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BIOGRAPHICAL NOTE
JOHN MARIN -- born in Rutherford, N. J., December,
1870. Grandfather came from Ile-de-France, Mother's side,
the Curreys, lived near Peekskill, N. Y., during the Revolu-
tion. Education: Stevens High School and Stevens Institute,
Hoboken; two years Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Art;
one year Art Students' League. Four years abroad, chiefly
Paris, free-lancing in etching, oil, water color. Exhibited oils
in Salon des Independents, 1909. In 1910, ten water colors
in Salon d' Automne. French Government purchased an oil.
Introduced to U. S. A. at "291," (the pioneer center of
modern art in America) in 1909. Returned to America in
1990 and has not left it since. Resident of Cliffside, N. J.
Spends summers chiefly in Maine.
MARIN'S PALETTES

WATER COLORS
Blues: French ultramarine, cerulean, cobalt.
Reds: rose madder, light red, spectrum red.
Yellows: aureolin, yellow ochre, cadmium.
Greens: viridian, oxide of chromium.
Gray: Payne's gray.
Black: lamp black.

OIL COLORS
Blues: French ultramarine, cerulean.
Reds: cadmium red, Venetian red, rose madder.
Yellows: aureolin, yellow ochre, cadmium.
Green: viridian.
Brown: Mars brown.
White: zinc white.
Black: vine black.

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Publication Information: Book Title: John Marin: The Man and His Work. Contributors: Emanuel Mervin Benson - author. Publisher: The American Federation of Arts. Place of Publication: Washington, DC. Publication Year: 1935. Page Number: 111.
    
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