Harwood Steiger was born in 1900 in
Fairport,
New York. He studied painting at the
Rochester Institute of Technology and took his first job as a colorist in a dye plant. That job would affect his later work in life. He then enrolled in the
Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts, taking every course they had to offer. After moving to
New York City in the 1920s to make a name for himself, Harwood was swept into the depression, like the rest of the country. Undaunted, the entrepreneurial young man opened his own art studio and began teaching classes. In the early 1930s, Harwood’s work was gaining acclaim. Continuing to teach, he opened a summer art school at
Martha’s Vineyard called The Steiger Paint Group. His artistic style drew on the social mores and themes of the era. Like
Thomas Hart Benton, who also summered on Marta’s Vineyard, Harwood’s artistic style was on the forefront of the Regionalist art movement. He worked primarily in watercolor, sculpting his fluid figures in thick washes of color, using sharp dark lines to give his work a punctuating weight. His art explored the everyday experiences of ordinary people, a stylistic choice associated with the New Deal art projects. In 1938, Harwood received a commission from the
Section of Painting and Sculpture and completed a mural for the post office in
Fort Payne,
Alabama. In 2001 the mural was relocated to Hunt Hall, part of the Fort Payne Hosiery Museum. ==Sophie Steiger==