Morris Atkinson Blackburn

American, 1902 - 1979
The landscape painter and art teacher Morris Atkinson Blackburn was born in Philadelphia, where he lived for the majority of his career. A descendant of the noted colonial portraitist Joseph J. Blackburn (c. 1700-1780), who was active in North America from 1753 to 1763, he became interested in art at an early age and studied architectural drawing at the Philadelphia Trade School. Blackburn took classes at the Graphic Sketch Club in 1922 and at the School of Industrial Art. While working for the noted Philadelphia furniture designer Oscar Mertz, he attended the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts from 1925 to 1929. There he studied painting with Henry Bainbridge McCarter (1866-1942), drew from the antique with Daniel Garber (1880-1958), and took sketching classes with Arthur B. Carles (1882-1952), who introduced him to modernist styles. Blackburn won two Cresson Traveling Scholarships and visited Europe in 1928 and 1929, where he was influenced by the work of Gustav Klimt (1862-1918), Egon Schiele (1891-1918), and Paul Cezanne (1839-1906).

Blackburn returned to the United States during the Depression and painted murals for the federally funded Public Works of Art Project. He resumed working for Mertz and began to teach furniture design and drafting at the Pennsylvania Museum School of Industrial Art in 1932; he later became an assistant there to the painter Franklin Chenault Watkins (1894-1972). Blackburn took private lessons from Carles during the late 1930s and began to paint in an increasingly abstract style. During World War II he worked as a mechanical draftsman for the Philco company. Blackburn taught at a number of Philadelphia area schools after the war, including the Philadelphia Museum (where he remained until 1972) and the Tyler School of Art from 1948 to 1952, when he became the first instructor of graphics at the Pennsylvania Academy. He exhibited widely after his first solo show at the Joseph Luyber Galleries in New York in 1947.

Biography courtesy of Schwarz Gallery, www.antiquesandfineart.com/schwarzphila
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