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her, such as Latin, Greek, mythology, ancient history and geography of the ancient world. Bacon described her unconventional childhood as "absolutely delightful." Her youth was very sheltered; she was often accompanied by a governess, most of which she hated. The only time she really had freedom from this life was when her family was living in Nassau and her parents and grandmother were quarantined because they had contracted typhoid fever.
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244:. Looking back at her time at the League Bacon said, "The years at the Art Students League were a very important chunk of life to me and very exhilarating. It was the first time in my life, of course, that I had met and gotten to know familiarly a group of young people who were all headed the same way with the same interests. In fact it was practically parochial." In 1917, she exhibited two works in the
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the end of 1913, Bacon first studied art at the School of
Applied Design for Women but disliked it calling it, "the prissiest, silliest place that ever was." She transferred after a few weeks to the School of Fine and Applied Arts on the West Side where she took classes in illustration and life drawing. During the summer of 1914 Bacon attended Jonas Lie's landscape class in Port Jefferson, Long Island.
263:, like her early drypoints, depended upon a hard, controlling outline, filled in with shading or an obscure pattern. Bacon's pastel portraits are distinguished by their intensity of the hues, highly selective and organized palette, and visually satisfying compositions. Bacon was featured in solo shows in prominent galleries such as Stieglitz's Intimate Gallery, the
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and London. Between the ages of 9 and 11 Bacon lived with her parents in France, first in Paris and then in a house in
Picardy at Montreaux-sur-Mer. Bacon's mother did not believe in formal schooling and as a result, for most of her childhood, Bacon had tutors and studied only subjects of interest to
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and the two married on May 4, 1920. After marrying, Bacon and Brook moved to London for a year, where their daughter, Belinda, was born. When they returned, the family divided their time between
Greenwich Village and Woodstock, New York, two vibrant artist communities. In 1922 a son, Sandy, was born
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Bacon had always been interested in art and from a very young age her early artistic interests were encouraged and supported by her parents. Although Bacon started drawing when she was a year and a half old, she did not receive formal training in art until after graduating from Kent Place School. At
188:. In 1913, the same year she graduated, Bacon's father killed himself in his studio in New York. He had overcome alcoholism but was susceptible to bouts of depression. After this devastating event Bacon and her mother moved to New York City and lived on the West Side in the home of family friends.
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The aim of a caricature is to heighten and intensify to the point of absurdity all the subject's most striking attributes; a caricature should not necessarily stop at ridiculing the features but should include in its extravagant appraisal whatever of the figure may be needed to explain the
259:, which was published by Bacon and her fellow art students in 1918. Drypoint was Bacon's primary medium until 1927, and pastels until 1945. Although Bacon had trained as a painter, she eventually became famous for her satirical prints and drawings. Her early portrait caricatures in
314:'s Intimate Gallery, and the Downtown Gallery. In 1934 Bacon was awarded the Guggenheim Fellowship for creative work in the graphic arts. During her time as a fellow she completed 35 satirical portraits of art world figures for a collection called
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Bacon's parents moved frequently and would have tutors for Bacon wherever they went. The family lived in
Connecticut but spent winters in New York and in the winter of 1902 they lived in Nassau, Bahamas. They also spent time in
159:, to Charles Roswell Bacon and Elizabeth Chase Bacon. She was the first of three children but raised an only child after her two younger brothers died in infancy. Bacon's parents were both artists and met while attending the
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in New York. Her father, an errand boy for
Tiffany's during his childhood, painted landscapes and figures in adulthood while her mother was a miniaturist. Both of her parents were very well read; they loved reading
386:. The exhibit traced her associations using photographs, letters, graphics, and archival documents from the Archives of American Art to illustrate Baconβs connection to dozens of other prominent artists.
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In addition to her artistic career, Bacon taught extensively during the 1930s and 1940s at various institutions, including the
Fieldston School, the Art Students League, Hunter College, the
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as there was no one teaching etching at the Art
Students League at the time. Bacon's first caricature prints were featured in the single-issue, satirical magazine
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and in 1980 the
Academy awarded her a gold medal for her lifelong contribution to illustration and graphic art. In 1947, Bacon was elected into the
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In the summer of 1919, Bacon studied with Andrew
Dasburg in Woodstock, New York. That same summer she was engaged to American painter
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and she exhibited in galleries and museums frequently. Bacon had over thirty solo exhibitions at such venues as
Montross Gallery,
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A Finding Aid to the Peggy Bacon papers, 1893-1973, bulk 1900-1936, in the Archives of American Art, Smithsonian Institution
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as an Associate member, and became a full member in 1969. In December 1975, the National Collection of Fine Arts, now the
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216:. While at the League, Bacon became friends with several other artists. Her circle of friends and acquaintances included
722:"Untitled manuscript on caricature," Bacon papers, George Arents Research library, Syracuse University, cited in: 1992.
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personality, the whole drawing imparting a spicy and clairvoyant comment upon the subject's peculiarities.
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and published her first caricatures in the student magazine. They soon appeared in publications such as
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Bacon was a very prolific artist. In 1919, at the age of 24, she wrote and illustrated her first book,
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537:"Catalogue of the First Annual Exhibition of the Society of Independent Artists, April 10-May 6, 1917"
251:(April 10-May 6, 1917). Around 1917 Bacon also became interested in printmaking and taught herself
120:(May 2, 1895 β January 4, 1987) was an American artist, best known for her satirical caricatures.
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Tarbell, Roberta (1988). "Peggy Bacon's Pastel and Charcoal Caricature Portraits".
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in Washington, D.C., and summers at the School of Music and Art in Stowe, Vermont.
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in 1952 for best novel. Bacon's popular drawings appeared in magazines such as
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In the 1970s Bacon's eyesight began failing and she eventually went to live in
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For the English radio and television producer and radio presenter, see
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764:"It's a Small World After All: "Six Degrees of Peggy Bacon""
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739:"Peggy Bacon, 91, Illustrator and Author of Gentle Satires"
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Donald W. Reynolds Center for American Art and Portraiture
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in Woodstock. In 1940, Bacon and her husband divorced.
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and participated in many of their annual exhibitions.
425:"Oral history interview with Peggy Bacon, 1973 May 8"
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Members of the American Academy of Arts and Letters
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519:"Peggy Bacon papers, 1893-1973, bulk 1900-1963"
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180:At the age of fourteen, Bacon began attending
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322:. In 1942 she was granted an award from the
654:John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation.
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626:"The true philosopher and other cat tales"
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455:"Oral History Interview with Peggy Bacon"
318:, which was published that same year by
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284:The True Philosopher and Other Cat Tales
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374:. She died in 1987 at the age of 91 in
147:for creative work in the graphic arts.
879:Art Students League of New York alumni
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681:American Academy of Arts and Letters.
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829:Internet Speculative Fiction Database
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914:20th-century American women painters
874:Artists from Ridgefield, Connecticut
459:Smithsonian Archives of American Art
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884:20th-century American women writers
737:McQuiston, John (January 7, 1987).
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904:20th-century American illustrators
700:Smithsonian Institution Archives.
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155:Bacon was born on May 2, 1895, in
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726:6 (4): 17. Retrieved 9 July 2012.
702:""Peggy Bacon" opens at the NCFA"
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349:Bacon's philosophy of caricatures
240:, Dick Dyer, David Morrison, and
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484:Encyclopedia of World Biography
332:National Museum of American Art
320:Robert M. McBride & Company
246:First Annual Exhibition of the
129:Art Students League of New York
894:20th-century American painters
641:"Edgar Awards throughout time"
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453:Cummings, Paul (May 8, 1973).
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801:Works by or about Peggy Bacon
624:Bacon, Peggy (July 6, 1919).
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899:American women illustrators
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480:"Peggy Bacon Biography"
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486:. The Gale Group. 2004
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118:Margaret Frances Bacon
111:Painting, illustration
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366:Later life and legacy
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316:Off With Their Heads!
292:Edgar Allan Poe Award
145:Guggenheim Fellowship
810:Works by Peggy Bacon
792:Works by Peggy Bacon
372:Cape Porpoise, Maine
269:the Downtown Gallery
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125:Kenneth Hayes Miller
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838:Library of Congress
568:Woman's Art Journal
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214:Art Students League
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662:on January 3, 2013
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186:Summit, New Jersey
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768:Smithsonian
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523:Finding Aid
360:Peggy Bacon
308:Vanity Fair
222:Anne Rector
166:Henry James
141:Vanity Fair
98:Nationality
61:May 2, 1895
32:Peggy Bacon
853:Categories
490:August 24,
390:References
382:exhibited
234:Molly Luce
206:John Sloan
57:1895-05-02
773:March 11,
656:"Fellows"
464:March 11,
814:LibriVox
748:July 26,
707:July 26,
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609:July 10,
431:July 10,
358:β
261:Bad News
257:Bad News
253:drypoint
133:drypoint
102:American
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304:Fortune
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