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Alexander Samuel MacLeod

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Fishpond, Kahaluu, lithograph by Alexander Samuel MacLeod, c. 1940

Alexander Samuel MacLeod (1888-1956), also known as A. S. MacLeod, was a painter and printmaker. He was born on Prince Edward Island, Canada on April 12, 1888. MacLeod studied at McGill University. After moving to San Francisco, he continued his artistic training at the California School of Design under Frank Van Sloun. In the early 1920s, MacLeod arrived in Hawaii, where he worked in the art departments of the magazine Paradise of the Pacific and the local papers, The Honolulu Advertiser and the Honolulu Star-Bulletin. By 1929, he had returned to Canada and resided there for ten years. Again in Hawaii, MacLeod became the director of the graphic art department for the United States Army in the Pacific. In 1943, he published a book of his Hawaiian prints, The Spirit of Hawaii, Before and After Pearl Harbor. MacLeod retired to Palo Alto, California, where he died in 1956.

MacLeod is best known for his Hawaiian landscapes and sympathetic representations of rural Hawaii's native population. The Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco, the Honolulu Academy of Arts and the Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art (Kansas City, Missouri) are among the public collections holding works by Alexander Samuel MacLeod.

Selected works

References

  • Forbes, David W., Encounters with Paradise: Views of Hawaii and its People, 1778-1941, Honolulu Academy of Arts, 1992, 210-250.
  • MacLeod, Alexander Samuel, The Spirit of Hawaii, Before and After Pearl Harbor, New York, London, Harper & Brothers, 1943.