Minimalist painter, Myron Stout is best known for his "black and white" period. He has also done landscapes, abstracts, and drawings in pencil. Stout who died in 1987 was the subject of a major... Read full biography
Minimalist painter, Myron Stout is best known for his "black and white" period. He has also done landscapes, abstracts, and drawings in pencil. Stout who died in 1987 was the subject of a major retrospective at the Whitney Museum of American Art in 1980. Myron Stout spent much of his career in... Read full biography
Minimalist painter, Myron Stout is best known for his "black and white" period. He has also done landscapes, abstracts, and drawings in pencil. Stout who died in 1987 was the subject of a major retrospective at the Whitney Museum of American Art in 1980. Myron Stout spent much of his career in Provincetown, Massachusetts. His first visit was during the summer of 1938, as he was just finishing his graduate work. He was brought to Provincetown by his painting teacher from Columbia Teacher's... Read full biography
Minimalist painter, Myron Stout is best known for his "black and white" period. He has also done landscapes, abstracts, and drawings in pencil. Stout who died in 1987 was the subject of a major retrospective at the Whitney Museum of American Art in 1980. Myron Stout spent much of his career in Provincetown, Massachusetts. His first visit was during the summer of 1938, as he was just finishing his graduate work. He was brought to Provincetown by his painting teacher from Columbia Teacher's College, Charles Martin, who held a class there. In 1946, after the war, Stout had leave from his teaching job in Hawaii, and came back to Columbia, to consider further graduate work toward a doctorate. Stout returned to Provincetown in the fall and the... Read full biography
Minimalist painter, Myron Stout is best known for his "black and white" period. He has also done landscapes, abstracts, and drawings in pencil. Stout who died in 1987 was the subject of a major retrospective at the Whitney Museum of American Art in 1980. Myron Stout spent much of his career in Provincetown, Massachusetts. His first visit was during the summer of 1938, as he was just finishing his graduate work. He was brought to Provincetown by his painting teacher from Columbia Teacher's College, Charles Martin, who held a class there. In 1946, after the war, Stout had leave from his teaching job in Hawaii, and came back to Columbia, to consider further graduate work toward a doctorate. Stout returned to Provincetown in the fall and the summer and then quit teaching in 1949. He was attending the Hans Hofmann school through those summers on the GI Bill. The summer of 1... Read full biography
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