Description
Millard Sheets: The Early Years (1926-1944)
Author: Gordon T. McClelland
Publisher: The California Regionalist Art: Information Center, 2010
It was during the Great Depression of the 1930s that artist Millard Sheets experienced a rapid rise in fame within the American Regionalist Art Movement. He was just 27 years old when art critics proclaimed him to be California’s premier Regionalist artist and one of America’s foremost watercolor painters. Sheets was a native of Southern California who grew up on a farm in Pomona and received his art instruction in Los Angeles. After traveling through Europe in 1929 he returned home and in spite of the depressed economy, he successfully launched an art career. During the 1930s he focused on creating innovative oil paintings and watercolors which captured the essence of the California scene.
This book includes listings of his many accomplishments in the field of architecture, his tile mural designs, sculptures, prints and stain glass creations. His involvement in furniture design, pottery design and commercial displays are discussed. In addition there are listings of over 30 major art exhibitions he curated and documentation regarding the art departments he developed at Scripps College, Claremont and the Otis Art Institute, Los Angeles.