Harry Louis Freund
1905 -1999
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BORN
September 16, 1905
Clinton, Missouri
DIED
December 22, 1999
Little Rock, Arkansas
EDUCATION
GENDER
RACE / ETHNICITY
OCCUPATION
Educator

Harry Louis Freund was a well-known muralist, painter, illustrator and educator. He was born on September 16, 1905, in Clinton, Missouri. His mother was an artist who made copies of paintings, and his uncle painted miniature portraits. This provided a creative environment for him to pursue art.

After graduating from Clinton High School, Freund studied art at the University of Missouri from 1923 to 1925 with John Ankeney. He then transferred to the St. Louis School of Fine Arts at Washington University in 1925 and studied with Fred Carpenter. He graduated from there in 1929. After graduating, he was awarded the Edmund H. Wuerpel foreign travel scholarship. As a part of this scholarship, Freund went to Paris and attended the Académie Colarossi and Académie de la Grande Chaumière. He also studied under Gustav Frederick Goetsch, Henri Morisset, and Morey. After he returned to the U.S. he worked as an illustrator for a New York publishing house for two years.

Freund returned to Missouri in the early 1930s and entered competitions for mural commissions. He painted several murals in Missouri, Arkansas, and neighboring states. In 1933 he designed a mural for the State of Missouri exhibit at the Chicago World’s Fair. He also painted several murals for the U.S. Treasury, Section of Fine Arts program in the 1930s.

Freund completed the following murals for U.S. Post Offices: Wheat Farming and Chicken Hatcheries (Clinton, Missouri, 1936), Arrival of the First Train in Herington - 1885 (Herington, Kansas, 1937), Agriculture and Varied Institutes (Windsor, Missouri, 1938), Last Home of the Choctaw Nation (Idabel, Oklahoma, 1940), From Timber to Architecture (Heber Springs, Arkansas, 1939), and Early Days and First Post Office in Pocahontas (Pocahontas, Arkansas, 1939).

While working for the Works Progress Administration, Freund traveled around the Ozarks in his Model T Ford, painting and capturing life in the Ozarks. He was also a freelance illustrator for Crowell Publishing and Ford Motor Company.

H. Louis Freund  met Elsie Bates in 1936, and they married on July 6, 1939. In 1941, Elsie and H. Louis Freund founded the Art School of the Ozarks in Eureka Springs, Arkansas, and had a major role in bringing the arts there. At their school, which was inside Hatchet Hall, the former home of temperance advocate Carrie Nation, H. Louis taught painting and Elsie taught design and weaving. They ran the school until 1951.

In 1938, Freund was appointed artist in residence at Hendrix College in Conway, Arkansas, and was the head of the art department from 1941-1946. At the same time in 1940, he founded the art department at the Little Rock Junior College, now the University of Arkansas at Little Rock, and was the artist-in-residence there until 1942.

In 1940, Freund received a Carnegie Fellowship and attended Princeton University from 1940-1941. During World War II, H. Louis  served in the U.S. Army as a visual aids director for the 8th Service Command from 1943-1945, painting murals to educate recruits about Army training. After World War II, H. Louis and Elsie took classes at Colorado Springs Fine Arts Center from 1946 to 1947.

In 1949, H. Louis and Elsie moved to Deland, Florida, where Louis taught at Stetson University. He received a Carnegie-Stetson grant in 1953 and went to Mexico, and in 1959 received a Stetson University grant and went to Central America. From 1951 to 1959, H. Louis was the head of the art department.  After leaving as the head of the department, he continued as the artist-in-residence until his retirement in 1967. During this time, H. Louis and Elsie spent the winters in Florida, and the summers in Eureka Springs. After H. Louis’ retirement, the couple moved back to Eureka Springs and helped to establish the Eureka Springs Art Gallery.

H. Louis was active in artists’ organizations and served as president of the Florida Artist Group. He and his wife were also founding members of the Florida Craftsmen group, which he served as president.

H. Louis Freund died on December 22, 1999, in Little Rock, Arkansas.

IBM Exhibition

Organized by IBM

Award, Wayman Crow Medal
Award, Missouri State Fair
Award, Edmund J. Wuerpel Scholarship for Foreign Study
Award, St. Louis Artists' Guild Exhibition
Award, Missouri State Fair
Award, Arkansas Watercolor Society Exhibition
Award, Annual Arkansas Painters and Sculptors Exhibition
Award, Ozarks Art Association Exhibition
Award, Carnegie Fellowship
Award, Northwest Printmaker’s 21st Annual Exhibition
Award, Carnegie-Stetson Grant
Award, Stetson University Grant

Awards & Exhibitions 47

IBM Exhibition

Organized by IBM

Award, Wayman Crow Medal
Award, Missouri State Fair
Award, Edmund J. Wuerpel Scholarship for Foreign Study
Award, St. Louis Artists' Guild Exhibition
Award, Missouri State Fair
Award, Arkansas Watercolor Society Exhibition
Award, Annual Arkansas Painters and Sculptors Exhibition
Award, Ozarks Art Association Exhibition
Award, Carnegie Fellowship
Award, Northwest Printmaker’s 21st Annual Exhibition
Award, Carnegie-Stetson Grant
Award, Stetson University Grant

References

Artist clippings file is available at:

Bibliography

Select Sources

“Louis and Elsie Freund: Biography,” University of Central Arkansas Art Collection, accessed January 12, 2022, https://uca.edu/artcollection/louis-and-elsie-freund/.

“Artists: H. Louis Freund,” Living New Deal, accessed January 14, 2022, https://livingnewdeal.org/artists/h-louis-freund/.

“Harry Louis Freund (1905-1999)” Encyclopedia of Arkansas, accessed January 19, 2022, https://encyclopediaofarkansas.net/entries/harry-louis-freund-459/.

Harry Louis Freund papers, Arkansas State Archives, Little Rock, Arkansas.

Karal Ann Marling, Wall to Wall America: Post Office Murals in the Great Depression (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1982), 115-117.

“Freund, Harry Louis,” in Who’s Who in American Art (New York: Jaques Cattell Press/R.R. Bowker Company, 1973), 245.

“Life in the Ozarks Portrayed in Exhibit at Nelson Gallery,” Kansas City Star, September 5, 1952, 20.

“Seattle Annual,” ArtNews, XLVIII, no. 3 (May 1949): 8.

“Fine Art to Have Renaissance Here,” Hutchinson News, January 9, 1949, 22.

“Louis and Elsie Freund and Their Art School in Hatchet Hall,” Clinton Eye, June 24, 1948, 9.

“Freund, Harry Louis,” in Dorothy B. Gilbert, ed. Who’s Who in American Art (Washington, DC: The American Federation of the Arts, 1947), 179.

“H. Louis Freund Will Paint Mural for Idabel, Okla., Post Office,” The Clinton Eye, November 9, 1939, 1.

“Hendrix Follows Suit,” Art Digest 12, no. 13 (April 1, 1938): 27.

“Murals Adorn South Wall in Post Office: Three Paintings by Henry County Artist Depict Windsor’s Major Industries,” The Windsor Review, April 7, 1938, 1.

“Freund to Decorate Clinton Post Office,” The Clinton Eye, November 21, 1935, 1.

“‘American Scene’ Wanes at Cincinnati Show,” Art Digest (June 1, 1935): 13.

United States. Department of the Treasury. Public Works of Art Project: Report of the Assistant Secretary of the Treasury to Federal Emergency Relief Administrator: December 8, 1933-June 30, 1934. (Washington: United States Government Printing Office, 1934), 55.


Core Reference Sources

Peter H. Falk, et. al, Who was Who in American Art, 1564-1975: 400 Years of Artists in America (Madison: Sound View Press, 1999).

Anita Jacobsen, Jacobsen's Biographical Index of American Artists (Carrollton: A.J. Publications, 2002).

askART (database), askART, https://www.askart.com/.

Image Credits

Artwork

Harry Louis Freund, Town Creek, Clinton, Missouri, 1934.

Oil/Paperboard, 16 x 23 7/8 in.

Smithsonian American Art Museum, Transfer from Federal Trade Commission, 1984.20.

Harry Louis Freund, Hiroshima, circa 1947.

Oil/Masonite, 20 x 16 in.

The Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art, Gift of the artist, F98-24.

Reproduced with permission of The Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art.

Harry Louis Freund, Circus, circa 1935.

Oil/Masonite, 30 x 40 in. 

The Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art, Gift of James and Virginia Moffett in honor of the 75th anniversary of The Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art, 2009.49.1.

Reproduced with permission of The Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art.

Portrait of Artist

Unknown, Portrait of H. Louis Freund, 1943.

Photograph.

Included in The Troubadour (Conway, Arkansas: Hendrix College, 1943), 30.

Contributors

Roberta Wagener, Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art

Artist Record Published

Published on January 21, 2022

Learn more

References

Artist clippings file is available at:

Artist’s work in these institutions’ collections

Arkansas Museum of Fine Arts

Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art

Bibliography

Select Sources

“Louis and Elsie Freund: Biography,” University of Central Arkansas Art Collection, accessed January 12, 2022, https://uca.edu/artcollection/louis-and-elsie-freund/.

“Artists: H. Louis Freund,” Living New Deal, accessed January 14, 2022, https://livingnewdeal.org/artists/h-louis-freund/.

“Harry Louis Freund (1905-1999)” Encyclopedia of Arkansas, accessed January 19, 2022, https://encyclopediaofarkansas.net/entries/harry-louis-freund-459/.

Harry Louis Freund papers, Arkansas State Archives, Little Rock, Arkansas.

Karal Ann Marling, Wall to Wall America: Post Office Murals in the Great Depression (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1982), 115-117.

“Freund, Harry Louis,” in Who’s Who in American Art (New York: Jaques Cattell Press/R.R. Bowker Company, 1973), 245.

“Life in the Ozarks Portrayed in Exhibit at Nelson Gallery,” Kansas City Star, September 5, 1952, 20.

“Seattle Annual,” ArtNews, XLVIII, no. 3 (May 1949): 8.

“Fine Art to Have Renaissance Here,” Hutchinson News, January 9, 1949, 22.

“Louis and Elsie Freund and Their Art School in Hatchet Hall,” Clinton Eye, June 24, 1948, 9.

“Freund, Harry Louis,” in Dorothy B. Gilbert, ed. Who’s Who in American Art (Washington, DC: The American Federation of the Arts, 1947), 179.

“H. Louis Freund Will Paint Mural for Idabel, Okla., Post Office,” The Clinton Eye, November 9, 1939, 1.

“Hendrix Follows Suit,” Art Digest 12, no. 13 (April 1, 1938): 27.

“Murals Adorn South Wall in Post Office: Three Paintings by Henry County Artist Depict Windsor’s Major Industries,” The Windsor Review, April 7, 1938, 1.

“Freund to Decorate Clinton Post Office,” The Clinton Eye, November 21, 1935, 1.

“‘American Scene’ Wanes at Cincinnati Show,” Art Digest (June 1, 1935): 13.

United States. Department of the Treasury. Public Works of Art Project: Report of the Assistant Secretary of the Treasury to Federal Emergency Relief Administrator: December 8, 1933-June 30, 1934. (Washington: United States Government Printing Office, 1934), 55.


Core Reference Sources

Peter H. Falk, et. al, Who was Who in American Art, 1564-1975: 400 Years of Artists in America (Madison: Sound View Press, 1999).

Anita Jacobsen, Jacobsen's Biographical Index of American Artists (Carrollton: A.J. Publications, 2002).

askART (database), askART, https://www.askart.com/.

Contributors

Roberta Wagener, Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art

Artist Record Published

Published on January 21, 2022

Updated on None

Citation

Wagener, Roberta. "Harry Louis Freund.” 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, 2022, https://doi.org/10.37764/5776.