William Stirling Dickinson Chicago Illinois Artist Lithograph 1930 Signed Wpa Era #2 - Nov 05, 2023 | Brandywine Valley Auctions In Pa
LiveAuctioneers Logo

lots of lots

William Stirling Dickinson Chicago Illinois artist Lithograph 1930 Signed WPA Era #2

Related Prints & Multiples

More Items in WPA Prints & Multiples

View More

Recommended Art

View More
item-164580992=1
item-164580992=2
item-164580992=3
item-164580992=4
item-164580992=5
item-164580992=6
item-164580992=7
William Stirling Dickinson Chicago Illinois artist Lithograph 1930 Signed WPA Era #2
William Stirling Dickinson Chicago Illinois artist Lithograph 1930 Signed WPA Era #2
Item Details
Description
William Stirling Dickinson Lithograph 1930 Signed WPA Era #2, "In the New World" 27/30, "For Ms. O'Dell", 14 x 9 3/4" image size, 19 1/4 x 14 1/4" overall
Stirling Dickinson (1909 – October 27, 1998) was an American artist who spent much of his life in San Miguel de Allende, Guanajuato in Mexico, where he was one of the first members of what would become a colony of expatriate artists from the United States and Canada.
Willam Stirling Dickinson was the son of Francis Reynolds Dickinson (1880-1974) and Alice May Stirling (1884-1952). Dickinson's grandfather William Dickinson was born on a New Hampshire farm in 1837, moved to Chicago, and after joining the firm of Hugh McLennan & Co. became a millionaire trader in the Chicago grain futures market. His father, a Chicago lawyer, was a 1903 graduate of Harvard, where he was an editor of the Crimson and a member of Signet. Both were painfully shy, a trait that Stirling inherited. Stirling Dickinson was born in Chicago in 1909, and studied at the Berkshire School and then at Princeton University graduating in 1931. He attended the Art Institute of Chicago for post-graduate studies, and as a graduate student went to the Écoles d'Art Américaines in the Palace of Fontainebleau in France. However, he accepted that his talent would never place him in the top rank of artists.
In 1934 he and Heath Bowman, whom he had met at Princeton, made a six-month tour of Mexico in a green 1929 Ford Model A convertible. Bowman described their experiences in the light-hearted book Mexican Odyssey, which Dickinson illustrated. The book sold well.[2] They wrote a second book on South America. Westward from Rio records their extremely difficult journey from Rio de Janeiro west to the shore of the Pacific Ocean.[4] The two men then decided to write a novel based in Mexico, choosing to live in San Miguel while writing Death is Incidental, and first building a house that they called "Los Pocitos" in part of the ruins of an old tannery.[2] The property cost just $90.[5] After the book was published, Bowman married and moved away, and Dickinson bought his share of the house. He remained there, a bachelor, living very simply despite having inherited considerable wealth.
In 1938 Dickinson was appointed director of the Escuela Universitaria de Bellas Artes in San Miguel.Dickinson actively promoted the new school, visiting universities and cultural centers and handing out flyers in several U.S, cities. The school mostly targeted foreign students and wealthy Mexicans, but also offered low-cost workshops for local students, teaching traditional weaving and pottery techniques and thus helping to preserve their cultural traditions.
During World War II, Dickinson served in Naval Intelligence and the Office of Strategic Services in Washington and Italy between 1942 and 1945.When World War II ended in 1945, the G.I. Bill funded free education for veterans. Many took the opportunity to study art in San Miguel, where the cost of living was very low. The school hired the muralist David Alfaro Siqueiros as a lecturer, a prominent communist. He had a dispute with the school's owner, Alfredo Campanella, over funding. Most of the students supported Siqueiros, and in the end most of them walked out. The school was forced to close in 1949. Dickinson launched his own school, but without accreditation from the U.S. Embassy had difficulty attracting students.
Dimensions
20 x 15 x 1 in
Weight
10 lb
Buyer's Premium
  • 25% up to $50,000.00
  • 7% up to $100,000.00
  • 5% above $100,000.00

William Stirling Dickinson Chicago Illinois artist Lithograph 1930 Signed WPA Era #2

Estimate $100 - $300
See Sold Price
Starting Price $25
8 bidders are watching this item.

Shipping & Pickup Options
Item located in Chadds Ford, PA, us
Offers In-House Shipping
Local Pickup Available

Payment
Accepts seamless payments through LiveAuctioneers

Brandywine Valley Auctions

Brandywine Valley Auctions

Exton, PA, United States1,078 Followers
TOP