Max Fernekes

BORN: July 7, 1905 in Milwaukee, WI

DIED: November 28, 1984 in Lampasas, TX

Fernekes' father was a local architect who encouraged him to study engineering at Marquette University. However, Max dropped out to become a full time artist. He attended Wisconsin State Teachers College for a year (1928-1929) and studied painting and printmaking under Gustave Moeller.

Fernekes' goal was to devote his career full-time as a professional artist. He survived the Great Depression by selling his art in the streets of Milwaukee with his wife the artist Ava Avery Fernekes. His work often depicts rural Wisconsin landscapes, documents its architecture, cityscapes, and the daily lives of peoples.

Fernekes worked as an illustrator for the 1930s Index of American Design, a catalog of pre-1880s decorative arts of Wisconsin, written by Clarence F. Hornung. This project was financed by the Works Progress Administration, which provided jobs to indigent American artists. One of his notable pieces was 'Arch Grill' (1938) which helped launch his career as an illustrator. Fernekes was also commissioned by various Milwaukee journals, magazines, and newspapers.

Fernekes was a prolific artist with many devoted fans. Among them was the former CEO of Bank Mutual, who collected his paintings, and displayed them throughout Bank Mu

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Max Fernekes
Jones Island Fishing Village by Max Fernekes
Jones Island Fishing Village
7.5 x 9.5 in.
 
Landscape with Buggy by Max Fernekes
Landscape with Buggy
16 x 19 in.