Mitchell Jamieson
Mitchell Jamieson (1915–1976) was an American painter who worked for the Federal Art Project during the Great Depression, before studying painting in Mexico and returning to the United States. In World War II he enlisted as a war artist for the United States Navy, receiving a lieutenant's commission and a Bronze Star.[2] After the war he worked as a professor of art and continued to travel and paint prolifically. During his extraordinary career he began depicting the infrastructure projects of Franklin D. Roosevelt's New Deal. Always more drawn to people, however, his studies in Mexico and work as a World War II war artist led him to portray the Americans in their crusade against the Axis Powers. Afterwards he was a pioneering artist in the NASA Art Program[3] before and after his devastating work chronicling the impact of the Vietnam War on the peoples of Southeast Asia in his series "The Plague." These efforts took a psychological toll on him. Broken by his Vietnam experiences, he died by his own hand in 1976. Jamieson was twice awarded a Guggenheim Fellowship.[4] His works are on display at the White House, National Air and Space Museum, the National Gallery of Art, The Smithsonian, Naval History and Heritage Command, Corcoran Gallery of Art, Metropolitan Museum of Art, Brooklyn Museum, Whitney Museum of American Art, the Seattle Art Museum and in numerous other collections. LifeJamieson was born in Kensington, Maryland, in 1915. He studied at the Abbott Art School and the Corcoran School of Art. He married Ludmilla Plavsky in 1946 and had a son. They remained married until his death. The WPA Federal Art ProjectIn the 1930s, Jamieson traveled first to Key West, then on to the United States Virgin Islands to paint under the Treasury Department's Art Project. Residing at Blackbeard's Castle in Charlotte Amalie, he painted island life while a guest of the island's government architect, honing his skills before moving to Mexico City, where in 1939 he studied mural painting. Before and after his Mexican sojourn, Jamieson received commissions to paint murals for post offices in Upper Marlboro and Laurel, Maryland; and Willard, Ohio. Jamieson received a major commission from Secretary of the Interior Harold L. Ickes to paint the mural in what is now the Stewart Lee Udall Department of the Interior Building to commemorate Marion Anderson's famous concert at the Lincoln Memorial on April 9, 1939. Titled An Incident in Contemporary American Life, the mural is still on view to the public who visit the building.[5] World War II Combat ArtistDuring World War II, Jamieson served as a combat artist in the U.S. Navy.[6] He sketched and painted the occupation on North Africa, the invasion of Sicily, the invasion of France, and the Okinawa invasion. Jamieson described his work as a war artist in the following terms:[7]
Vietnam and "The Plague"In 1967 Jamieson volunteered to artistically document the war in Vietnam. His depictions, which he called "The Plague" series, demonstrate Jamieson's disaffection with the war and complete disenchantment with war itself. According to the Naval History and Heritage Command,[2]
A set of the Plague series is in the permanent collection of the National Gallery of Art[8] Mercury and Apollo ProgramsJamieson was the first artist chosen by NASA to document the Mercury Program and in 1963 documented the astronaut Gordon Cooper's historic twenty-two orbits around the earth.[9] NASA later called upon him to document the Apollo Program within the NASA Art Program, Jamieson created the Apollo 11 Codices, which are now in the permanent collection of the National Air and Space Museum.[3][10] DeathJamieson killed himself at his Northern Virginia home in 1976, nine years after returning from Vietnam. As journalist Paul Richard described the circumstances in the Washington Post:
References
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