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Morton Patrick Traylor (April 6, 1918 – April 28, 1996) was an American fine artist, designer, serigrapher and founder of the Virginia Art Institute in Charlottesville, Virginia.
Biography
editMorton Traylor was born on April 6, 1918,[citation needed] in Petersburg, Virginia.[1] Traylor lived in Los Angeles most of his life. After graduating from Eagle Rock High School, he entered Los Angeles City College, where his formal art training began.[citation needed]
Around 1960, he moved to White Hall. In the mid-1960s, he established the Virginia Art Institute in Charlottesville, Virginia. The school was in operation for about ten years.[1]
Traylor married Maxine.[2] Around 1986, he moved with his wife back west.[1] Traylor died on April 28, 1996, aged 78, in Roseburg, Oregon.[2]
Traylor was a painter and serigraph printmaker.[1] His artwork can be found in museums and private collections around the world including the Georgia Museum of Art and The British Museum.
Professional life
edit- National Features Syndicate, New York, New York
- McNaught Syndicate, St. Louis, Missouri.
- Whitman Publishing Co. (Dell Comics) Beverley Hills, California
- Northrop Aviation Co. Commercial Art Dept., Hawthorne, California
- Art Director, "TRYOUT", Big Bear Lake, California
- Owned and Operated Advertising Co., San Bernardino, California
- President of Inter-Mountain Concert Society, California
- Director of Lex Advertising Co., Charlottesville, Virginia
- Owned and Operated Virginia Art & Advertising, Crozet, Virginia
- Founder/Director of Virginia Art Institute, Charlottesville, Virginia
Awards and honors
edit- President of Kappa Tau Sigma, Honorary Art Society (1939)
- LACC Summer Scholarship to Chouinard Art Institute through Latham Contest (1939)
- Annual Scholarship to Chouinard through National competition (1940)
- Graduated from LACC as one of six Honor Students Continuing Scholarship to Chouinard Art Institute (1941)
- First Prize (Drawing) 3rd National Veterans' Exhibition, Long Beach, California (1949)
- First Prize (Drawing) 5th Annual, Alley Gallery, Charlottesville, Virginia (1964)
- First Prize (Print) Contemporary Southern Art Festival, Charlottesville, Virginia (1964)
- Hon. Mention, Southern Art Festival, Atlanta Georgia (1964)
National and group exhibitions
edit- Municipal Art Commission, City Han, Los Angeles, California (1946)
- Solon de L'Art Libre, Modern Museum of Art, Paris, France (1947)
- First Annual Veterans' Exhibition, L. A. Museum of Art, Los Angeles, California (1946)
- City Show at Greek Theatre, Los Angeles, California. (1946–47)
- National Orange Show, San Bernardino, California (1949–50)
- Los Angeles Art Association, Los Angeles, California (1949–51)
- Print Club, Albany, New York National Serigraph Society, New York City, N. Y. (1949)
- Oakland Art Gallery, Oakland, California San Francisco Museum of Art, California (1949)
- Arizona State Fair, Phoenix Arizona Modern Institute of Art, Beverly Hills, California (1949)
- First Annual Exhibition, Santa Paula, California (1949)
- Los Angeles Annual, County Museum, Los Angeles, California (1950–55)
- Los Angeles County Fair, Pomona, California (1950)
- Western Drawing Institute Show, Jepson's Gallery, Los Angeles, California (1950–51)
- Pennell Exhibition, Library of Congress, Washington, D. C. (1950)
- Laguna National Print Exhibition, Laguna Beach, California (1950)
- California State Fair, Sacramento, California (1949–50)
- Landau Gallery Group Show, LaCieniga Blvd., Los Angeles, California (1951)
Publications
edit- Newspaper "Paris Montparnasse" Paris, France (1947)
- Art News Magazine, December (1950)
- Newspaper "Times" Los Angeles, California (1949)
- "Sacramento Bee" Sacramento, California (1954)
- Les Archives Historiques D'Art Contemporain De La Biennale De Venise (1954)
- Prints of California Artists, Crest of Hollywood, California (1954)
- The News-Review Roseburg, Oregon (1986)
References
edit- ^ a b c d "Morton Traylor..." The Daily Progress. 1996-05-30. p. D3. Retrieved 2024-11-04 – via Newspapers.com.
- ^ a b "Morton P. Traylor". The Daily Progress. 1996-05-11. p. 12. Retrieved 2024-11-04 – via Newspapers.com.