Prentiss Taylor
Prentiss Taylor (December 13, 1907 – October 7, 1991) was an American illustrator, lithographer, and painter. Born in
Washington D.C., Taylor began his art studies at the
Corcoran Gallery of Art, followed by painting classes under
Charles Hawthorne in
Provincetown, Massachusetts, and training at the
Art Students League in
New York City. In 1931, Taylor began studying
lithography at the League. He became a member of one of the most important printmaking societies in America at that time, the
Society of American Graphic Artists. Taylor interacted and collaborated with many writers and musicians in his time in New York in the late 1920s and early 30s. This was in the emergence of the
Harlem Renaissance. Among his close friends and colleagues were
Langston Hughes and
Carl Van Vechten.
Taylor's work is in the collection of numerous institutions such as: the
Smithsonian Institution's
National Museum of American Art;
The Phillips Collection;
Gibbes Museum of Art;
Museum of New Mexico; the
Metropolitan Museum of Art;
Whitney Museum of American Art Fisk University Galleries and
Greenville County Museum of Art.
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