William Jacobs Art
A Chicago native, William Jacobs was an American artist, born in 1897. He studied at the Art Institute of Chicago and Hull House. From the 1930s, through the 1950s, his works were exhibited at the “A.I.C. Regional Painters Show” and the Jewish Women's Art Club, a philanthropic organization dedicated to selling the art of midwestern painters. Jacobs was also a WPA muralist, who painted for the Chicago Public Schools. An expressionist by temperament and a modernist by conviction, William was an artist of his generation, choosing to depict the industrial symbols of Chicago and its roiling tenements, in his art. Jacobs lived in the Jewish Maxwell Street district on South Halsted and used the everyday life of his neighborhood, as source material for his work.
1950s American Impressionist William Jacobs Art
Oil Pastel
1950s American Impressionist William Jacobs Art
Oil Pastel
1930s American Impressionist William Jacobs Art
Paper, Pastel
1930s American Impressionist William Jacobs Art
Oil Pastel
21st Century and Contemporary Impressionist William Jacobs Art
Oil Pastel, Oil, Acrylic
1980s American Impressionist William Jacobs Art
Oil Pastel, Laid Paper
Early 2000s American Impressionist William Jacobs Art
Oil Pastel
2010s Impressionist William Jacobs Art
Oil Pastel, Board
2010s American Impressionist William Jacobs Art
Pastel, Board
2010s American Impressionist William Jacobs Art
Pastel, Board
Early 20th Century American Impressionist William Jacobs Art
Pastel, Archival Paper
Mid-20th Century American Impressionist William Jacobs Art
Pastel, Archival Paper
2010s American Impressionist William Jacobs Art
Pastel, Board
1910s American Impressionist William Jacobs Art
Canvas, Pastel
1940s Modern William Jacobs Art
Pastel, Watercolor, Gouache
1940s Cubist William Jacobs Art
Pastel, Watercolor, Gouache