CONRAD
BUFF (1886 - 1975)
Artist Images
Born
in Speicher, Switzerland, the son of an Alpine
farmer, Conrad Buff, by the age of forty, had an
established reputation as an artist, primarily
realistic paintings that expressed his love of the
American Southwest.
He was apprenticed at age 14 to an uncle, a baker,
and confectioner, and baking became a hobby with him
for the rest of his life. He also learned the trade
of lace designing and making, which ultimately
influenced his pointellist painting style, and which
was then a major trade in Switzerland. But he felt
constrained with having to copy patterns, and in the
early 1900s went to Munich, where he lived the heady
life of a young man.
However, money ran out, and at age 19, he came to
America and took the first train West. He was
briefly on a Wisconsin ranch, working as a sheep
herder and then for ten years roamed the West doing
odd jobs such as cooking in cafes, bartending, and
driving mules on a railroad construction gang. He
relieved the monotony by painting in his spare time.
He also explored lithography and silk screen
painting and drew directly on stone or zinc plates.
With his wife, Mary Marsh, he wrote and illustrated
two books: Dancing Cloud and Kobi.
In 1906, he moved to Los Angeles, and from 1907,
painted in Arizona. Maynard Dixon was a frequent
sketching companion. Buff did a number of large
scale murals for banks, schools, and libraries, and
with well-known California artist, Edgar Payne,
painted a 1000-foot mural for a Chicago hotel.
Conrad Buff died in Laguna Hills, California on
March 11, 1975.
Sources:
Edan Hughes, Artists in California, 1786-1940
Peggy and Harold Samuels, Encyclopedia of Artists of
the American West