Saturday, May 14, 2016

Edwin W. Deming

Edwin W. Deming



Edwin W. Deming



Edwin W. Deming


When he was still an infant, Edwin Willard Deming's family moved from his birthplace in Ashland, Ohio, to western Illinois, an area that during those pre-and post-Civil War years retained a frontier character, and where roaming Winnebago Native Americans were sometimes neighbors. While still in his teens, Deming traveled to Indian territory in Oklahoma and sketched extensively. 

Determined to become a painter of Native Americans, he enrolled at the Art Students League, then spent a year at the Académie Julian in Paris (1884-85), studying under Gustave Boulanger and Jules Lefebvre. Back in the United States, he worked the next two years painting cycloramas

In 1887 Deming first visited and painted the Apaches and Pueblos of the Southwest. His active career of painting and illustrating took him repeatedly to the lands of the Blackfoot, Crow, and Sioux, as well as to Arizona and New Mexico. 

After the turn of the century, Deming devoted more time to sculpture but also began work on a series of romantic murals of Native American life, which were subsequently installed in the American Museum of Natural History and the Museum of the American Indian in New York.



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