John Marshall (sculptor)

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John "Jack" Marshall was an American artist best known for his sculptures.

Biography[]

Marshall was born in Quincy, Massachusetts, on February 27, 1932, son of Francis J. and Josephine (Ghigli) Marshall. He enlisted in the U.S. Army for three years as a linguistic specialist and was honorably discharged June 5, 1951.

He received a Bachelor of Arts degree in design from the Massachusetts College of Art. He obtained a graduate degree from Boston University in studio arts and one from the Yale School of Architecture in environmental design and installation art on a full scholarship.

He died on July 7, 2009, at his home in Keene, New Hampshire, at the age of 77.

Achievements[]

Marshall held patents for the “Foam Method of Cementitious Casting” and “A Fiber-Optic Perception Device.”

His awards include: first place award in sculpture: and , four prizes for sculpture at at in New Canaan, Connecticut, the and a Ford Foundation Purchase Award. He also received grants from: , , , , DuPont Corp., Union Carbide Corp., the and the Comune di Santa Croce sull’Arno for a traveling exhibit throughout Tuscany.

Marshall's works have been shown regionally at the in Brockton, Massachusetts, DeCordova Museum in Lincoln, Massachusetts, in Cambridge, and Carl Siembab, Sunne Savage and Ellie Reiglehaupt Galleries on Newbury Street in Boston; in New York City at the Whitney Biennial, the Awards Exhibit of the American Academy and Institute of Arts and Letters, the American Institute of Architecture, Lever House, The New School, and most recently in a solo show at in SoHo, Manhattan. In Europe he has had shows in Milan, Pisa, Florence, Copenhagen, Geneva and Zurich. His work is in numerous collections, many of which are monumental commissions: public and private in this country and internationally. He recently retired professor emeritus from teaching after almost 30 years as director of 3-D Studies at Keene State College, prior to which he had taught at the schools of Art and Architecture at Yale, the New School for Social Research and Manhattanville College. He had studios in Keene, New Hampshire, and Carrara, Italy.

References[]

  • Reynolds, Mark (July 10, 2009), "Jack Marshall, Emeritus Professor of Art", KSC Newsline, Keene State College
  • Jones, Cynthia (May 4, 1986), "Humor and expressions, not limitations: Multimedia artist scorns specialization to create all-encompassing environment. From Keene to Italy following his muse: Marshall develops distinctive style since N.H. move", The Telegraph (Nashua)
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