Chuzo Tamotzu
Amercan artist (born Japan), 1891–1975
Largely self-taught, Tamotzu mastered Sumi ink drawing, printmaking, and painting in oils and tempera. During the Great Depression, he worked for the Public Works of Art Project in New York but was unable to benefit from W.P.A. programs because he was not a U.S. citizen. He served as a combat sketch artist in WWII and eventually gained citizenship. In 1947, he was a founding member of the New York Artists' Equity Association.
He relocated to Santa Fe, renting John Sloan's studio, which he eventually transformed into an art gallery. Tamotzu joined the vibrant art community there, exhibiting regularly at the Museum of New Mexico.
Person TypeIndividual
Terms
- Santa Fe
- Kagoshima
- artists
- male
American painter, printmaker, author, 1895–1987
American painter, photographer, and printmaker, 1889–1953, born in Japan
American painter, etcher, and illustrator, 1871–1951
British painter, printmaker, and author, 1883–1948


