Denman Fink (1880–1956) was an American artist and magazine illustrator.[1]
Works
editHe worked with Phineas P. Paist and Walter De Garmo on the Douglas Entrance (1924) in Coral Gables, Florida, a property listed on the National Register of Historic Places.[2] He also designed the Venetian Pool (1925) in Coral Gables,[3] which is also listed on the National Register of Historic Places. The designs were strictly Denman's. The only thing Phineas Paist and Walter De Garmo added was their architect's seal because Denman was not a licensed architect. Denman designed all of the original entrances to Coral Gables and designed the original water tower in the shape of a lighthouse. Fink was artistic advisor for the City of Coral Gables. He also designed the Coral Gables City Hall.
New Jersey
editFink was a long-time resident of Haworth, New Jersey.[4]
Murals
editFink was commissioned to create United States post office murals by the Treasury Department Section of Painting and Sculpture. At the U.S. Post Office and Courthouse in Miami, he completed a mural titled Law Guides Florida Progress (1941). It is above the judge's bench and is flanked by two pairs of Ionic marble pilasters. The mural depicts the positive impact of justice guiding Florida's economic development. Fink included a likeness of himself as a draftsman and a likeness of architect Phineas E. Paist (with whom he worked in Coral Gables, Florida) as a chemist.[5] At the Lake Wales, Florida post office, he painted a mural titled Harvest Time-Lake Wales in 1942.[6]
References
edit- ^ "Welcome to Haworth, New Jersey". haworthnj.org/index. Official Website of Haworth, New Jersey. Retrieved 3 April 2015.
- ^ Behar, Roberto M.; Culot, Maurice C. (1997). Coral Gables : an American garden city. Paris, France: Norma Editions. p. 99. ISBN 2909283348.
- ^ Behar and Culot, 1997. p. 181
- ^ Parks, Arva Moore. George Merrick's Coral Gables: Where Your 'castles in Spain' are Made Real, p. 10, Past Perfect Florida History, 2006. ISBN 9780974158969. Accessed December 4, 2014. While attending law school, he lived in Haworth with his uncle Denman Fink, a nationally known book and magazine illustrator who was only six years his senior.
- ^ David W. Dyer Federal Building and U.S. Courthouse Archived 2009-08-17 at the Wayback Machine, General Services Administration].
- ^ Florida WPA Murals