Charles Kerins | |
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Born | December 7, 1915 Brookline, Massachusetts |
Died | January 1988 Pocasset, Massachusetts |
Nationality | United States |
Influenced by | Cyrus Dallin |
Charles M. Kerins (December 7, 1915–January 1988) American illustrator and painter.
Kerins is a listed artist. He graduated from the Massachusetts College of Art and Northeastern University. Twice married, he was named one of America's Top 100 Illustrators by the Chicago Art Directors Club in 1956. Kerins studied under sculptor Cyrus Dallin who had a profound affect on the artist's attention to anatomy in his paintings.
Kerins chronicled the idealized American dream of the 1950s and 1960s in paintings which appeared as covers for Boston Red Sox Yearbooks, Converse Yearbooks, Catholic Boy magazine and ads in the Saturday Evening Post, Life, Look, and National Geographic magazine. Oil portraits constituted much of his body of work. Portraits include; Wifred L. O'Leary, John F. Kennedy, Richard Cushing, Joseph Martin, Pope John XXIII among others. Kerins' studios were at Scituate, Massachusetts and Pocasset, Massachusetts.
In classical tradition, Kerins worked from live models and used many local people, including a young Mark Goddard of Lost in Space. Working with both Speed Graphic and Polaroid cameras, the artist used photo references as well as life drawings in the creation of his paintings.
Hallmarks of the artist's work are excellent anatomy and dynamic action. Though Kerins style is unique, it is sometimes compared to Illustrators Norman Rockwell and Harry Anderson.
Charles Kerins wife Kathryn, mother of his eldest 4 children, was his agent for more than thirty years. Later in life he married Dona and had five more children.