Women’s History – Remembering Putnam County Artist In Residence Frances O’Brien

March 15, 2022, Brewster, New York ā€“ During Womenā€™s History month the Putnam County Historianā€™s Office is remembering Frances Oā€™Brien (1903-1990), a famous portrait artist, woodblock illustrator, as well as a published author, who lived for a time in Putnam County, New York. Born in Rochester, New York, Oā€™Brien attended Vassar College, the Corcoran Art School in Washington, D.C. (now part of George Washington University), and the Art Students League of New York. As her art career blossomed in the mid-twentieth century, she and her then-husband George GarfiĀ­eld, a lawyer and businessman, and their son Brian, kept a country home in the ā€œDoansburgā€ section of the Town of Southeast.

The Garfield family rented on Foggintown Road during the 1930s and 1940s.Ā  At the height of World War II, Oā€™Brienā€™s portrait art was used on many covers of The Saturday Review of Literature, an American weekly magazine published that focused on literary criticism but also included politics, science, and art.Ā  She profiled presidents, military leaders, authors, and artists alike in varying techniques including pen and ink drawings, paintings, and wood cut prints.Ā  An extensive collection of these portraits can be found in the Frances Oā€™Brien Collection at the University of Arizona Museum of Art & Archive of Visual Arts in Tucson, Arizona.

Following Japanā€™s attack on Pearl Harbor in 1941, Oā€™Brien teamed up with fellow local artist, Ernest Hamlin Baker, to create a series of propaganda posters under the auspices of the Putnam County War Council.Ā  Their posters were printed by The Putnam County Courier and distributed widely.Ā  Each work is signed ā€œFrancerneā€, a combination of the two artistsā€™ names. Today, these posters can be found in the collections of the National Archives and the National Museum of American History.

During her time in Putnam County, Oā€™Brien participated in exhibitions held at Memorial Hall (todayā€™s VFW Hall) in Carmel, New York, where she was a member of the Board of Governors of the Art Association of Putnam County. She showed her work alongside other notable local artists including Ada V. Gabriel, Charles Keck, Zelma Baylos, Edmund Amateis, Maude Cole, and Robert Seymour. Locally, her most popular woodblock art is of the Old Southeast Church in Southeast.

Oā€™Brien was a friend of Georgia Oā€™Keeffe, an artist who played a central role in the development of modern art in America.Ā  The two first met in the 1920s, about the time that Oā€™Keefe became the first female painter to gain respect in New York Cityā€™s art world. They remained connected for many years, even as both eventually relocated to the Southwest ā€“ Oā€™Brien to Arizona and Oā€™Keeffe to New Mexico.Ā  Following his motherā€™s death in 1990, Brian Garfield donated Frances Oā€™Brienā€™s collection of photographs and correspondence with her friend to the Georgia Oā€™KeeffĀ­e Museum in Santa Fe, New Mexico.

Throughout Womenā€™s History Month, posters documenting Oā€™Brienā€™s life and works will be on display at Brewster Public Library, the Putnam County Office Building, and the Department of Motor Vehicles.

 

Picture credits:

  • Portrait of Frances Oā€™Brien, University of Arizona Museum of Art & Archive of Visual Arts
  • Portrait of Georgia O’Keeffe by Frances O’Brien, University of Arizona Museum of Art & Archive of Visual Arts
  • WWII Salvage for Victory Poster by ā€œFrancerneā€, National Archives, IdentiĀ­fier 515334
  • H.G. Wells portrait by Frances Oā€™Brien, 1946, Saturday Review of Literature Ā© JTE Multimedia, University of Arizona Museum of Art & Archive of Visual Arts
  • Old Southeast Church, wood cut by Frances Oā€™Brien, from newspaper archives, 1941