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Marco Gomez BIOGRAPHY
1910 Durango, Mexico - 1972 Manhattan Beach, California. Known for: Nostalgic cowboy genre and mission painting.
The following information was submitted in June of 2006 by Norman Davies, California book collector and art historian. Marco Antonio Gomez "Tony" was born in Durango, Mexico in 1910. He was 8 years... Read full biography
The following information was submitted in June of 2006 by Norman Davies, California book collector and art historian. Marco Antonio Gomez "Tony" was born in Durango, Mexico in 1910. He was 8 years old when the family moved to Ashfork, Arizona. His father was a recognized portrait painter. Young... Read full biography
The following information was submitted in June of 2006 by Norman Davies, California book collector and art historian. Marco Antonio Gomez "Tony" was born in Durango, Mexico in 1910. He was 8 years old when the family moved to Ashfork, Arizona. His father was a recognized portrait painter. Young Tony was raised among paint pots and canvases and one day had encroached upon his father's creative endeavors with a misplaced brush stroke. His father initially gave his son paints and canvas with the... Read full biography
The following information was submitted in June of 2006 by Norman Davies, California book collector and art historian. Marco Antonio Gomez "Tony" was born in Durango, Mexico in 1910. He was 8 years old when the family moved to Ashfork, Arizona. His father was a recognized portrait painter. Young Tony was raised among paint pots and canvases and one day had encroached upon his father's creative endeavors with a misplaced brush stroke. His father initially gave his son paints and canvas with the admonition: "You paint your pictures and let me paint mine", or words to that effect. Later his father taught him. Much of the artist's work springs from his background in mountainous northern Arizona. He grew up with intimate knowledge of the area's... Read full biography
The following information was submitted in June of 2006 by Norman Davies, California book collector and art historian. Marco Antonio Gomez "Tony" was born in Durango, Mexico in 1910. He was 8 years old when the family moved to Ashfork, Arizona. His father was a recognized portrait painter. Young Tony was raised among paint pots and canvases and one day had encroached upon his father's creative endeavors with a misplaced brush stroke. His father initially gave his son paints and canvas with the admonition: "You paint your pictures and let me paint mine", or words to that effect. Later his father taught him. Much of the artist's work springs from his background in mountainous northern Arizona. He grew up with intimate knowledge of the area's Indians, whom he rode and played with, and witnessed many of their now forgotten rituals and absorbed... Read full biography
Artist Biography
Biography page for Marco Gomez ((1910 - 1972)), known for Nostalgic cowboy genre and mission painting. Showing 3 biographical entries and 0 sample artworks.
Marco Gomez - Artist Info
About Marco Gomez
Biography from the Archives of askART
The following information was submitted in June of 2006 by Norman Davies, California book collector and art historian.
Marco Antonio Gomez "Tony" was born in Durango, Mexico in 1910. He was 8 years old when the family moved to Ashfork, Arizona. His father was a recognized portrait painter. Young Tony was raised among paint pots and canvases and one day had encroached upon his father's creative endeavors with a misplaced brush stroke. His father initially gave his son paints and canvas with the admonition: "You paint your pictures and let me paint mine", or words to that effect. Later his father taught him. Much of the artist's work springs from his background in mountainous northern Arizona. He grew up with intimate knowledge of the area's Indians, whom he rode and played with, and witnessed many of their now forgotten rituals and absorbed the "feeling" of the country.
He moved to California during the great depression. He teamed up with two other young artists to share living costs in a downtown Los Angeles apartment of highly debatable quality. The times were hard; meals were somewhat less than glamorous; patience and fortitude were necessary virtues. It was a period of gestation, with time to develop, learn and strengthen. He attended the Chouinard School of Art. When war came in 1941 he joined the military and became the official artist for the 433rd fighter squadron. Upon returning home to civilian life he received his American citizenship. An event he says was his greatest honor in life.
He met and married his wife of twenty years Margery, and felt the need to hold a steady job and relegate his art to night lights. The time came, however, when the urge to paint won out over holding a steady job. Tony declared his intent of artistic independence to his wife, and she supported the decision. They made frequent trips to the southwest criss-crossing the lands of his youth, spending weeks and months among the Indians of the great southwest and into the plains country, researching, sketching and painting.
Tony and his wife lived about a block from the the ocean in Manhattan Beach, California, yet he painted only a few seascapes.
On his last painting trip into the southwest in 1972, Tony took ill and returned home to California where he died within a few weeks from cancer.
In May of 1971, Cody Wyoming's Whitney Museum and Gallery of Western Art honored Tony with an exhibition of his paintings. This event is detailed with some photos of his paintings in the March 1971 issue of the Westerner Magazine.
In 1973, Grand Central Galleries Inc. of New York held a retrospective of his work.Biography from the Archives of askART
Born in Durango, Mexico, Marco Gomez became a painter of the Old West focusing on nostalgic depictions of cowboys, Indians, and the landscape.
He was the pupil of his father, a famous Mexican portrait painter who moved his family to northern Arizona in 1918. There in quite untamed country, Marco rode and played with Indian children and learned about their culture.
He studied at Chouinard's Art Center in Los Angeles and with Martin Syverston. In World War II, he became official artist for the 433rd Fighter Squadron. He died in Manhattan Beach, California.
Source:
Best of the West AuctionsBiography from the Archives of askART
Marco Antonio (Tony) Gomez was born in Durango, Mexico on Sept. 25, 1910. "Tony" Gomez learned to paint from his father who was a portrait painter. The family relocated to Arizona in 1918. It was there that his fascination with the Old West was to become the subject matter of his future paintings. He studied in Los Angeles at Chouinard and the Art Center School and spent the latter part of his life in southern California. He died in Manhattan Beach on May 21, 1972.
