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PAUL BOUGH TRAVIS
1891 – 1975


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            Paul Travis was born in Wellsville, Ohio and grew up on his family’s farm.  After attending high school, he worked for a few years as a teacher in a country schoolhouse.  Inspired by a catalogue to attend the Cleveland School of Art, he enrolled in the school in 1913 and graduated in 1917.  During his student years, he associated with Henry Keller and Charles Burchfield.

            In 1918 Travis served in the army, stationed in France.  He remained overseas for a year after the Armistice, painting watercolors and teaching at American universities in France and Germany.  In 1920, he returned to Cleveland and began exhibiting in the annual May Shows at the Cleveland Museum of Art, continuing to do so for more than fifty years. He served on the faculty of the Cleveland School of Art for fifty year also (1927 – 1957).

              In 1927 he fulfilled a lifelong dream to paint in Africa, where he also purchased tribal art with funds provided by the Gilpin Players of Karamu House.  The works were subsequently divided between the Cleveland Museum of Natural History, the Cleveland Museum of Art and Karamu House.  Exhibitions of his African subjects were held in the Eastman-Bolton Galleries of Cleveland (1929) and the Milwaukee Art Institute (1931).  In the 1930s his paintings were featured in group shows at the Carnegie Institute of Art in Pittsburgh and the Art Institute of Chicago.  The Butler Art Institute in Youngstown organized a solo exhibition of his paintings (1943). 


                
Travis continued to paint after retiring from teaching in 1957 and died in Cleveland.  His papers are archived in the Archive of American Art, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D.C.


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