Emma McCagg

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Emma McCagg, born Katharine Emma McCagg, is a New York-based painter and filmmaker.

Biography[]

Emma McCagg was born in Concord, Massachusetts and began making drawings as a child of which some of these appeared in her first documentary feature entitled .[1][failed verification]

McCagg attended Friends Seminary in New York City and traveled to Europe to study art. In London, she enrolled at the Byam Shaw School of Art to study painting. While there, she met Graham Nickson, a visiting professor, who would later be the Dean of the New York Studio School where McCagg would also later study. Upon returning to New York City, she attended and received a B.A. from Sarah Lawrence College. She would later attend Boston University where she obtained an MA in journalism. In between attending Sarah Lawrence College and Boston University, she worked at the Lewisboro Ledger where she did investigative reporting and was one of the first journalists to write on the Kathleen Durst disappearance.[2] Upon graduating from Boston University, she enrolled in the New York Studio School were two paintings made during this time were included in the yearly book of juried "open studios competition" entitled .[3] McCagg's two-large scale oil paintings, Julie (1997) and Patrick (1997), were selected for inclusion by the noted American art dealer, gallerist, and author Ivan Karp.[4][failed verification] She is currently represented by ,[5] Monterrey, Mexico, and by ,[6] Chicago, USA, before founder and director, , passed on in 2021.

Work by McCagg is in the collection of  [Wikidata].[7]

Awards[]

References[]

  1. ^ Victims and Villains
  2. ^ McCagg, Emma. "Kathleen Durst: The Mystery Continues." , Vol. 6, No. 8, February 24, 1982.
  3. ^ New American Paintings, June, 1997.
  4. ^ New American Paintings
  5. ^ Artfacts
  6. ^ Artfacts
  7. ^ "Artists – Museolaboratorio". Retrieved 2021-12-11.

External links[]

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