Fred Machetanz is
the most widely acclaimed artist to continue the traditional frontier image of
Alaska into the present day. Focusing on Alaskan animals, Native people,
pioneers, and the dramatic landscape, Machetanz's work is widely reproduced and
highly sought after by individuals and public collections throughout the United
States and abroad.
Born in 1908 in
Kenton, Ohio, and trained in art at Ohio State University, Machetanz intended a
brief visit to his uncle Charles Traeger's remote Unalakleet, Alaska trading
post in 1935, but remained for two years. After working as an illustrator in
New York, sailing with a Coast Guard patrol along Alaska's coast, and serving
in the Aleutians with the Navy in World War II, the artist returned to
Unalakleet, where he met and married writer Sara Dunn in 1947. The couple
worked together on books, films, and lecture tours for many years, and they
lived in the home they built near Palmer from 1950 until Sara's death in
September 2001.
Since that time, Machetanz
has become almost as much a legend as Sydney Laurence and Eustace Ziegler among
long-time Alaskans. His oil paintings on masonite employ ultramarine blue
underpainting followed by many traditional linseed oil glazes, achieving a
luminosity reminiscent both of Renaissance painters and of the twentieth-century
painter Maxfield Parrish, who was an early influence on the artist.
Courtesy of AskArt
Back to Top