David John McCosh (1903 Cedar Rapids, Iowa – 1981 Eugene, Oregon) was a Northwest American artist and art instructor.[1] [2] [3] The Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art has over 170 of his works in their permanent collection.
McCosh graduated from the School of Art Institute of Chicago (AIC) in 1926 and began his teaching career there in 1931. In 1934 McCosh traveled to Santa Fe, New Mexico to marry painter Anne Kutka in the company of his new in-laws, artists and art instructors Suzanne Kutka Boss and Homer Boss. Later that same year the couple relocated to Oregon. There he taught courses in lithography, drawing, oil painting and watercolors at the University of Oregon from 1934 through to his retirement in 1970.
Undergraduate at Coe College, Cedar Rapids, Iowa. | ||
1927 | Spends the summer in Wyoming on a painting trip. | |
1928 | Spent 8 months in Europe, including in Paris, France. | |
1930 | Meets Anne Kutka in Oyster Bay, Long Island, with Bolton Brown. | |
1931 | Rooms with Herber Ferber Silvers in New York City in the winter and spends the summer working in Grant Arnold’s lithography studio in Woodstock, New York. | |
1932 | Art Institute of Chicago and Stone Colony. | |
1933 | Stone Colony and Murals. | |
1934 | Marries Anne (NM), moves to Eugene, OR; Feragil Gallery, Maynard Walker Gallery. | |
1936 | Sagatuck, Michigan, with Francis Chapin, Art Institute of Chicago Summer School. | |
1937 | Art Institute of Chicago summer school. | |
1938 | Lewis and Clarke in Kelso, WA. | |
1940 | National Parks murals, Washington, D.C. | |
1942 | Spirit of Beresford mural, SD. | |
1947 | Bozeman Montana summer teaching. | |
1949 | Sabbatical: painting at Cohasset Beach, Washington, San Miguel de Allende, Mexico, and New Mexico. | |
1954 | Full Professor | |
1956 | Painting workshop in Klamath Falls, Oregon. | |
1957 | Guest artist at San Jose State College, California, during the summer. | |
1958 | Sabbatical: England, France, Italy, Morocco, and Spain. | |
1962 | Illustrates Ernest G. Moll’s poem “The Lightless Ferry” for publication in The Rainbow Serpent and Other Poems. | |
1965 | Sabbatical: New Mexico and in San Miguel de Allende, Mexico City, and the Yucatan. | |
1970 | Retires. | |
1977 | Interview with David and Anne. | |
1981 | Dies in Eugene, Oregon. |