Skip to main content
Howard N. Cook
Howard N. Cook
Howard N. Cook

Howard N. Cook

1901 Springfield, Massachusetts - 1980 Santa Fe, New Mexico
BiographyHoward Cook was born in Springfield Massachusetts in 1901. He moved to New York City in 1919 to attend the Art Students League where he studied under George Bridgman, Max Weber, Andrew Dasburg and Joseph Pennell. During school, he worked painting outdoor billboards and in lithography and photo-engraving shops. By 1922 he was creating woodcuts and drawings for illustrations for magazines including Atlantic Monthly and Forum. He traveled extensively for those assignments and it was a commission from Forum magazine to illustrate Willa Cather's Death Comes for the Archbishop that brought Cook to New Mexico in 1926. In Taos, he met the artist Barbara Latham whom he married in 1927. They lived for a time in New York. Cook produced murals for courthouses and the San Antonio post office as part of the New Deal. During WWII, Cook served in the Navy in the South Pacific as an artist-war correspondent. Cook and Latham settled in Talpa, New Mexico in the late 1930s. Cook was the first Artist-in-Residence at the Roswell Museum and Art Center in 1967 and the couple moved to Roswell, New Mexico in 1973. In 1976, the couple moved to Santa Fe, New Mexico after Cook was diagnosed with multiple sclerosis. He died in 1980.
Person TypeIndividual
Terms
    1958 First Mesa, Arizona - 2017 Arizona
    Victor Moscoso
    born 1936 Oleiros, Galicia, Spain; lives San Francisco, California
    Starr Jenkins
    1925 Chicago, Illinois - 2021 San Luis Obispo, California
    Ray Abeyta
    1956 Santa Cruz, New Mexico - 2014 Brooklyn, New York
    Allan J. Graham
    1943, San Francisco, California - 2019 Albuquerque, New Mexico
    Gussie Du Jardin
    1918 San Francisco, California - 2006 Roswell, New Mexico
    1888 Appleton, Wisconsin - 1960 St. John's, Arizona
    Olive Rush
    1873 Fairmount, Indiana - 1966 Santa Fe, New Mexico
    Helen Hardin
    1943 Albuquerque, New Mexico - 1984 Albuquerque, New Mexico
    Walter C. Haussamen
    1916 El Paso, Texas - 2009 Albuquerque, New Mexico