Dines Carlsen

Dines Carlsen (March 28, 1901 – October 1, 1966) was an American Expressionist painter. He was a student at, and cutting edge a fanatic of, the National Academy of Design. He in addition to exhibited frequently at the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts. He was known particularly for his nevertheless life paintings, and in his memory his wife usual the Emil and Dines Carlsen Award to acknowledge the Academy's best yet life painter annually.

Carlsen was born in New York City on March 28, 1901, the son of the well-known Danish-American performer Emil Carlsen. Carlsen was homeschooled by his parents. His mother taught him academic subjects and his dad instructed him in art. Consequently, his paintings bear a marked similarity to his father's work.

He began exhibiting in imitation of the prestigious National Academy of Design in 1915 and he won the Julius Hallgarten Prize twice, in 1919 and 1923. He became an Associate of the National Academy in 1922 and a full fanatic of the National Academy of Design in 1942.

Dines Carlsen not speaking his get older between his family's New York house and studio and their house in Falls Village, Connecticut until his father's death in 1933. Thereafter, he lived in Falls River and wintered in Summerville, South Carolina.

Carlsen taught students privately in his home. He exhibited his take action with the artist's helpful Grand Central Art Galleries and had solo exhibitions in 1946, 1950 and 1954.

In 1951, he married Florence Gulick Shaw in West Orange, New Jersey.

Carlsen died upon October 1, 1966 at St. Luke's Hospital in New York City, and was survived by his wife, Florence. Following his death in 1966, Grand Central mounted a dual exhibition of his and his father's work.

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