
Reginald Marsh, Featured Artist
Reginald Marsh, born on March 14, 1898 in France, did not originally intend to have a career as a painter.
After graduation from Yale in 1920, he moved to New York to become an illustrator. He got a job doing cartoon reviews of vaudeville and burlesque shows for the New York Daily News and in 1925, when the New Yorker was founded, Marsh was one of its original contributors. Marsh continued to submit drawings to Vanity Fair, Harper's Bazaar, Esquire, Fortune, and Life even after he determined to be a painter in the 1920s. He also taught intermittently at the Art Students League, where he had studied in the early 1920s. A frequent traveler to Europe, Marsh adapted the techniques and spatial arrangements of Old Master painting to his own canvases, but continued to prowl New York's back streets, sketching Bowery bums, burlesque queens, and the crush of people around Union Square and 14th Street. He used compositional formats drawn from Italian Mannerist and Baroque masters in his scenes of tawdry New York life . . . and brought an underlying sympathy for the downtrodden to his often satiric compositions.
Source: Virginia M. Mecklenburg. Modern American Realism: The Sara Roby Foundation Collection. (Washington, D.C.: Smithsonian Institution Press for the National Museum of American Art, 1987).
Pictured: Reginald Marsh (1898 France1954 USA), Coney Island Beach,1953, egg tempera and ink on fiberboard, 18 x 24 in., Smithsonian American Art Museum, Gift of the Sara Roby Foundation.