Mark Freeman

For the MLB player, see Mark Freeman (baseball).
Mark Freeman
Born September 27, 1908
Zaleszczyki, Austria
Died February 6, 2003 (aged 94)
New York City, U.S.
Nationality American
Education Columbia University
Sorbonne
National Academy of Design
Known for Painting, Printmaking

Mark Freeman (Sept. 27, 1908 Feb. 6, 2003) was an Austrian-born American artist, "whose prints and paintings from the 1930s chronicle a seminal period of New York City’s architectural growth in a style that has been described (by Will Barnet) as a beautiful blend of the poetic and historical."[1][2]

Biography

Freeman was born in 1908 in Zaleszczyki, Austria, and came to New York in January 1923.

Freeman had a BA from Columbia College, a Bachelor of Architecture from Columbia University, a Master of Architecture from Columbia, and a Diploma of Art and Archaeology from the Sorbonne in Paris. He also studied at the National Academy of Design.[3]

He and his wife Polly Allen (who died before him) were married for 67 years. They had two sons and seven grandchildren.[1] Freeman died in 2003 in New York City.

Administrative art offices

Awards

Selected exhibitions

Represented in permanent collections

References

Bibliography

External links