Hernando Villa

Hernando G Villa - Watercolor Illustration- WWI Patriotic Rally P3209

Regular price $1,200.00

Is this a theater all ready to show newsreel footage of the fighting in France? Certainly it is a great turnout, a big event, and the young painter gives it his all as he imagines it.

Measures 20" x 13 1/2" on card.

Biography   Hernando Villa

Hernando Gonzallo Villa (1881 - 1952) was active/lived in California.  Hernando Villa is known for Hispanic and Indian figure, missions.

Born in Los Angeles, CA on Oct. 1, 1881, the son of Esiquia and Miguel de Villa. His parents came to Los Angeles from Baja California in 1846 when the area was still part of Mexico. Raised in an artistic milieu, his mother was an amateur singer and his father an artist with a studio on the Plaza. Villa studied locally under Louise Garden-MacLeod at the School of Art & Design in 1905, and later taught there after studying for one year in England and Germany. He established a studio in Los Angeles and worked as a commercial artist and illustrator for the Santa Fe Railroad for 40 years. He died in Los Angeles on May 7, 1952. Equally facile with oil, watercolor, pastel, and charcoal, he produced scenes of the Old West, Indians, missions, and the Mexican vaqueros. Villa's most famous work is the emblem of the Santa Fe Railroad, The Chief. Exh: Alaska-Yukon Expo (Seattle), 1909; PPIE, 1915 (gold medal for mural); Royar's Frame Shop (LA), 1934; El Paseo Inn (LA), 1935

Source: Edan Hughes, "Artists in California, 1786-1940"
Southern California Artists (Nancy Moure); Artists of the American West (Samuels); Calif. Design, 1910.

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