Standish Backus, Jr. (1910–1989) was a
United States military artist. Born in
Detroit, he attended
Princeton University, where he obtained a degree in
architecture. He then spent a year at the
University of Munich studying painting. After a brief period in Maine studying watercolor under
Eliot O'Hara, he relocated to
Santa Barbara, in 1935 and began working full-time as an artist. At the start of the
Second World War he commissioned as an ensign in the Naval Reserve in 1940, and became an active-duty officer in 1941. He spent most of the war assigned to Net and Boom Defenses in the
South Pacific
The Pacific Ocean is the largest and deepest of Earth's five oceanic divisions. It extends from the Arctic Ocean in the north to the Southern Ocean (or, depending on definition, to Antarctica) in the south, and is bounded by the continen ...
.
He transferred to a special graphic presentation unit in 1945 and spent the last year of the Pacific theater as a combat artist. By the end of the war he had obtained the rank of commander. He left active service in May 1946 and taught at the
University of California, Santa Barbara from 1947 to 1948.
He returned to active duty in 1955 to 1956 to travel with Admiral
Richard Evelyn Byrd to
Antarctica as part of "
Operation Deepfreeze" to record images of the exploration.
Backus returned to California and continued to paint. He died in Santa Barbara in 1989. His work is in the collections of the
Santa Barbara Museum of Art, the
Los Angeles County Museum of Art, and the Naval Historical Center.
References
*
* on the Los Angeles County Museum of Art website
*on the Sullivan Goss Gallery website
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1910 births
1989 deaths
20th-century American painters
American male painters
Painters from California
Princeton University School of Architecture alumni
Painters from Detroit
American expatriates in Germany
20th-century American male artists