This biography from the Archives of AskART:
| Mildred Bryant Brooks was born in Maryville, Missouri July 21, 1901, but grew up in Long Beach, California. Always desiring to be an etcher, she was finally able, in her late twenties, in 1929, with marriage and motherhood, to study that medium with artist Arthur Millier, also an art critic for the Los Angeles Times. She enjoyed a successful thirty-plus year career as an etcher, but tragically, her eyesight failed in the early 1960s, not allowing her to work in etching during the more than thirty years that remained before her death in 1995.
During her working life, Brooks produced many etchings of trees and the California landscape. Millier, in 1936, wrote that she created "America's best etchings of trees."
Brooks studied from 1921-1925 at the University of Southern California, in Los Angeles, with Frank Tolles Chamberlain. With her marriage to Don Brooks in 1924, she became a part-time student, as well as a part-time teacher there. She also attended the Otis Art Institute and Chouinard Art Institute in Los Angeles.
She was an artist-in-residence in 1946 at Pomona College, California. She taught, in 1952 and 1954, at the Los Angeles County Art Institute. Living in South Pasadena, California, and attempting to cope with her bad eyesight, Brooks tried the larger images involved in mural painting, as well as moving in another direction, interior decoration. Ill health eventually forced her into a Santa Barbara, California rest home, where she died on July 3, 1995.
Brooks was the President of the California Printmakers eight times, exhibiting frequently with the group. She had one-person exhibitions at the Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D.C. in 1936; and the Laguna Art Museum, in California, in 1975. Brooks also exhibited nationally and internationally at the National Academy of Design, New York City; Society of American Etchers, New York City; Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, Philadelphia; Library of Congress, Washington, D.C.; International Printmakers; and the Paris International, in France.
Her works are in the collections of the Los Angeles County Museum of Art; Laguna Art Museum; Fine Arts Gallery, San Diego, California; Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D.C.; National Gallery, Washington, D.C.; Cleveland Museum of Art, Ohio; University of Nebraska, Lincoln; and University of Vermont, Burlington.
In addition to twenty-two national and international awards given Mildred Bryant Brooks, she received the Pasadena Arts Council Gold Crown Artist Award in 1976.
Source: Phil Kovinick and Marian Yoshiki Kovinick, "Women Artists of the American West"
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Biography from Crocker Art Museum Store:
| Etcher. Born in Marysville, MO on July 21, 1901. In 1907 the Bryant family settled in Long Beach, CA. Mildred showed artistic talent at an early age and following high school began art studies at USC followed by classes at the Otis and Chouinard art schools. F. Tolles Chamberlin at Otis first gave her encouragement to become an etcher.
In 1924 she married Don Brooks. She began teaching at the Stickney Art School in Pasadena in 1929 and did the bulk of her etchings in the 1930s. During this time her works were awarded many prizes. At the beginning of WWII she abandoned etching since she was unable to get the necessary European etching supplies. Her years then were spent teaching and lecturing in southern California.
Mrs. Brooks died at a rest home in Santa Barbara on July 3, 1995. Member: Calif. Society of Etchers; Calif. PM Society; Chicago Society of Etchers; Society of American Etchers. Exh: Smithsonian Inst., 1936 (solo); Laguna Museum, 1975 (solo).
In: CSL; Orange Co. (CA) Museum; Cleveland Museum; NMAA; LACMA; De Young Museum; NY Public Library; Smithsonian Inst. SCA; KOV; WWAA 1936-53; So. Calif. Artists, 1890-1940; Santa
Barbara News-Press, 7-11-1995(obit).
| | Nearly 20,000 biographies can be found in Artists in California 1786-1940 by Edan Hughes and is available for sale ($150). For a full book description and order information please click here. |
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