Bridgeman Artist

FRED J. MAROON PHOTOGRAPHY

Biography

Fred J. Maroon was born in New Brunswick, N.J. After three years in the Navy during World War II, he attended the Catholic University of America, in Washington, D.C., receiving a Bachelor of Architecture degree in 1950. He completed his studies with one year of graduate work at the École Supérieure des Beaux-Arts in Paris. In 1996 he was awarded an Honorary Doctorate (Humane Letters) from Catholic University. After graduation Mr. Maroon worked for Life magazine in New York, and became a stringer in their Paris bureau while doing his graduate studies. Following that he practiced architecture for two and a half years. In 1953 Edward Steichen selected a number of his photographs to include in the exhibition ‘Always the Young Strangers’, at the Museum of Modern Art in New York. Inspired by this, in 1954 Mr. Maroon became a freelance photographer. During his career Mr. Maroon had scores of photographic features in most major national and international magazines, including National Geographic, Smithsonian, Paris Match, Town and Country, Travel and Leisure, Esquire, Life, Look, and Holiday. Mr. Maroon was the recipient of Gold Medal awards from the Art Directors' Clubs of Metropolitan Washington and New York. His work was exhibited throughout America and abroad, including the Metropolitan Museum of Art and the Museum of Modern Art, in New York, and the National Gallery of Art and the Library of Congress, in Washington DC. He had one-man exhibitions at the Corcoran Gallery, the Smithsonian Institution, and the United States Capitol in Washington DC. In June 1995 he had an exhibition, ‘Politics and Poetry’, at the Leica Gallery in New York. A posthumous exhibition, ‘Sorrow and Splendor: Images of Europe, 1950 – 1951’, was held at the Kathleen Ewing Gallery in Washington, DC in 2002. His photographs have been exhibited in major national museums as part of the ‘Photography in the Fine Arts’ exhibitions, which are now in the permanent collection of the International Centre of Photography in New York. Among his many honours were four First Prize awards in the annual White House News Photographers Association competitions. Mr. Maroon lectured extensively throughout the United States and abroad. In 1986 and 1990 he exhibited and lectured at Photokina in Cologne, Germany, and in October 1986 he lectured as part of the National Geographic Society’s, ‘Masters of Photography’ series. In 1990 Mr. Maroon was part of the Smithsonian Institution’s, ‘Masters of Photography’ series. In 1977 he received a royal commission to make portraits of the ruling members of the Saudi royal family in Riyadh, and in 1978 he was commissioned by the Egyptian Government to make President Sadat’s official portrait. Mr. Maroon was Visiting Professor at Syracuse University’s Newhouse School of Public Communications for the winter/spring semester of 1984. In 1985 he received the Newhouse Citation from Syracuse University for his significant contribution to the field of visual communications. Mr. Maroon was the author of twelve books. His first two books, Washington: Magnificent Capital (with Eric Sevareid and A. Robert Smith) and Courage and Hesitation (with Allen Drury), were published by Doubleday Company. An exhibition of photographs from Washington: Magnificent Capital was held in Washington in 1965, and the United States Information Agency accepted the exhibition for display in major museums throughout the world. Mr. Maroon co-authored his third book, These United States, with Hugh Sidey. It was published in English by EPM Publications, Inc., of McLean, Virginia, and in German, Swedish and Italian by Reich Verlag, of Lucerne, Switzerland. Photographs from this book were exhibited in a one man show at the Corcoran Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C., and the Nikon House Gallery in New York. Six copies of an exhibition of Mr. Maroon’s U.S.A. photographs were mounted by the United States Information Agency for worldwide display in over a hundred countries in celebration of America’s Bicentennial. His fourth book, The Egypt Story (with P. H. Newby), was published in 1979 by Abbeville Press, New York, and printed in four languages. The book received a Gold Medal at the 1982 International Book Art Exhibition in Leipzig. An exhibition of photographs from the book was displayed in the Smithsonian Institution’s Dillon S. Ripley Gallery in 1993, and the Houston Museum of Science and Technology in 1995. In September 1983 Mr. Maroon’s fifth book, Keepers of the Sea (with Edward L. Beach), a book on the United States Navy, was published by the Naval Institute Press in Annapolis, Maryland. The book received the Military Book of the Year Award in 1984. His sixth book, Maroon on Georgetown, was published in November 1985 by Thomasson-Grant, Inc., of Charlottesville, Virginia, and won the Gold Medal for photography in the 1986 Art Directors Club of Metropolitan Washington’s annual competition. An enlarged edition of the book was published in October 1997. Mr. Maroon’s seventh book, The English Country House: a Tapestry of Ages, was published by Thomasson-Grant, Inc. in October 1987, and by Pavilion Books and the National Trust in England in 1988. These photographs were featured in the National Gallery of Arts major exhibition, ‘The Treasure Houses of Britain’. Mr. Maroon’s eighth book, Jean-Louis: Cooking with the Seasons, on the cooking of Jean-Louis Palladin, featured food photography as art. It was published in October 1989 by Thomasson-Grant, Inc. The book won the Ben Franklin Award from the Printing Institute of America, and the Golden Ink Award. Mr. Maroon’s ninth book, on the Catholic University of America, Century Ended, Century Begun, was published in September 1990 by the Catholic University of America Press. Mr. Maroon’s tenth book, The United States Capitol, with text by his wife, Suzy Maroon, was published by Stewart, Tabori and Chang, of New York, in June 1993, in anticipation of the bicentennial of the laying of the cornerstone of the Capitol on September 18, 1793. An exhibition from the book was mounted in the United States Capitol in the spring of 1994. The Supreme Court of the United States, a companion to the book on the Capitol, was published in May 1996 by Thomasson-Grant and Lickle. Mr. Maroon’s last book, The Nixon Years 1969 - 1974: White House to Watergate, (with Tom Wicker) was published by Abbeville Press in August 1999 - the twenty-fifth anniversary of President Nixon’s resignation. A major exhibition of these photographs from the Nixon-Watergate era was shown at the Smithsonian Institution’s National Museum of American History from July to December, 1999. At the time of his death Mr. Maroon was working on a book and exhibition featuring photographs taken when he was a student in Europe in 1950-1951.

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