- John W. Norton
John Warner Norton (
7 March 1876 -7 January 1934 ) was an Illinoismural ist andeasel artist who pioneered the field in the United States.Among his works are the landmark 1929 convert|180|ft|m|0|sing=on long ceiling mural for the concourse ceiling of the Chicago Daily News Building (not currently installed in this building which has been renamed), the "Ceres" mural in the Chicago Board of Trade Building (1930), his Tavern Club (Chicago) murals, his "American Heritage Series" at the Hamilton Park Field House, 513 W. 72nd St., Chicago, a mural at the
St. Paul, Minnesota city hall, twelve murals comprising "The History of Mankind" (1923) at theLogan Museum of Anthropology atBeloit College , inWisconsin , and his first major mural in the Cliff Dwellers' Club (1909).Norton was born in
Lockport, Illinois , the son of John Lyman Norton and Ada Clara Gooding Norton. The family ran the Norton & Co. of Lockport. Norton's study of the law atHarvard University was broken off when the family's firm went bankrupt. Before and after a period of living as a cowboy and enlisting with theRough Riders , he studied art at theArt Institute of Chicago (1897, 1899-1901). He was influenced by theArmory Show and the Japanese printmakerKatsushika Hokusai . At the time of his death inCharleston, South Carolina of cancer, he was a popular and respected artist.Honors
* William M. R. French memorial Gold Medal (1924)
* Norman Waite Harris Bronze Medal (1926)
* honorary Master of Fine Arts from theArt Institute of Chicago
* Gold Medal of Honor for Mural Painting from theArchitectural League of New York (1931)References
* Zimmer, John L. (2005-06) "Memories of John W. Norton's Mural Masterpiece," "The Living Museum" 67(4): 4-8.
* Gray, Mary Lackritz (2001) "A Guide to Chicago's Murals". University Of Chicago Press.
* Tallmadge, Thomas and Tom Lea (1935) "John W. Norton, American Painter". Lakeside Press: Chicago (privately printed).
* "John Warner Norton" (catalogue raisonné). Illinois State Museum.External links
* A discussion of the mounting of "Ceres": http://aic.stanford.edu/jaic/articles/jaic24-01-002.html. (JAIC 1984, Volume 24, Number 1, Article 2 (pp. 14 to 22) )
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.