Mary Gregg Byrne
Mary Gregg Byrne | |
---|---|
Born |
1951 (age 64–65) Oberlin, Ohio |
Nationality | American |
Education |
University of Oregon School of Visual Concepts |
Known for | Portraits, illustration, landscapes |
Awards |
1997 Juror's Award for Painting, Tacoma Art Museum Northwest Biennial 2003 Benjamin Franklin Award for illustration, One Smile |
Mary Gregg Byrne (born 1951 in Oberlin, Ohio)[1] is an American portraitist, Illustrator, and landscape artist, who is best known for her watercolor paintings.[2]
Biography
Byrne was born in 1951, in Oberlin, Ohio and grew up in the Midwest. Byrne's grandmother was an artist, and Byrne started painting when she was a child, being encouraged by her mother.[3]
Byrne went to Occidental College, intending to become a biologist. But she later changed her mind and attended University of Oregon, where she earned a Bachelor of Fine Arts in printmaking in 1975.[1][3] After graduating from university, Byrne worked as a scrimshaw and advertising designer at Alaskan Silver & Ivory Company for a few years until 1980.[1] After that, she began painting watercolors. In 1995, she attended School of Visual Concepts.[1]
In 1975, Byrne moved to Bellingham, Washington, where she currently lives.[4]
Career as an illustrator
Byrne's works have been exhibited in many places in the United States. Byrne is a member of the Society of Children's Book Writers and Illustrators, National Watercolor Society and the Northwest Watercolor Society,[4] and she has had her works shown in traveling exhibition of Northwest Watercolor Society.[1]
In 1997, Byrne received the Juror's Award for Painting at Tacoma Art Museum Northwest Biennial.[1][2] In 2003, Byrne won a Benjamin Franklin Award for her illustrating work on the 2002 children book One Smile.[1]
Works
- Illustrator
- Rachel Wolf, Splash 5: The Glory of Color 1998.
- Rachel Wolf, Best of Flower Painting, Volume 2 1999.
- Rachel Wolf, Splash 6: The Best of Watercolor 2000.
- Cindy McKinley, One Smile 2002.
- Heidi Charissa Schmidt, Too Many Murkles 2003.