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  2. John Stango - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Stango

    Later, Stango began to create silk screen T-shirts. Eventually he turned his attention and energy to painting full-time. [2] [3] Currently he works out of a historic warehouse outside of Philadelphia. Stango paints in the vein of such artists as Andy Warhol, Jean-Michel Basquiat, Robert Rauschenberg, Roy Lichtenstein, LeRoy Neiman, and Peter ...

  3. Hyman J. Warsager - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hyman_J._Warsager

    In 1939, Velonis, Warsager and other artists co-founded the Creative Printmakers Group in New York City. [20] [21] About this group, Sylvie Covey wrote in Modern Printmaking: A Guide to Traditional and Digital Techniques: "The group's shared screen-printing studio introduced the silkscreen process to many serious artists who went there to have editions printed.

  4. Max Arthur Cohn - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Max_Arthur_Cohn

    Cohn's works are in MoMa New York, the Metropolitan Museum of Art, [10] the Art Institute of Chicago, [11] the Whitney Museum of American Art, [12] the National Gallery of Art, [13] and the Philadelphia Museum of Art. [14] With Jacob Israel Biegeleisen he authored Silk Screen Stenciling as a Fine Art (1942), expanded to Silk Screen Techniques ...

  5. Elizabeth Olds - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elizabeth_Olds

    Carl Zigrosser, who was curator of prints and drawings at the Philadelphia Museum of Art from 1940 through 1963, wrote from the vantage point of 1941 that: "The first serigraph actually made on the newly organized (WPA) New York Silk Screen Project was The Concert by Olds. . . .She is an accomplished graphic artist and has made a considerable ...

  6. National Serigraph Society - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/National_Serigraph_Society

    [1] [2] [3] The creation of the society coincided with the rise of serigraphs being used as a medium for fine art. [4] Originally called the Silk Screen Group, the name was soon changed to the National Serigraph Society. [5] The National Serigraph Society had its own gallery, the Serigraph Gallery at 38 West 57th Street in New York City. [6]

  7. Anthony Velonis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anthony_Velonis

    Zigrosser continued: "Late in 1938, in spite of some opposition and through the missionary work of the Public Use of Arts Committee and the United American Artists, a separate Silk Screen Unit, with Anthony Velonis at its head, was established as a branch of the Graphic Section of the New York City W.P.A. Art Project.

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  9. Harry Sternberg - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Harry_Sternberg

    He was born in New York City on July 19, 1904. [1] Harry, the youngest of eight children, was born in his family's tenement apartment on the Lower East Side of New York. [2] [3] The family moved to Brooklyn in 1910 and Harry began orthodox Jewish religious training. At the age of nine he began to take art classes at the Brooklyn Museum of Art.