Walter F Isaacs PRICE CHARTS
1886 Gillespie, Illinois - 1964 Seattle, Washington. Known for: Abstract figure and portrait painting, teaching.
"Reacting to Modernism: Walter F. Isaacs," by Donald Pittenger, November 2, 2011. Published online on the blog Art Contrarian. My old stomping ground, the School of Art at the University of... Read full biography
"Reacting to Modernism: Walter F. Isaacs," by Donald Pittenger, November 2, 2011. Published online on the blog Art Contrarian. My old stomping ground, the School of Art at the University of Washington, held an exhibit featuring three former faculty members including its first chairman Walter F.... Read full biography
"Reacting to Modernism: Walter F. Isaacs," by Donald Pittenger, November 2, 2011. Published online on the blog Art Contrarian. My old stomping ground, the School of Art at the University of Washington, held an exhibit featuring three former faculty members including its first chairman Walter F. Isaacs (1886-1964). I went to see it because two of the artists (Ray Hill, 1891-1980 and Boyer Gonzales, Jr., 1909-1987) were there when I was. But I was most anxious to see Isaacs' work because he was... Read full biography
"Reacting to Modernism: Walter F. Isaacs," by Donald Pittenger, November 2, 2011. Published online on the blog Art Contrarian. My old stomping ground, the School of Art at the University of Washington, held an exhibit featuring three former faculty members including its first chairman Walter F. Isaacs (1886-1964). I went to see it because two of the artists (Ray Hill, 1891-1980 and Boyer Gonzales, Jr., 1909-1987) were there when I was. But I was most anxious to see Isaacs' work because he was active during a period that interests me greatly: 1920-1945. Why those years? Because they were the time following the surge of art movements (Cubism, Fauves, Futurism, Blaue Reiter, etc., etc.) in the years just before the Great War. Following the... Read full biography
"Reacting to Modernism: Walter F. Isaacs," by Donald Pittenger, November 2, 2011. Published online on the blog Art Contrarian. My old stomping ground, the School of Art at the University of Washington, held an exhibit featuring three former faculty members including its first chairman Walter F. Isaacs (1886-1964). I went to see it because two of the artists (Ray Hill, 1891-1980 and Boyer Gonzales, Jr., 1909-1987) were there when I was. But I was most anxious to see Isaacs' work because he was active during a period that interests me greatly: 1920-1945. Why those years? Because they were the time following the surge of art movements (Cubism, Fauves, Futurism, Blaue Reiter, etc., etc.) in the years just before the Great War. Following the war many avant-garde artists experienced a what-do-we-do-next? realization as the number of new movements fell off drastically. Meanwhile,... Read full biography
