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Milton Menasco
Milton Menasco (1890 – 1974) was an American painter and
art director of silent movies born in Los Angeles, California.
Born in 1890 in Los Angeles, Menasco began his art career in the
early days of Hollywood and described his work then as the "blood
and thunder" posters which enticed movie fans into theaters
to watch the first silent pictures. He was commissioned for mural
paintings at the Palace of Fine Arts in San Francisco for the World's
Fair in 1915.
His vivid use of colors and graphics won him recognition in Hollywood,
where he worked on 33 films--29 times as art director and twice
as set director. In 1925 he was the architecture and set director
for the original Sir Arthur Conan Doyle "The Lost World"
film. This film received accolades for its innovative art direction
and special effects. To quote one review in the NewTimes: "And
while Harry O. Hoyt is credited as director, a host of fellow auteurs
must take credit for Lost World's still impressive thrills, especially
the effects work of Willis O'Brien (who would later animate King
Kong in 1933) and the wild set design from Milton Menasco."
A complete list of Menasco's film credits is given here.
In 1925 Menasco went to New York as art director for a film making
company and turned to advertising. He also painted portraits and
water colors of horses and ships during this time which he sold
in the City's galleries. During World War II, Life Magazine commissioned
him to draw air and sea battles to chronicle the wars in Europe
and the Pacific.
After the war, Mr. Menasco moved to Kentucky to devote himself
entirely to his real love, horse portraiture. Here he painted the
equine racing greats of the nation and helped with art direction
at the Thoroughbred Record and Sporting News. He and his wife purchased
a farm where an old brick house built in the 18th Century served
for many years as his studio. He delighted in the change of the
seasons, the beauty of the landscape, and the variety of foliage
and animal life that he encountered there.
Horsemen admired the richness and feeling reflected in Menasco's
paintings, and his clients included John Hay Whitney, Mrs. Dodge
Sloane, President Ronald Reagan and Mrs. Richard DuPont. One of
his first large paintings was for Mrs. Gene Markey and included
nine Calumet horses, Citation, Coaltown, Bewitch and company, grouped
in the track with exercise boys up.
In 1953 he painted 'La Troienne' and Her Foals: Eighteen Vignettes
and One Painting Together in One Frame for John Whitney. The painting
was exhibited at the New York Metropolitan Museum of Art and the
National Museum of Racing in Saratoga. In 1999 it sold from the
estate of Mrs. John Hay Whitney through Sotheby's Auction House
for 74,000 pounds (ca.$120,000).
In 1957, Menasco painted Doubledogdare and Delta for A.B. Hancock
Jr. The artist explained that although the actual painting had taken
him about three months to complete, "behind it goes all the
training, study and experience of my life."
A distinguishing mark of Menasco's paintings is the detail to sky
and landscape backgrounds. A perfect example of this detail is apparent
in Nashua, with Eddie Arcaro up, painted by Menasco at Hialeah for
Leslie Combs II. The background shows the track and a ring of palm
trees.
Mr. Menasco died died on June 7, 1974 of a heart attack at his
farm in Versailles, Kentucky.
The paintings are the excellent portrayal of the events and scenes
that we see around us. The painters are the best cameras of the
world. They reproduce many different types of pictures. They even
draw imaginary pictures that do not exist in this world. We tend
to use both thinned oil paints and dense oil paints. Masterpieces
can be dyed more than once, but each time it may be different from
the existing paintings.h
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