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  1. Anthony Angarola (4 February 1893–15 August 1929) was an American painter, printmaker, and art instructor. He graduated from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago. Since he was an Italian immigrant himself, his work focused on people who struggled to adapt to a foreign culture.

  2. Anthony Angarola’s “school,” if such it could be called, was literally a legacy left to schoolchildren through his intended wife, Belle (Goldschlager) Baranceanu.133 Baranceanu worked with Angarola, both in Chicago and at the Minneapolis School of Art, where she studied from 1921 to 1925.

  3. Anthony Angarola. b. 1893, Chicago, IL - d. 1929, Chicago, IL. Anthony Angarola, the seventh of the eleven children of Italian immigrants Rocco and Anna Bonomo Angarola, was born in Chicago in 1893. Although he had artistic aspirations from a young age, he had little support from his family and he worked at a series of jobs, including plumber, ...

  4. Anthony Angarola. 1893-1929. Born into an Italian immigrant family in Chicago, Anthony Angarola began attending the Art Institute of Chicago as a teenager and continued his studies there both part- and fulltime until he finally graduated in 1917. Angarola first exhibited in the Art Institute’s annual exhibitions while still a student, in 1915.

  5. Angarola, Anthony: Appointed for creative work in painting, principally in France and Italy; tenure, twelve months from August 15, 1928. Born February 4, 1893, at Chicago, Illinois. Education: Art Institute of Chicago, 1908–17. Instructor of Painting at the John Layton School of Art, Milwaukee, Wisconsin, 1921; Head of Department of Drawing ...

  6. www.artnet.com › artists › anthony-angarolaAnthony Angarola | Artnet

    View Anthony Angarolas artworks on artnet. Learn about the artist and find an in-depth biography, exhibitions, original artworks, the latest news, and sold auction prices.

  7. On August 15, 1929, at the early age of thirty-six, Anthony Angarola died. His work is represented at many museums, including the Art Institute of Chicago, the Minneapolis Institute of Arts, the Carnegie Institute, and the Davis Museum at Wellesley College in Boston.