Wynn Chamberlain

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Elwyn Moody "Wynn" Chamberlain, (19 May 1927 – 27 November 2014), was an American

realist painter",[1] Chamberlain has two works, Interior: Late August (1955) and The Barricade (1958), in the permanent collection of the Smithsonian American Art Museum.[2]

Early life

Elwyn Chamberlain was born in

University of Wisconsin, while continuing to paint and studying with the Magic realist artist, John Wilde.[4]

Art career

He had his first solo exhibition in Milwaukee in 1951,[5] and three years later he had his first New York City solo exhibition at the Edwin Hewitt Gallery. Throughout the 1950s and 1960s his realist landscapes, interior scenes, and allegorical paintings were exhibited throughout the United States and in Europe. Although his work tended to become more abstract in the 1960s, he had a major exhibition of nude portraits at the Fischbach Gallery in 1965. The portraits were of New York literary and artistic figures of the time. One of the most famous of these is Poets Dressed and Undressed, two panels portraying Joe Brainard, Frank O'Hara, Joe LeSueur and Frank Lima. The exhibition also included a nude portrait of Allen Ginsberg who wrote the publicity flyer for the exhibition (Chamberlain's "Nakeds") as well as notes for the catalogue, wherein he equated Chamberlain's nudes with the ecstatic poetry of William Blake.[6]

In the 1960s Chamberlain also became involved in

Baby Jane Holzer and Sam Shepard
in the cast.

On 7 September 1965, in Staatsburg, New York,[9] Chamberlain married Sally Stokes, the former wife of John Sergeant Cram III and a daughter of Frederick Hallock Stokes.[10][11] The couple had two children in 1968, fraternal twins Sara Ninigret Stokes Chamberlain and Samuel Wyandance Stokes Chamberlain.[12]

Later life

In 1970, Chamberlain left the

Mendocino County, lived in a tent for three years, built their house and grew most of their own food.[15]
It was during this time that Chamberlain became a novelist. His first novel, Gates of Fire, was published by Grove Press in 1978. Gates of Fire, like his third novel, Then Spoke the Thunder, is set in India.

As of 2009[update] Chamberlain was living in

Marrakech, Morocco.[16]

Chamberlain died in New Delhi, India, of heart failure on 27 November 2014, at the age of 87.[17]

Novels

  • Gates of Fire (1978) Grove Press, )
  • Hound Dog (1984) North Atlantic Press
  • Then Spoke the Thunder (1987) Grove Press (also published in French as La nuit tomba sur Kotagarth (1990) Laffont, )
  • Paradise (2006) Kadmos Publishing

References

  1. ^ Thorton (11 November 1973) p. 179
  2. ^ Smithsonian American Art Museum
  3. ^ Stix (22 September 1978) p. C1. Note that the year of birth is given as 1928 in Cummings (1971) p. 94.and 1929 in American Federation of Arts (1959)
  4. ^ Cozzolino (2006)
  5. ^ Smithsonian American Art Museum
  6. ^ McCarthy (1998) p.31
  7. ^ Smith (30 November 1967) p. 33
  8. ^ Social Register, Social Register Association, 1966, page 132
  9. ^ "Miss Sally Stokes Married in the South to John S. Cram", The Philadelphia Inquirer, 3 April 1960, pages 1 and 3
  10. ^ "Duke's Daughter Maryland Bride of John Cram 3d", The New York Times, 10 March 1964
  11. ^ "Twins to Mrs Chamberlain", The New York Times, 14 March 1968
  12. ^ Stix (22 September 1978) p. C1
  13. ^ Chamberlain (July 2000)
  14. ^ Stix (22 September 1978) p. C1
  15. ^ *Chamberlain, (September 2009) p. 2
  16. ^ Weber, Bruce (6 December 2014). "Wynn Chamberlain, an Artist in Paint, on Screen and in Novels, Dies at 87". The New York Times. Retrieved 7 December 2014.

Sources

External links