Elaine Manning
Crook was born on February 25, 1942 in Chicago, Illinois. She attended the Art
Institute of Chicago Saturday classes from seventh grade through high school.
Upon graduation she attended the AIC on a one-year scholarship. She also took
classes at the University of Chicago during this time.
In 1962 she married
William F. Crook and moved to Arizona. She first free-lanced as a fashion
illustrator from 1962-1965. Later she enrolled at Arizona State University
until becoming the art director for KAET, the schools educational television
station, in 1966. While at the station she began drawing Native American
symbols. Her interest in Native American cultures grew and she began to paint.
Unable to find enough time to pursue her interest while working at KAET, she
resigned in 1972. E. Manning Crook has traveled widely to reservations and
pueblos throughout the southwest. She uses a variety of media for her art and
her subjects include Native American women and girls, men and views of
villages.
Crooks work also
includes sketches of the Oregon coast. Crook has exhibited in Arizona for over
twenty years.
Credits: "An
Encyclopedia of Women Artists of the American West" by Phil Kovinick and
Marian Yoshiki-Kovinick.
(Courtesy of AskArt)
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