NAN
GREACEN (1908 - 1999)
Artist Images
Born in Giverny, France where her father Edmund
Greacen was an impressionist painter actively
following Claude Monet, Nan Greacen became a noted
oil painter and watercolorist. She began earning
awards from 1936, when she received the Hallgarten
Prize at the National Academy of Design. In the
following years, her award medals were from the
National Arts Club, Montclair Art Museum, Katherine
Lorillard Wolfe, Hudson Valley Art Association, and
Grumbacher Society.
She graduated from the Brearley School in New York
City and then studied for four years at the Grand
Central Art School, which her father had established
in 1921. Her instructors were Wayman Adams, Arshile
Gorky, Jerry Farnsworth and her father. She taught
drawing and still life at the school from 1931 to
1942. She moved to Scarsdale, New York in 1945 with
her husband, Rene Bard Faure, and two children,
Nancy and Renee. Here she continued her successful
painting and teaching career until 1969 when she and
her husband retired to Ponte Vedra Beach, Florida.
It was during this time in Ponte Vedra that she
wrote and illustrated two books on painting
technique: Still Life is Exciting [1965] and The
Magic of Flower Painting [1971] and published with
Walter Foster.
She continued to paint and teach until her death on
November 15, 1999 at Vicars Landing, Florida.
Her one-woman exhibitions include Grand Central Art
Gallery, 1967; Daytona Beach Art Gallery, 1969; and
Florida Gulf Coast Art Center, 1972-1974.
She was a member of The National Academy of Design
(ANA/1940; NA/1962), Audubon Artists, Allied Artists
of America, Hudson Valley Art Association, Florida
Water Color Society and Jacksonville Water Color
Society.
Source:
Paul Sternberg Sr., Art by American Women; Renee
Faure, daughter of the artist.