Phillip Hicken
United States, 1910 - 1985
His memberships and affiliations included the Boston Arts Festival, Boston Printmakers, Cambridge Art Association, Royal Society of Art, Cummington School, Boston University, the National Serigraph Society, American Artists Congress, Boston Watercolor Society, and the Artists Association of Nantucket.
His works were exhibited nationwide and his work is held in the collections of numerous universities and museums. He was instrumental in developing the modern screenprinting technique and he received international acclaim and many awards.
Hicken was an integral part of Nantucket’s art scene from the 1960s through the mid-1980’s. He mentored and influenced a great number of well-known Nantucket artists. He spent his final years living year-round on Nantucket with his wife at his 23 Pine Street home and studio until his death in 1985.
He is widely known as a silkscreen artist, and his career as a printmaker began in 1928 in Boston with
a four-year apprenticeship to Forbes Lithography Inc. At Forbes, Hicken was required to draw such diverse realist subjects as Civil War battle scenes and portraits of George Washington. This classical training with a commercial lithography firm led to Hicken’s participation in the WPA’s easel and mural project.
Starting in 1936 he worked on a number of projects for the WPA including a mural depicting the life of John Brown for an Army Chapel, paintings and watercolors, and a small number of silk screen prints.
https://www.fuscofourmodern.com/philip-hicken
Person TypeIndividual
United States, 1923 - 2018