Byron Birdsall (December 18, 1937 โ December 4, 2016) was an American painter. He was "one of Alaska's most renowned watercolorists" according to the Alaska Daily News.[1]
Birdsall started his career as a history teacher in California.[1] After teaching for six years, he worked in advertising in Alaska.[1]
Birdsall was a prolific painter in Alaska for five decades.[1] He painted landscapes and portraits, both in watercolour and oil paintings.[1][2][4] He did many paintings of Anchorage.[5]
Birdsall did prints from the early part of his career onwards. For example, he designed a limited edition of 500 prints for the commemoration of the dedication of the Russian Bishop's House in 1988.[6] Meanwhile, in 1991, Birdsall designed stamps for the state of Alaska.[7] At the Seward Music & Arts Festival in Seward, Alaska in September 2015, he did a mural with 50-60 volunteers representing two kayakers at the Aialik Glacier for the main building of the Kenai Fjords National Park.[8]
Birdsall was married twice. With his first wife Lynn, who was a watercolourist,[9] he had a son, Joshua, and a daughter, Courtenay.[1] After his first wife died of cancer in 1998, he married Bilie, with whom he resided in Anchorage, Alaska and on Whidbey Island in Washington.[1]
Birdsall died of heart failure on December 4, 2016.[1][2][5]
Works
Birdsall, Byron (1985). The art of Byron Birdsall : an evolution. Anchorage, Alaska: Artique Ltd. OCLC50771958.
Birdsall, Byron (1993). Byron Birdsall's Alaska and other exotic worlds. Portland, Oregon: Graphic Arts Center. ISBN9780945397168. OCLC27034225.
Birdsall, Byron; Garvey, Mike (2009). People of the Saltchuk : paintings by Byron Birdsall. Seattle, Washington: Documentary Media. ISBN9781933245171. OCLC405107116.