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Ogden M. Pleissner
American, 1905-1983
He attended the Art Students League of New York from 1922 to 1926 with Frank DuMond and began teaching at the Pratt Institute soon after. Throughout the 1930s, Pleissner worked mainly in oils and became known for his Western landscapes and images of the Maritimes and New England.
He was commissioned as a captain in the United States Air Force at the start of World War II and stationed in the Aleutian Islands as a war artist. The inclement, damp weather demanded that Pleissner work in watercolors because they dried faster than oil paints.
In 1942, Pleissner accepted a commission from the United States Army as a war correspondent on inactive duty employed by Life magazine. After the war, Pleissner continued to travel to Europe and Wyoming, painting city scenes, landscapes, and sporting subjects.[citation needed]
Pleissner was also the director and trustee of the Tiffany Foundation (see The Louis Comfort Tiffany Foundation).
He died in 1983 in London, England
Person TypeIndividual