Eve Garrison Explained

Eve Garrison
Birth Name:Eve Josephson
Birth Date:22 April 1903
Birth Place:Boston, Massachusetts, United States
Death Place:Chicago, Illinois, United States
Alma Mater:Art Institute of Chicago (1930)
Known For:Painting
Style:Landscape art
Portraiture
Abstract art
Movement:Modernism
Realism
Spouse:Joseph D. Garrison

Eve Josephson Garrison (1903-2003) was a modernist painter. Her early works focused on a realist style including landscapes and cityscapes, specifically depicting Chicago, Colorado, and Mexico.[1] She also painted nudes and portraits and increasingly abstract and textured art in later life.[2] She suggested creating work for juried shows and annuals was not the way "to be a great artists!" Instead, she began making work that felt was more expressive of her ideas. In the sixties she began making work that she termed "sculptural relief oil paintings." This involved a process of embedding objects such as seeds, branches, glass, and string into the paint.[3] [4] During the period she was producing more abstract work she had solo exhibitions in New York, Detroit, Milwaukee, Miami, Paris, and London.[5]

In 1957, Garrison, along with twenty-three other artists, including Leo Segedin, co-founded Exhibit A, the first post-war, artist-run cooperative gallery in Chicago.[6] [7]

Early life

Garrison graduated from School of the Art Institute of Chicago in 1930.[8] She also exhibited at the Art Institute of Chicago's Annual Chicago and Vicinity Artists exhibition between 1934 and 1940.

Exhibitions

Awards

Notes and References

  1. Web site: A Lifetime in Portraits BU Today Boston University. BU Today. 2016-03-05.
  2. Web site: Eve Garrison Life Study: 70 Years of Figurative Painting. Amazon. 5 March 2016.
  3. News: A Little Lady Lost in Her Art. MALAGARIS. KALIOPEE. 28 June 1967. The Chicago Tribune.
  4. News: The Wonderful World of Art: Statues Share Show with 'Sculptural Painting'. Weigle. Edith. May 12, 1957. The Chicago Tribune.
  5. News: A Little Lady Lost in Her Art. MALAGARIS. KALIOPEE. 28 June 1967. Chicago Tribune.
  6. Butler, Doris Lane. “A Group Gallery Opens,” Chicago Daily News, July 1957.
  7. Weigle, Edith. Review, Chicago Tribune, May 25, 1959.
  8. Web site: Eve Garrison - Corbett vs. Dempsey. Corbett vs. Dempsey. en-US. 2016-03-05.