Raphael GLEITSMANN

1910–1995, USA

Biography

Discover the life and artistic journey of Raphael GLEITSMANN (born 1910, USA, died 1995), including key biographical details that provide essential context for signature authentication and artwork verification. Understanding an artist's background, artistic periods, and career timeline is crucial for distinguishing authentic signatures from forgeries.

Born in Dayton, Gleitsmann moved to akron at an early age when his father, an architectural engineer and amateur painter, secured a job in the Akron area. After graduating from high school, he took private drawing lessons for one year with Katherine Calvin. Lacking the funds for tuition, he accepted the invitation of Paul Travis to attend classes informally at the Cleveland School of Art and became friends with other artists there. Primarily a landscape painter, he first exhibited in the annual of the Butler Institute of Art in Youngstown (1936) and had his first solo show at the Massillon Museum (1939) He also exhibited at the New York World's Fair that year. The Little Gallery of Cleveland College organized his second solo exhibition (1940). In 1943 he began an association with Macbeth Galleries in New York, where he was featured in solo exhibitions (1940's-50's). He exhibited in the annuals of the Art Institute of Chicago (1937-49), Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts in Philadelphia (1944-52), and Carnegie Institute of Art in Pittsburgh (1943-48). In 1944 - 45 he served in the U.S.Army as combat engineer in europe, an experience that profoundly affected his subsequent subject matter. Previously specializing in American scene depictions, after the war he created images inspired by the bombed cities of Europe. In the late 1940's and early 1950's he taught studion courses at the Akron Art Instituteand continued to exhibit on a regular basis. The Akron Art Institue mounted a solo exhibition of his paintings (1948). By the early 1960's Gleitsmann had stopped painting "for reasons known entirely only to himself." "Transformations in Cleveland Art 1796-1946" The Cleveland Museum of Art, William H. Robinson and David Steinberg, 1996

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