Manuel Tolegian

Manuel Tolegian  10 x13 watercolor on paper, year 1941 full image

Manuel Tolegian, 10×13 inches,  watercolor on paper, 1941

Manuel Tolegian

Born in Fresno, CA on October 18, 1911, Tolegian moved to Los Angeles at age nine and first studied art there at Manual Arts High School under Frederick Schwankovsky. He then contined at the Art Students League of New York City with John Sloan, Thomas H. Benton, John S. Curry, and George Grosz. He was a boyhood firned of writer Wm Soroyan for whomhe wrote the folk music to his Pulitzer prize-winning play “Time of your Life.” Tolegian’s book illustrations include Omar Khayyam’s and The Dove Brings Peace. During WWII he was a correspondent in the US Army Medical Corps. After the war he settled in Sherman Oaks, CA where he reamined until his death on August 4, 1983. A Social-Realist during the 1930s, he then painted social protest scenes and later in life specialized in realistic still lifes. He was also a writer, musician, and inventor of the first power easel.

Exhibited: PAFA, 1938; AIC, 1938, 1943; Ny World’s Fair, 1939; GGIE, 1939; Crocker Art Gallery, 1941; SFAA, 1941; CGA, 1939, 1941, 1943; SFMA, 1941.

Works Held: CPLH; Crocker Museum; University of Arizona; Chico Public Library, California; Phillips Gallery, Washington, DC.

Artist Details

  • Manuel Tolegian: United States
  • Date: 1911-1983
  • Category: Realism
Menu