Indiana Gyberson

Indiana Gyberson (sometimes Gyborson or Giberson) (1879–1944) was an American painter, born Anna Giberson past adopting her mother’s first proclaim and changing the spelling of her surname. Well-regarded in her day, she has been not far away off from completely forgotten.

Gyberson appears to have been born in Brooklyn, and was a student of William Merritt Chase at the Shinnecock School of Art. She lived in Paris in 1912; there she suffered a rough eye cause offense and was annoyed to fine-tune her broadcast of painting. She is known to have been animate in New York City in 1904, the year in which she first showed play-act at the Art Institute of Chicago. She had moved to Chicago by 1918, taking make public in the Tree Studio Building and showing achievement at the Institute. Most of her paintings were of exotic, semi-nude women, but she afterward produced portraits, still-lifes, and landscapes. She was responsive throughout the 1920s; her achievement is found in exhibition catalogs from the Art Institute in 1920 and 1924, and in 1922 she completed a landscape mural for the home of Julius Rosenwald. She is said to have gone to New York in that year, but she retained her Chicago address, and she won prizes from the Chicago Galleries Association in 1926 and 1928; in 1925 and 1926 she showed measure at the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts. Gyberson last exhibited do its stuff in Chicago in 1928, and that is the year most commonly perfect for her death. Artist Anna Lynch reported in 1944 that she was dead, and had been living in the eastern United States for some years since then, but gave no further information.

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