Carl Rudolph Krafft was born in 1884 in Reading, Ohio, and his family moved to Chicago, Illinois, in the early 1900s. Early in his career, he studied for the ministry but decided to enter the commercial art field. Krafft studied at the Art Institute of Chicago and at the Chicago Fine Arts Academy.
In 1912, Krafft and painter Rudolph Ingerle traveled to the Ozark Mountains in south-central Missouri to find subjects for paintings. In 1913, they founded an artists’ society there, the Ozark Society of Painters. The landscapes and hazy atmosphere of the Ozarks are what drew Krafft and his fellow artists. Krafft painted in the Ozarks for more than two decades, and the area that Krafft depicted was near the town of Arcadia and along the Gasconade River.
The first painting that brought Krafft attention was The Charms of the Ozarks, which was awarded a $500 prize in the 1916 Art Institute annual exhibition for Chicago artists.
Krafft was also a member of the Palette and Chisel Club, Municipal Art League (founder), the Society of Painters of the Forest Preserve (founder), Society of Ozark Painters (founder and president in 1915), and Art League of Oak Park, of which he was founder and president from 1921 to 1922.
Later in his career, Krafft began showing his work outside the Midwest, in places such as New York, between 1912 and 1938.
Krafft died in 1938 in Oak Park, Illinois.
Organized by Art Institute of Chicago
Organized by Art Institute of Chicago
Organized by Allied Artists of America
Organized by Art Institute of Chicago
Organized by Art Institute of Chicago
Organized by Art Institute of Chicago
Organized by Art Institute of Chicago
Organized by Allied Artists of America
Organized by Art Institute of Chicago
Organized by Art Institute of Chicago
Headshot | Person | Dates | Actions |
---|---|---|---|
Vincent Richard Campanella1915 - 2001 | Kansas City 1949-1952 Parkville 1952-2001 | M |
Headshot | Person | Dates | Actions |
---|---|---|---|
Vincent Richard Campanella1915 - 2001 | Kansas City 1949-1952 Parkville 1952-2001 | M |
Artist clippings file is available at:
William H. Gerdts, Art Across America: Two Centuries of Regional Painting, 1710-1920 (New York: Abbeville Press, 1990).
Anita Jacobsen, Jacobsen's Biographical Index of American Artists (Carrollton: A.J. Publications, 2002).
Peter H. Falk, et. al, Who was Who in American Art, 1564-1975: 400 Years of Artists in America (Madison: Sound View Press, 1999).
Carl Krafft, Ozark Zephyrs, 1915.
Oil on canvas, 46 1/8 x 60 in.
M. Christine Schwartz Collection
Carl Rudolph Krafft, Night Scene, n.d.
Oil on canvas, 24 x 17 1/2 in
Dayton Art Institute, museum purchase with funds provided by the 2006 Associate Board Art Ball, 2006.27.
Carl Rudolph Krafft, circa 1916.
Carl Krafft, from a photograph reproduced in Lena McCauley, "A Painter Poet of the Ozarks," Fine Arts Journal 34 (Oct. 1916).
Tracey Boswell
Published on September 20, 2021
Artist clippings file is available at:
William H. Gerdts, Art Across America: Two Centuries of Regional Painting, 1710-1920 (New York: Abbeville Press, 1990).
Anita Jacobsen, Jacobsen's Biographical Index of American Artists (Carrollton: A.J. Publications, 2002).
Peter H. Falk, et. al, Who was Who in American Art, 1564-1975: 400 Years of Artists in America (Madison: Sound View Press, 1999).
Tracey Boswell
Published on September 20, 2021
Updated on None
Boswell, Tracey. "Carl R. Krafft." In Missouri Remembers: Artists in Missouri through 1951. Kansas City: The Kansas City Art Institute and The Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art; St. Louis: The St. Louis Public Library, 2021, https://doi.org/10.37764/5776.