Especially Texan: Tom Lea

Tom Lea is one of the most accomplished artists and writers in the history of the Lone Star State. Continue reading to learn more about the talented El Pasoan.

Tom Lea was an artist and writer who excelled as a muralist, illustrator, portraitist, landscapist, World War II artist correspondent, poet, novelist and historian. Born in El Paso, Texas, on July 11, 1907, he was the eldest of three boys of Zola Lea and Thomas Calloway Lea, Jr.

 

His childhood was happy with parents who supported his desire to be an artist—his father quipped that he’d rather his son be a “good blacksmith” than a “poor preacher.” El Paso’s librarian introduced Lea to art books, his high school art teacher suggested he design the El Paso High School annual, and his English teachers provided the foundation for his becoming a writer.

 

In 1924 Tom Lea graduated from El Paso High School and left for the Art Institute of Chicago where he studied under muralist John Warner Norton and became a paid apprentice on murals in Chicago and other cities. He married fellow art student Nancy Jane Taylor, an aspiring writer, in 1927. Around that time, Lea also worked as a freelance commercial artist doing advertisements and appearing in the Saturday Evening Post.

 

In 1933 Tom and Nancy Lea moved to Santa Fe, New Mexico, where he worked for the Laboratory of Anthropology and painted for the Works Progress Administration. Soon after moving into their one-room adobe home on Fremont Ellis’s Rancho San Sebastian, Nancy suffered an appendicitis attack. After a botched operation in the Santa Fe hospital, infection set in from which Nancy never recovered. She died in El Paso on April 1, 1936. After driving to Santa Fe to recover a few things, Tom Lea left and never returned again.

 

Work kept Lea going in 1936 when his mother and grandmother’s deaths left him bereft of the most important women in his life. During that time painters benefited from federal government projects through the Treasury Department. He won the competition for the Ben Franklin Post Office on Pennsylvania Avenue in Washington, D.C., in 1936 with his mural The Nesters, which brought him national attention and led to his selection for the Texas Centennial murals in the Hall of State at Fair Park in Dallas.

 

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TSHA Auction: Featured Book of the Week

 The Brave Bulls


Auction Ends on 8/20, 5:00 p.m. CT

Bid on this first-edition copy copy signed by Tom Lea. All proceeds from the sale of this book, as well as the others on our eBay page, will support the mission of the Texas State Historical Association.

 

While working on the Pass of the North mural in the El Paso federal courthouse in 1938, he met Sarah Catherine Dighton Beane, a divorcée from Monticello, Illinois, who had come to El Paso to visit a friend. He proposed on the first date, and they were married in July. The union lasted sixty-three years. Sarah’s son, James, from her previous marriage, was adopted by Lea. Tom Lea later said that his portrait of Sarah in the Summertime, which he painted after his return from World War II in 1947, was his favorite painting and the best work he ever did.

 

Carl Hertzog and J. Frank Dobie were two friends of great import to Tom Lea’s work. Hertzog, a printer and book designer, and Dobie, a writer, sharpened Lea’s attention to the writing and making of books. He illustrated Dobie’s Apache Gold and Yaqui Silver (1939), John C. Duval: First Texas Man of Letters (1939), and The Longhorns (1941), giving him national visibility and bringing him to the attention to the managing editor of Life magazine who read Dobie’s books.

 

After being awarded a fellowship from the Rosenwald Foundation in 1940 to paint a series of paintings about authentic Southwest figures in authentic Southwest landscapes, Tom Lea received a telegraphed invitation from Life magazine to board a United States Navy destroyer in the North Atlantic as an accredited war artist correspondent. He resigned his fellowship and for four years traveled more than 100,000 miles and documented U.S. and Allied soldiers, sailors, and airmen worldwide.

 

In the North Atlantic he covered the fight against German U-boats in late 1941; he was aboard the carrier USS Hornet during the air and sea battles off Guadalcanal in 1942 and witnessed the sinking of the USS Wasp; he traveled halfway around the world with the United States Army Air Forces transport, fighter, and bomber crews in England, North Africa, and China in 1943; and he landed on Peleliu with the Seventh Marine Regiment of the First Marine Division in 1944. His paintings and writing were featured in ten issues of Life magazine between 1941 and 1945. During the war he also painted a number of notable portraits, including Claire Chennault, Jimmy Doolittle, and Chinese Nationalist leader Chiang Kai-shek and his wife.

 

Upon returning from war, Tom Lea turned to writing and realized “there are many parts of mankind’s living and dying better expressed with words than with paint.” He wrote The Brave Bulls (1949) about bullfighting in Mexico, a bestseller published in ten foreign editions and turned into a motion picture starring Mel Ferrer. Lea’s The Wonderful Country (1952) about pistol-toting in Chihuahua became a bestseller published in three foreign editions and was made into a film starring Robert Mitchum. His two-volume history The King Ranch (1957) was considered by some scholars to be the greatest ranching history ever written. Lea wrote The Primal Yoke (1960) about mountaineering in Wyoming; The Hands of Cantú (1964) about horse training in sixteenth-century Nueva Viscaya; A Picture Gallery (1968), an autobiographical work about the experiences documented in his paintings; and In the Crucible of the Sun (1974) about King Ranch properties in Australia. He illustrated all of his books in pen and ink, Chinese ink wash, watercolor, or oil on canvas.

 

During the last decades of his life, Lea’s interest in writing books diminished, and he felt a renewed interest in painting. He and Sarah traveled far and wide, and he painted places as remote as China, Equador, Somoa, and Australia—though most of his subjects were from the vicinities of home. Lea painted portraits, but never for hire; he reserved them for his own pleasure and for friends who could pose in his studio. Only twice did he make exceptions—he once painted a portrait of Sam Rayburn for the Rayburn Building in Washington, D.C. (1966), and he painted Benito Juarez, now in the collection of the U. S. State Department in Washington, D.C. (1948).

 

Describing himself as an “avowed painter of the Almighty’s own outward and visible handiwork,” Tom Lea’s favorite subjects were the Southwestern landscape he knew so well with authentic Southwestern figures. He wrote that each of his subjects had “its own worthiness, each awaiting summons—upon right occasion—for portrait likeness.” The El Paso Museum of Art established its Tom Lea Gallery in 1996, and in 1997 he was honored as a Fellow in the Texas State Historical Association.

 

On January 29, 2001, Tom Lea died at Sierra Medical Center in El Paso from injuries suffered from a fall. Hundreds of people attended his memorial service at First Baptist Church, including First Lady Laura Bush. On May 14, 2005, a commemorative cenotaph was erected for Lea and his wife in the Texas State Cemetery. After Sarah Lea died in 2008, their ashes were scattered over Mount Franklin. Pulitzer-winning biographer Robert Caro called him “an unsung genius of the twentieth century who made it purely on the quality of his work.” Texas collector and historian J. P. Bryan wrote, “Tom Lea was the greatest artist, illustrator and writer Texas has ever known.”

 

Content courtesy of the Handbook of Texas

 
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