Jerome Myers

Jerome Myers
Jerome Myers ca. 1910
Born(1867-03-20)March 20, 1867
DiedJune 19, 1940(1940-06-19) (aged 73)
NationalityAmerican
EducationCooper Union, Art Students League
Known forPainting, drawing, pastels, etching
Notable work
  • Their Life (aka End Of The Walk) (1907)
  • Sunday Morning (1907)
  • The Mission Tent (1906)
  • Italians In Jefferson Park (1934)
MovementNew York Realists, Ashcan School
SpouseEthel Myers

Jerome Myers (March 20, 1867 – June 19, 1940) was an American artist and writer associated with the Ashcan School, particularly known for his sympathetic depictions of the urban landscape and its people.[1] He was one of the main organizers of the 1913 Armory Show, which introduced European modernism to America.[2]

Born in Petersburg, Virginia, and raised in Philadelphia, Trenton and Baltimore, he spent his adult life in New York City. Myers worked briefly as an actor and scene painter. He then studied art for a year at Cooper Union followed by study at the Art Students League over a period of eight years where his main teacher was George de Forest Brush. In 1896 he went to Paris, but only stayed a few months, believing that his main classroom was the streets of New York's Lower East Side. His strong interest and feelings for the new immigrants resulted in over a thousand drawings, as well as paintings, etchings and watercolors that depicted their lives outside of the tenements which were their first homes in America.

In a 1923 magazine article he explained why cities were his greatest source of inspiration:

All my life I had lived, worked and played in the poorest streets of American cities. I knew them and their population and was one of them. Others saw ugliness and degradation there, I saw poetry and beauty, so I came back to them. I took a sporting chance of saying something out of my own experience and risking whether it was worthwhile or not. That is all any artist can do.[3]

  1. ^ "Jerome Myers". Smithsonian American Art Museum and Renwick Gallery. Smithsonian Institution. Retrieved 1 February 2013.
  2. ^ "1913 Armory Show: The Story in Primary Sources". Archives of American Art, Smithsonian Institution. Retrieved 1 February 2013.
  3. ^ "The Life Song of the People: Paintings and Sketches by Jerome Myers". The Survey: 33–39. October 1, 1923.