John Steuart Curry
Born: 1897
Died: 1946
John Steuart Curry, Thomas Hart Benton, and Grant Wood were Regionalist painters. With the Social Realists, they composed the group of artists who defined American Scene Painting. This art movement, which prevailed during the Great Depression of the 1930s, sought to portray American life in traditional realist styles. The tone of their work could be lyrically nationalist or critical.
Born in Kansas, Curry studied at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago and in Paris. He taught in New York at the Art Students’ League but returned to the Midwest in 1936 to teach as artist-in-residence in the College of Agriculture at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. He continued to teach and paint there until his death in 1946 at the age of forty-nine. Free brushwork and energized forms characterize his realist style that poeticizes and celebrates the history and everyday life of his beloved Midwest.
Artworks
The Plainsman
1945
Sanctuary
1944
Stallion and Jack Fighting
1943
Our Good Earth
1942
Madison Landscape
1941
John Brown
1939
John Brown
1939
Progressive Party Rally
1938
Prize Stallion
1938
Flood
1937
Elephants
1936
Head of a Woman
1936
The Missed Leap
1934
Hounds and Coyote
1931
Coyotes Stealing a Pig
1927