Description |
Dancing Bear and Moose, pencil drawings
Measurements: 17"x 21"
Signed W.D. Berry '72
Frames are dirty with nicks
Bill Berry 1926-1979, born in California.
About the artist (from Berry Studios website)
Bill’s passion for the arts continued to grow, and in 1943, Bill attended the Art Center in Los Angeles. However, his studies were interrupted with the start of World War II. Bill enlisted in the U.S. Army in 1944, and spent three years in the military, but he didn’t stop recording his surroundings during this time. In fact, during his last year of service he was a cartoonist for the Pacific edition of the Stars and Stripes military newspaper.
After the war, Bill continued his artistic pursuits and attended the School of Allied Arts in Glendale for three years. Yet, most of his knowledge came from the numerous hours he spent studying and drawing the displays at the Los Angeles County Museum, so much so that the museum eventually asked him to illustrate the book, Birds of Southern California by George Wollett. Bill’s relationship with museums only grew over his lifetime, and he later went on to work as curator of science at the California Junior Museum in Sacramento, and a diorama artist for the Denver Museum of Natural History.
In 1952, Bill married Elizabeth “Liz” M. Berry. Liz was a burgeoning zoologist who later came to be an admired ceramicist. Over the course of their marriage, Liz played a key role in Bill’s career, serving as his most influential collaborator and assistant, and ultimately helping to continue Bill’s legacy long after his death in 1979. Bill’s relationship with Alaska began in April 1954, when him and Liz moved north to help their friends Ginny and Morton Wood and Celia Hunter found Camp Denali, a wilderness lodge in the heart of Denali National Park. Among his other duties, Bill quickly became the resident artist, and could often be found gallivanting around the Denali tundra with pencil and paper in hand. Though they initially only intended to spend that first summer there, Bill and Liz ended up spending the next three years living in Alaska.
At the time of his death in 1979, Bill was working on a fanciful mural for the children’s book room of the Noel Wien Library in Fairbanks. The mural was completed with the help of Bill’s friend, and nationally known illustrator, Trina Schart Hyman, with assistance from his protégé and wildlife artist, Todd Sherman, and his son, Mark. The children’s room at the library is named the Berry Room in Bill’s honor.
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