Samuel David Smith (born Thorndale, Texas, on February 11, 1918 — May 23, 1999)[1] was an American artist.

Sam Smith
Sam Smith
Born
Samuel David Smith

(1918-02-11)11 February 1918
Died23 May 1999(1999-05-23) (aged 81)
Resting placeNavajo Lake, NM
NationalityAmerican
Known forPainting, Drawing, Sculpture, Printmaking, Gun engraving
Spouse(s)Harriette Holley Hening (1948–74),
Elizabeth Childers Black (1978-99)

Early life edit

He was born February 11, 1918, in Thorndale, Texas, to Otto Franklin Smith and Jeanette Joyce. His paternal grandmother, Caroline Daugherty, was the half sister of Charles Goodnight Jr. the famous Texas cattle baron. Sam's father was a carpenter and building contractor. His mother Jeanette was a school teacher. Sam had two siblings, his sister, Marian Jeanette Smith (Messemer) and a half brother, Frank Vaughn Smith. Slim employment opportunities forced the family to relocate several times, finally settling in Albuquerque, New Mexico, in 1925. Sam Smith attended Albuquerque High School, but dropped out in the tenth grade at the age of 13 to apprentice himself to various New Mexico artists such as Randall Davey, Fletcher Martin, Nicolai Fechin and Carl Von Hassler.[2]

Combat artist edit

World War II brought Sam Smith the opportunity to display his talent on a large scale. He enlisted in the US Army in February, 1941 in Santa Fe, New Mexico. He attended basic training at Camp Barkeley, nine miles southwest of present-day Abilene, Texas. Here, he volunteered to paint a patriotic Texas State mural over the entrance to the camp service club.[3] His artistic ability earned him a set of orders after boot camp as an Army Combat Artist. Technical Sergeant Smith spent the rest of his time in the Army painting and sketching combat scenes in West Africa and the China-Burma-India Theater. In December 1944 he was part of a C-47 crew that was forced to bail out over South China. Rescued by local villagers, he was given shelter and secretly transported out of hostile territory. The governor of Liping County of Guizhou provided him with a document which the artist said helped him obtain assistance in reaching allied forces.

Driving armored vehicles for a long distance to Fujiyama and destroying it. Heroes take the Japanese enemy’s bodies as their meals when they are hungry, and drink the enemy’s blood when they're thirsty! On December 8, 33 of the Republic of China’s calendar year (12/8/1944),[4] a U.S. air force aircraft had an accident over Li Ping County. Six airmen bailed out from their stricken plane and parachuted safely without incident at Ba Zhou, Li Ping County. Our ally came to help us to fight the Japanese enemy from a distant land during the critical moment of war in the Gui Zhow state and the Guang Xi state. I am very grateful for their help and am encouraged by their efforts. I write this letter to thank our ally and will never forget their help!

— Commemoration to Comrade Smith From Fan Cheung Lee, Governor of Li Ping County, Gui Zhou, The Republic of China

Post War work edit

Sam Smith returned to New Mexico after the war and in March, 1948 he married Harriette Holley Hening, the daughter of Horace Brand Hening, a New Mexico pioneer resident and editor of The Albuquerque Journal and The New Mexico Stockman.[5] Smith began construction of a home and studio at 213 Utah Street in Albuquerque. In 1950 he began a teaching career as a Professor of Art[6] in the College of Fine Arts at the University of New Mexico.[7] He taught watercolor and oil painting until his retirement in 1986. Sam and Holley had three children, all born in April, three years apart: Cézanne, Rembrandt and Michelangelo. In 1962 Smith purchased a home at 432 West Colorado Ave. in Telluride, Colorado. At that time Telluride was, for the most part, a ghost town with Idarado Mining Company the only significant employer. The Smith family spent summers there and wintered over during a sabbatical the Artist took in 1963. Unfortunately, his wife Holley was plagued throughout her life by mental instability and depression. In 1974 she took her own life.[8] Sam married Elizabeth Childers Black on May 31, 1978. He sold his home in New Mexico and moved with Elizabeth to Colorado. They spent winters in Telluride and summers on a houseboat on Navajo Lake near Bloomfield, NM.

A Sam Smith Retrospective show was held in the fall of 1986 at the University of New Mexico Fine Arts Center in Albuquerque, NM.

In June, 1995 the Department of Defense 50th Anniversary of World War II Commemoration Committee honored the combat art of Smith and his fellow veteran artists with an exhibition held at the National Building Museum in Washington, DC.[9] Featured works powerfully illustrate various aspects of World War II, ranging from battle scenes to the everyday lives of military men and women. The Department of the Air Force Art Collection holds 13 of his works within their physical and online collection[10]

Smith's paintings have been exhibited at the Metropolitan Museum in New York, the Biltmore Galleries in Los Angeles, the Corcoran Gallery in Washington, D.C., the New Mexico Museum of Art in Santa Fe, the Fine Arts Galleries at the University of New Mexico and the Roswell Museum and Art Center. His work can be seen in the permanent collections of the Panhandle Plains Historical Museum in Canyon, Texas, Arlington State College in Texas, and the New Mexico State Fair Collection. His awards include the 1960 Oil Purchase Prize at the New Mexico State Fair, the Questa Purchase Prize in 1962, the Grand Award Prize at the Artist's Alpine Holiday Show in 1964 and 1965 and the Grand Award at the Black Canyon Art Exhibition in Hotchkiss, Colorado.[11]

Notable students of Sam Smith include the artists Dennis Liberty, Elaine Amsterdam Farley and Nick Abdalla.

References edit

  1. ^ State of Texas Birth Certificate
  2. ^ A Camera trip Through Camp Barkeley Texas, (A Picture Book of the Camp and its Activities). US Government.
  3. ^ Aviation Safety Network, Crash Data for C-47(DC-4) Registration Number 42-92044, Friday 8 December 1944. Flight Safety Foundation.
  4. ^ "Obituary for Smith". Albuquerque Journal. May 30, 1999. Retrieved September 9, 2012.
  5. ^ "THE UNIVERSITY OF NEW MEXICO, FACULTY LIST". Retrieved January 12, 2024.
  6. ^ "Smith, Samuel D". Artists. United States Air Force Art Collection. Archived from the original on 13 January 2017. Retrieved 10 September 2012.
  7. ^ "Deaths and Funerals". Albuquerque Journal. Albuquerque, New Mexico, USA: 82. April 11, 1974. Retrieved August 14, 2016.
  8. ^ "IN RECOGNITION OF WORLD WAR II VETERANS WHO SERVED AS COMBAT ARTISTS: DoD 50th Anniversary of WWII". the Congressional Record Online through the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]. Congressional Record Volume 141, Number 106 (Tuesday, June 27, 1995). Retrieved 10 September 2012.
  9. ^ "The United States Air Force Art Collection, Artist: Smith, Samuel D". www.afapo.hq.af.mil. Archived from the original on 30 Jan 2021. Retrieved 2024-01-12.
  10. ^ Landis, Ellen J. (1986). Albuquerque High School Collection. The Albuquerque Museum and Albuquerque High School. p. 85. ASIN B00559APC4. LCCN 86071453.

Further reading edit

  • Art and Artists of New Mexico, New Mexico Magazine, December 1957, by Ina Sizer Cassidy
  • UNM Prof Demonstrates his Art, Albuquerque Journal, Journal of the Arts, Sunday, October 31, 1971, by Flo Wilks
  • The Cowboy's Christmas Tree, 1956 by Eddy, Effie Paige, Illustrated by Sam Smith[1]

External links edit