Kelly, Harold Osman, 1884-1955

Variant names
Dates:
Birth 1884
Death 1955
Gender:
Male
Americans,

Biographical notes:

Born in Bucyrus, Ohio, but lured out West as a youth, Harold Osman Kelly (1884-1955) traveled a long, hard road before turning his hand to painting as a means of support. Kelly's father was a Lancaster County, Pennsylvania railroader and his mother an Ohio born German. After losing his health to an itinerant working life and his farm in the Texas Panhandle to the Depression, Kelly was encouraged by friends to sell his watercolor and oil paintings for a living. As a significant primitive artist, Kelly's paintings present a world of rolling, green pastures, tranquil blue skies, and solid farms and farming towns, also populated by a thick dusting of livestock, including wily goats, unpredictable donkeys, fine mules and lively horses. The robust folk are reminiscent of Kelly's mother's German ancestors in Ohio, similar to those living in Fredericksburg, Texas, a town Kelly often visited for inspiration. As these letters so vividly attest, when Kelly sold a painting, it was the buyer's initiation into a warm friendship with the raconteur artist, not a mere business transaction. Kelly died in Blanket, Tex. where he had settled after losing his farm in 1939.

From the description of Correspondence, 1948-1990 (bulk 1948-1958). (Texas A&M University). WorldCat record id: 50135621

Born March 6, 1884 in Bucyrus, Ohio, but lured out West as a youth, Harold Osman Kelly (1884-1955) traveled a long, hard road before turning his hand to painting as a means of support. Kelly's father was a Lancaster County, Pennsylvania railroader and his mother an Ohio born German . In Kelly's own words he loved animals and felt a desire to work with them from his earliest years, leaving school at 16 to work in stables around his home. H.O. Kelly's great American dream, however, was to own Western land and raise fine stock, particularly horses . For nearly 40 years of his life he worked in thirty states as a muleskinner, farmer, logger, bull-whacker, mill hand, sheepherder, freighter, and rancher . With the help of family, H.O. and his wife Jessie, whom he met and married in Arkansas, finally bought a farm in the Texas Panhandle in 1921. By 1939, however, the Dust Bowl swirled H.O. Kelly's dream into a bank foreclosure . Health broken after years of hard outdoor work, Kelly and his wife settled in Blanket, Texas, where he turned more and more to his painting, first with watercolors, then in oils by 1947, not only to occupy his mind and time, but to provide a modest supplementary means of support for himself and Jessie. His first one-man show was held at the Dallas Museum of Fine Arts in 1950 at the invitation of Jerry Bywaters, the museum director and Kelly's early champion. Kelly died in Blanket, Texas December 12, 1955.

Bibliography: Johnson, William Weber. Kelly Blue. College Station: Doubleday, 1979.

From the guide to the Inventory of the H. O. Kelly Correspondence Dykes MSS 00111., 1948-1990; bulk 1948-1958, (Cushing Memorial Library, )

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Subjects:

  • Animals in art
  • Animals in art
  • Goats in art
  • Goats in art
  • Horses in art
  • Horses in art
  • Painting, American
  • Painting, American
  • Primitivism in art
  • Primitivism in art
  • University press publications
  • Watercolorists
  • Watercolorists

Occupations:

not available for this record

Places:

  • Texas--Blanket (as recorded)
  • Fredericksburg (Tex.) (as recorded)
  • College Station (Tex.) (as recorded)
  • College Station (Tex.) (as recorded)
  • Fredericksburg (Tex.) (as recorded)
  • Blanket (Tex.) (as recorded)
  • Dallas (Tex.) (as recorded)
  • Blanket (Tex.) (as recorded)
  • Dallas (Tex.) (as recorded)
  • United States (as recorded)