Carl Morris
Carl Morris (1911-1993)
Artist Carl Morris at Flaming Gorge, Colorado River Storage Project.
Carl Morris was born in Yorba Linda, California in 1911. He studied art at Fullerton Junior
College, the Chicago Art Institute, the Kunstgewerbeschule in Vienna, and the Vienna
Academy of Fine Art. He taught privately and at the University of Colorado and was the
director of the Federal Art Program at Spokane, Washington (1938-39). His commissions
included works for the U.S. Post Office at Eugene, Oregon, and the Hall of Religion at the
Oregon Centennial Exposition in 1959. During his career Morris received numerous awards
including the Austro-American Scholarship (1935), the Werkbund Scholarship (1939), the
Seattle Art Museum-Margaret E. Fuller Award (1946), honorable mention-Seattle Art
Museum
(1939,46,47), second prize-Seattle Art Museum (1943), and the Pepsi-Cola Bronze Metal
(1948). His works were featured in one-man and group exhibitions worldwide including at
the Foundation de Etats-Unis in Paris (1935), Paul Elder Gallery in San Francisco (1937),
Seattle Art Museum (1940), Chicago Art Institute, and the Sao Paulo (Brazil) Biennial
Exhibition (1955). Morris' works can be found in collections at the University of Colorado,
Denver Art Museum, Houston Museum of Fine Art, Seattle Art Museum, and the University
of Illinois.
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