University faculty]]
[[Category:School of the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston alumni]]
[[Category:Federal Art Project artists]]

Latest revision as of 15:14, 18 August 2024

Will Barnet
Born(1911-05-25)May 25, 1911
DiedNovember 13, 2012(2012-11-13) (aged 101)
EducationSchool of the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston (Philip Leslie Hale)
Art Students League of New York (Stuart Davis, Charles Locke)
Known forPainting, printmaking
Awards Chevalier de l'Ordre des Arts et des Lettres (National Medal of Arts List of recipients of the National Medal of Arts)

Will Barnet (May 25, 1911 – November 13, 2012)[1][2] was an American artist known for his paintings, watercolors, drawings, and prints depicting the human figure and animals, both in casual scenes of daily life and in transcendent dreamlike worlds.

Biography

[edit]

Born in 1911 in Beverly, Massachusetts, Barnet knew by the age of ten that he wanted to be an artist. As a student, he studied with Philip Leslie Hale at the School of the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston and viewed first-hand John Singer Sargent at work on the murals of the Boston Public Library. In 1930, Barnet studied at the Art Students League of New York, with Stuart Davis and Charles Locke, beginning his long association with the school. Here he concentrated on painting as well as printmaking, and, in 1936, he became the official printer for the Art Students League. There, he later instructed students in the graphic arts at the school and taught alongside the likes of Yasuo Kuniyoshi, Robert Beverly Hale and Richard Pousette-Dart. Barnet taught and mentored the early careers of artists Audrey Flack, Emily Mason, Brett Bigbee, Lois Dodd, Raymond A. Whyte[3] and Jim Rosenquist.[4] Barnet influenced a generation of artists, including James Rosenquist, Knox Martin, Emil Milan, Paul Jenkins, Ethel Fisher and Cy Twombly.[5] Barnet continued his love of teaching with positions at the Cooper Union, at Yale University, and at the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts. He was represented by the Bertha Schaefer Gallery in New York City.[6] Barnet had three sons, Peter, Richard, and Todd Barnet, by his first wife Mary Sinclair. Barnet later married Elena Barnet, with whom he had a daughter, Ona Barnet.[7]

Death

[edit]

A longtime resident of the National Arts Club, Barnet died in New York City on November 13, 2012, at the age of 101.

Works

[edit]

Barnett's works span the various "movements" of their era, from his early social realist work to his final signature style of clean lines and carefully placed volumes of solid color in a kind of minimalist representational approach. His work is concerned with humanity, yet at his core he always remained a formalist, cerebral in his approach to the elements that make up a good picture. In his interviews he articulated his well thought out principles regarding color use, composition and subject matter, in a professorial manner reflecting the theoretical acumen he brought to his teaching. Like many American painters of his generation he was digesting the evolving trends in Europe and integrating the new visual vocabulary into his American style while remaining universal, referencing his own personal history with images of his wife, his daughter, and their family pets. As James Thomas Flexner wrote, Barnet's work "makes us experience the interplay between the personal and the universal." While remaining representational, the simple elegance of the figures and their flat surfaces reflect his exploration with abstraction.

Will's artistic output spans eighty years. Few artists, other than Picasso or Monet, can claim such a long continuous period of inspired art making, nor the logical progression of moving through artistic phases: in the 1930s he was a social realist, in the 1940s a Modernist, in the 1950s an Abstract Expressionist and in the 1960s and onward he settled on a representational minimalism honed from the refinement of his earlier explorations. His early work is decidedly social realist, with sullen portraits done in dark tonalities that suggest both the struggle of the depression era and the hope in the simple love of family life. He moves out of this phase with the improving economy and in the 1940s adds vibrant color and more abstract figures, suggesting a lifting of the depression era malaise. He was a key figure in the 1940s New York movement called Indian Space Painting, artists who based their abstract and semi-abstract work on Native American art; a striking movement which had a handful of practitioners (notably Steve Wheeler).[8] In the 1950s he evolved into his form of Abstract Expressionism, which is more studied and less "spontaneous", creating formally pleasing paintings of well ordered shape and color. His later work returned entirely to figurative painting. He is probably best known for these enigmatic portraits of family, made from the 1970s onwards, notably the Silent Seasons series, which contrasts his earlier works edginess and brooding contemplation that becomes more remarkable when compared with the more placid and pretty works which followed his second marriage. Within his oeuvre one can chart the evolution of American painting trends of which Will was on the forefront, as well as the joys and vicissitudes of his personal life, with his first marriage ending in divorce and his second marriage providing a more stable family life, reflected in the harmonious compositions of domestic tranquility of his later work.

His works have entered virtually every major public collection in the United States, including, the National Gallery of Art, the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the Whitney Museum of American Art, the Museum of Modern Art, New York, the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, the Philadelphia Museum of Art, The Jewish Museum, the Art Museum of Southeast Texas, and the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art. He has been the subject of over eighty solo exhibitions held at the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts, the Museum of American Art of the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts, the National Academy of Design Museum, the National Museum of American Art, Montclair Art Museum, the Boca Raton Museum of Art, Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art, and the Worcester Art Museum, among others. Barnett was also an active member of the Society of American Graphic Artists.

Awards and honors

[edit]

Barnet was the recipient of numerous awards, including the first Artist's Lifetime Achievement Award Medal given on the occasion of the National Academy of Design's 175th anniversary, the College Art Association's Lifetime Achievement Award,[9] the Philadelphia Academy of Fine Art's Lippincott Prize, and the American Academy and Institute of Arts and Letters' Childe Hassam Prize. He was an elected member of the National Academy of Design, the Century Association, and the American Academy of Arts and Letters. Barnet defined an artistic career that, in the words of Robert Doty, "has always gone beyond the limitations of modern art because his work affirms a faith in life." Barnet was awarded the 2011 National Medal of Arts by President Barack Obama.[10] In 2012, France conferred the insignia of Chevalier of the Order of Arts and Letters on Barnet.[11]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Decker, Andrew (2011-06-01). "Will Barnet at 100". ArtfixDaily.com. Retrieved 2011-06-06.
  2. ^ "Will Barnet, legendary artist with strong Maine ties, dies at 101". 2012-11-13.
  3. ^ "Raymond Whyte - Artists - Spellman Gallery". www.spellmangallery.com. Retrieved 2024-05-31.
  4. ^ "Will Barnet as a Teacher". Portland Museum of Art. 2020-08-24. Retrieved 2024-05-31.
  5. ^ France Honors Will Barnet with the Order of Arts and Letters
  6. ^ Mellow, James R., ed. (1964). "New York: The Art World". Arts Yearbook. 7. New York, NY: The Art Digest, Inc.: 111.
  7. ^ Robert Doty, Will Barnet (New York: Harry N. Abrams), 144-145.
  8. ^ J., Sullivan, Edward (2018-03-27). Making the Americas modern : hemispheric art, 1910-1960. London. ISBN 9781786271556. OCLC 993420136.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  9. ^ "College Art Association Announces 2007 Award Winners". ARTINFO. December 20, 2007. Retrieved 2008-05-19. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  10. ^ Gelfand, Janelle (February 13, 2012). "National Medal of Arts Awards, 1:45 p.m. today". The Cincinnati Enquirer. Retrieved February 13, 2012.
  11. ^ France Honors Will Barnet with the Order of Arts and Letters Archived 2012-02-04 at the Wayback Machine
[edit]