Jozef Bakos
Jozef G. Bakos | |
---|---|
Born |
Buffalo, New York | September 23, 1891
Died |
April 25, 1977 85) Santa Fe, New Mexico | (aged
Resting place | Rosario Cemetery (Santa Fe, NM) |
Nationality | American |
Education | John E. Thompson |
Alma mater | Albright-knox |
Known for | Painting |
Style | Modernism |
Movement | Los Cinco Pintores |
Spouse(s) | Teresa Bakos |
Jozef Bakos (1891–1977) was an American painter of Polish origin, best known for his Western landscapes.
Bakos was one of Los Cinco Pintores, who worked in Santa Fe, New Mexico. Bakos studied art with John E. Thompson at the Albright Art Institute in Buffalo, New York. He later followed Thompson to Colorado and taught at the University of Colorado, Boulder.
In 1920 during a break from teaching, Bakos visited Walter Mruk, a childhood friend and artist who was living in Santa Fe. During his stay he exhibited some paintings together with Mruk at the Museum of Fine Arts. Following his relocation to New Mexico, Bakos worked for the U.S. Forest Service stationed at what is now Bandelier National Monument.[1] The next year Bakos formed an artists' group called "Los Cinco Pintores" (the five painters) with Mruk, Fremont Ellis, Willard Nash, and Will Shuster. Los Cinco Pintores was Santa Fe's first Modernist art group and produced works that depicted specifically American subjects such as the New Mexico landscape, local adobe architecture and Native American ceremonial dances. In 1923 Bakos married another artist, Teresa Bakos, and they spent a good portion of their lives together.[2]
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