Harry Shoulberg

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Harry Shoulberg
Born(1903-10-25)October 25, 1903
serigraph artist

Harry Shoulberg

expressionist painter.[2]
He was known to be among the early group of
serigraph) medium,[3]
as well as oil.

Biography

Harry Shoulberg was born October 25, 1903, in

Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
. His father, Max Shoulberg, was the fourth of twenty children and the first to be born in America. His mother was Tessie Derfler, a New Yorker of German descent. Harry Shoulberg grew up in New York, married Sylvia Hendler in 1931, and had one child, Ted. Harry Shoulberg died April 15, 1995, in New York City.

Studied

Harry Shoulberg attended City College of New York where he studied biochemical engineering for three years before switching to fine arts in his last year. He continued his art education at the John Reed School, 1934–1935; the American Artists School, 1935–1937; and then privately at the studios of artists Sol Wilson (1894–1974) and Carl Holty.

Serigraphs

A native of

Audubon Society. His serigraphs have won prizes from the National Serigraph Society and the American Color Print Society and are in the Baltimore Museum of Art, The Carnegie Institute, the San Francisco Museum of Fine Arts, the Milwaukee Art Institute and the Smithsonian American Art Museum, Washington, D.C.

Exhibitions

Harry Shoulberg participated in the Works Progress Administration/Federal Art Project (WPA/FAP) (1936–1942). He exhibited;

Collections

Awards

  • 1943: Artists Associates, New York City, "Art for Bonds:" 1st prize;
  • 1948: Milwaukee Art Museum, Purchase Prize;
  • 1949: National Serigraph Society, 10th Annual Exhibition, New York, Purchase Prize;
  • 1949: American Color Print Society, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, Florence F. Tonner Prize;
  • 1952:
    East Hampton, Long Island
    , 1st prize;
  • 1956: The Painters and Sculptors Society of New Jersey, Inc., Jane Peterson Philipp Prize;
  • 1956: The Joe and Emily Lowe Foundation, 8th Annual Emily Lowe Competition;
  • 1957: Silvermine Guild of Artists, Inc, Albert Kapp Award;
  • 1961: The Brooklyn Society of Artists
  • 1963: The Painters and Sculptors Society of New Jersey, Inc., "The Grambacher" Artist Material Co., Award;
  • 1965: Audubon Artists, Inc., New York City: 23rd Annual, Jane Peterson Award;
  • 1966: American Society of Contemporary Artists: 49th Annual, M.J. Kaplan Memorial Award;
  • 1966: The Painters and Sculptors Society of New Jersey, Inc., Talens & Son Material Award;

See also

References

Sources

  • Peter H Falk, Who was who in American art: compiled from the original thirty-four volumes of American art annual--Who's who in art, biographies of American artists active from 1898-1947 Publisher: Madison, Conn.: Sound View Press, 1985.
  • Peter H Falk; Audrey M Lewis; Georgia Kuchen; Veronika Roessler, Who was who in American art, 1564-1975: 400 years of artists in America Publisher: Madison, CT.: Sound View Press, 1999.
  • ''Smithsonian Institution Research Information System; Archival, Manuscript and Photographic Collections, Harry Shoulberg

Books

External links for image reproduction