PEDRO
JOSEPH LEMOS (1882 - 1954)
Artist
Images
Painter, etcher, illustrator, pastelist,
lithographer. Born in Austin, NV on May 25, 1882.
Lemos grew up on Myrtle Street in Oakland and was
educated in the public schools there. He studied art
in San Francisco with Mary P. S. Benton, Harry
Stuart Fonda, and at the Mark Hopkins Institute in
1900 under Arthur Mathews. He further studied in NYC
at the ASL under George Bridgman, Arthur Dow, and at
Columbia University. Following his art training, he
established a studio overlooking Lake Merritt in
Oakland and soon began teaching at UC. Beginning in
1911 he taught etching and decorative design at the
San Francisco Institute of Art and served as
director of that school during 1914-17. Lemos then
became director of the Museum of Art at Stanford
University, a position he held until retirement. He
was the author of Applied Art, Artists Scrap Book,
Block Printing, and about 50 books on arts and
crafts. The artist died at his home in Palo Alto, CA
at 101 Waverly Oaks on Dec. 5, 1954. Member: SFAA;
Calif. Society of Etchers (cofounder, 1912); Carmel
AA (1st pres.); Palo Alto AA; Bohemian Club; Calif.
PM Society. Exh: Calif. State Fair, 1901, 1916 (gold
medal); SFAA, 1912-16; Calif. Society of Etchers
from 1913; Sequoia Club (SF), 1914; Calif. Artists,
Golden Gate Park Museum, 1915; PPIE, 1915; Bohemian
Club, 1920s. In: CSL; Bohemian Club; Stanford Univ.;
Monterey Public Library. AAA 1915-33; American
Magazine of Art, Aug. 1922; WWAA 1936-62; WWC 1942;
Palo Alto Times, 12-6-1954 (obit); Oakland
Tribune,7-26-1987.
Source: Edan Hughes, “Artists in California,
1786-1940”
.