Frederick Gill has a very impressive listing in Who Was Who in American Art.
He earned a BFA from the University of Pennsylvania, 1929; he studied with
Charles Woodbury, summer 1931 & 1932; Tyler School of Art, MFA, 1953.
He exhibited mainly in Pennsylvania, won many prizes , both for his work in
oils and watercolor. He was honored with a (retrospective) by the Wallingford
(PA) Art Center, and was included in the exhibition "200 Years of
Watercolor in America, at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, NYC, 1967.
He was a teacher in oils, acrylics and watercolors in various Philadelphia
art schools from 1930 - 1967.
Frederick James Gill was born in May of 1906 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
Gill's media includes acrylics and watercolors. Not only is Gill a painter,
having studied at the Pennsylvania Museum School of Art, the University of
Pennsylvania and The Tyler School of Art, but he is also an avid jazz
saxophonist. Gill's works were first presented through the Philadelphia
Watercolor Club's traveling exhibitions in 1942. Gill's exhibitions went on to
include the Metropolitan Museum of Art, American Academy of Arts and Letters,
Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, Butler Art Institute and one-man shows at
the Philadelphia Art Alliance. His works are in many private collections
including the Philadelphia Museum of Art, Lehigh University, Temple University,
Temple School of Pharmacy and Beaver College. This strong collegiate bond was
evidenced also in his love for teaching, doing so from 1955 until 1974. Most of
Gill's paintings were influenced by his love of jazz, from his abstract
compositions to his improvisations with flowers, to his theories on landscapes,
Frederick Gill was an artist who chose to play it by ear. Mr. Gill died in 1974
at the age of 68.
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