Friday, 1 March 2013

William Twigg-Smith

William Twigg-Smith
William Twigg-Smith (1883–1950) was a New Zealand-born painter, illustrator and musician, who lived most of his life in Hawaii. During World War I, he was one of the first artists to serve in the American Camouflage Corps.After the war, he worked full-time as an illustrator for the Hawaiian Sugar Planters Association. He also had solo shows, featuring his landscapes of the region. Several of his works are held by the Honolulu Museum of Art, and are in private collections.Twigg-Smith was born in Nelson, New Zealand. He left home for the U.S. to study art at age 16 at the Art Institute of Chicago under Harry M. Walcott.
William Twigg-Smith
William Twigg-Smith
William Twigg-Smith
William Twigg-Smith
William Twigg-Smith
William Twigg-Smith
William Twigg-Smith

William Twigg-Smith
 
William Twigg-Smith
William Twigg-Smith
William Twigg-Smith
        

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