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Thomas Hart Benton's Threshing Wheat 1939 Home Link

 

"history" from Municipal Auditorium

 

Frieze depicting "The Arts" from the front facade of Municipal Auditorium, downtown Kansas City, Missouri.

 

NEXT Toy Safety Town Hall

 

November 20, 2007 - 4:00 p.m.

Don Chisholm Hospital Hill Center at Children’s Mercy Hospital
22nd and Holmes
(northwest corner)
Kansas City, Missouri


Listen to a few thoughts from Congressman Cleaver as he drives around the district
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Missouri's Fifth: Our History

 

Cradling Wheat, 1938, by Thomas Hart Benton

held at The Saint Louis Art Museum

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Thomas Hart Benton


Thomas Hart Benton was born on April 15, 1889 in Neosho, Missouri. He spent most of his childhood in boarding schools and in Washington, D.C. and landed his first job as a cartoonist for the Joplin American in Missouri. Benton studied at the Art Institute of Chicago, resided briefly in Paris and New York City, then settled in Kansas City, working as an instructor of drawing/painting at the Kansas City Art Institute. His most famous pupil was the Abstract Expressionist Jackson Pollock.

 

Benton was part of the Regionalist movement and is well known for his mural paintings that depict commmon everyday scenes of Midwestern life. The figures in his works often appear cartoon-like through the way he distorts the bone and muscular structure of their faces. His most famous murals are located in the Missouri State Capitol in Jefferson City and in the Truman Library in Independence. Benton died January 19, 1975 in his studio