Artist

Philip C. Curtis

born Jackson, MI 1907-died Scottsdale, AZ 2000
Media - portrait_image_113626.jpg - 90335
Courtesy The Philip C. Curtis Charitable Trust for the Encouragement of Art
Also known as
  • Phil Curtis
  • Philip Campbell Curtis
  • Philip Curtis
Born
Jackson, Michigan, United States
Died
Scottsdale, Arizona, United States
Biography

Philip C. Curtis followed in his father’s footsteps and went to law school, but an art class led him to transfer to the School of Fine Arts at Yale University. The Works Progress Administration hired him as a mural supervisor in New York, then sent him to Phoenix, Arizona, to establish the state’s first art center. Curtis thrived on this job, creating traveling exhibitions and art classes that eventually led to the founding of the Phoenix Art Museum. He wanted his images to be puzzling and once, when asked whether people in his painting of an elevator were going up or down, replied, “How the hell should I know? For all I know, they could be stuck.” (Ruben, “Setting the Stage,” American Dreamer: The Art of Philip C. Curtis, 1999)

Works by this artist (2 items)

Roland Clark, Sundown, ca. 1927, etching on paper, Smithsonian American Art Museum, Gift of Chicago Society of Etchers, 1935.13.56
Sundown
Dateca. 1927
etching on paper
Not on view
Roland Clark, A Mallard Marsh, n.d., drypoint, Smithsonian American Art Museum, Gift of Chicago Society of Etchers, 1935.13.57
A Mallard Marsh
Daten.d.
drypoint
Not on view