biografía de Carl MOON (1878/79-1948)
Lugar de nacimiento: Wilmington, OH
Lugar de defunción: San Francisco, CA
Direcciones: Pasadena, CA
Profesión: Photographer, painter, illustrator, writer
Estudios: T. Moran; F. Sauerwein; L. Akin.
Asociaciones: Pasadena AA; Calif. Writer's Guild; Pasadena Lib. Club (pres., 1931); Cartoonist Club
Obra: 24 canvases of Indians, Huntington Lib.; AMNH; Southwest Mus., Los Angeles; Montclair Mus.; LOC.
Comentarios: Moon was an artistic photographer of the Southwest Indians, assembling a large collection at his Albuquerque photography studio from 1904-07. From 1911-14, he worked for Fred Harvey Co., which traded in Indian artifacts. In 1914, he and his wife Grace Purdie (see entry; married in 1911) established their studio in Pasadena. In 1917, owing to anti-German sentiment during WWI, he changed the spelling of his first name from "Karl" to "Carl." Auth./illustr.: Flaming Arrow, Painted Moccasin, Tah-Kee; and numerous magazine stories; illustr.: Chi-Wee, Runaway Papoose, and many other Indian and Mexican stories for children, created in collaboration with his wife.
Fuentes: WW40; Hughes, Artists of California, 386; P&H Samuels, 330; Tom Driebe In Search of the Wild Indian (Maurose Pub., 1997)