Lily Harmon Art
Lily Harmon, whose original name was Lily Perlmutter, was born in 1912 in New Haven. She studied art at the Yale School of Art in New Haven, then at the Académie Colarossi in Paris and the Art Students League in New York. By the early 1930s, she was working in a Social Realist style that with adjustments would be the mainstay of her work. Ms. Harmon's art could lean toward social satire similar to Philip Evergood, or scenes of poetic introspection, like some of Philip Guston's early works. But it usually followed a tradition of sympathetic portraiture personified by Raphael Soyer, becoming increasingly refined in the 1970s. Her subjects tended to be relatives or art-world friends like her grandmother, the painter Helen Frankenthaler, Mimi Gross and the mother of her first husband, Philip Graham Harden, shown in a work from 1931 titled My Nude Mother-in-Law. Lily Harmon had her first solo exhibition at the Associated American Artists Gallery in New York in 1944. She met the millionaire Joseph Hirshhorn, one of the most active art collectors of his generation, in the early 1940s when he visited her studio to see her paintings. They were married in 1945 and adopted two infant daughters, in 1946 and 1950. The marriage ended in divorce in 1956. Ms. Harmon exhibited regularly in surveys of contemporary American art in museums across the country, including the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York, the Corcoran Gallery of Art in Washington and the Carnegie Institute in Pittsburgh. In 1982, a 50-year retrospective organized by the Wichita Art Museum in Kansas traveled to the Provincetown Art Association in Massachusetts and the Butler Institute of American Art in Youngstown, Ohio. In December, the Butler Institute mounted a second show, devoted to the found-object assemblages and collages that Ms. Harmon made intermittently in the 1960s and 70s. Lily Harmon is represented in public collections, including the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the Whitney Museum, the Jewish Museum in New York City, the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden in Washington. From 1945–76, Lily Harmon illustrated books, most notably works by André Gide, Jean-Paul Sartre, Thomas Mann, Edith Wharton and Franz Kafka. Freehand, her autobiography, was published in 1981 by Simon & Schuster. She died on February 11, 1998, in New York.
1950s Expressionist Lily Harmon Art
Canvas, Oil, Graphite
1950s Lily Harmon Art
Lithograph
1950s Lily Harmon Art
Lithograph
Mid-20th Century American Modern Lily Harmon Art
Ink, Gouache, Board
1960s Abstract Expressionist Lily Harmon Art
Canvas, Acrylic, Gouache
1930s Expressionist Lily Harmon Art
Canvas, Paper, Oil
1970s Abstract Lily Harmon Art
Lithograph
Mid-20th Century American Modern Lily Harmon Art
Gouache, Paper
1930s American Modern Lily Harmon Art
Gouache, Board, Watercolor
1970s Pop Art Lily Harmon Art
Lithograph
1970s Abstract Lily Harmon Art
Lithograph
1970s Pop Art Lily Harmon Art
Lithograph
1930s American Modern Lily Harmon Art
Gouache, Board
Mid-20th Century American Modern Lily Harmon Art
Paper, Gouache
20th Century Folk Art Lily Harmon Art
Lithograph
Mid-20th Century American Modern Lily Harmon Art
Paper, Gouache
1940s Modern Lily Harmon Art
Oil, Canvas