Augustus
Vincent Tack, a painter of portraits, murals and abstractions,
was born in Pittsburgh in 1870. He developed his talent so quickly,
that a painting he sent to the Society of American Artists in
1889 received the highest rating and a place of honor. Study with
John La Farge was followed by a trip to France in the early 1890s.
Beginning in the 1920s, he painted fifteen murals for various
Catholic churches and government buildings, including the New
Parliament Building, Winnipeg, Canada (1920), and the Nebraska
State Capitol, at Lincoln (1928). This was a time when he was
much sought after by religious and civic institutions for his
mural talent.
He
also became respected for his skills at portraiture. After World
War II, he painted many of the significant participants in the
struggle, including General George C. Marshall (circa 1949, Phillips
Collection, Washington, D.C.).
Tack's
portraits and murals were traditional in style, but during the
inter-war years, he also painted a number of mystical landscapes
and abstract works on the themes of religion and creation. "They
evoke, through faceted slabs of color, suggestions of timelessness
and spirituality in the tradition of Albert Pinkham Ryder, Georgia
O'Keeffe and Clyfford Still." However these "abstract
paintings were rarely purchased" (Falk), but they attracted
the attention of Duncan Phillips of Washington DC. As a result,
many of these works are housed in the Phillips Collection. It
is said that Tack inspired Morris Louis and other DC abstract
painters.
Tack
died in 1949 in New York City.
|