Woody Guthrie
by Charles Banks Wilson

Singer, songwriter, author and social activist, Woody Guthrie was exposed to music and politics at an early age. He would combine the two in his career to become America’s first true folk hero. Guthrie wrote hundreds of songs, including such classics as This Land is Your Land; So Long, It’s Been Good to Know You; and Oklahoma Hills, the official Oklahoma State Folksong. The colorful life he led became as legendary as the songs he wrote.
Born July 14, 1912 in Okemah, Oklahoma, his father was a real-estate broker and politician who fell on hard times and his mother suffered from Huntington's Disease, a genetic nerve disorder that led to her death. Guthrie learned how to play guitar, mandolin, fiddle and harmonica in his adolescence. He also read and wrote voraciously, drew cartoons and painted.
During the Dust Bowl of the 1930’s, Guthrie traveled and slept among migrants and hobos, accumulating the life experiences that fed his songs, stories and autobiography, Bound for Glory.
Moving to New York in 1940, Guthrie continued to record music and perform on radio, but played at worker strikes and rallies. All the while, the self-taught folksinger studied politics, economics, science and religion. By mid-decade, Guthrie began experiencing bouts of depression and disorientation that signaled the onset of Huntington's. His health slowly deteriorated and he was eventually confined to hospitals.
When he died on October 3rd, 1967, Guthrie left behind eight children and about a thousand songs.
Woody Guthrie by Charles Banks Wilson was dedicated on July 15, 2004. The commission was managed by the Oklahoma State Senate Historical Preservation Fund, Inc.
The painting is located in the rotunda area on the fourth floor of the Oklahoma State Capitol and can be viewed daily from 8:30-5:30.
The Artist
When
Charles Banks Wilson was born in 1918, his father was overseas fighting
in World War I and his mother was visiting her parents in Arkansas. Despite
the events surrounding his birth, Wilson grew up in Miami, Oklahoma,
and today considers himself an Oklahoma native. Wilson’s
thirst for art was reflected at an early age when he began drawing
on virtually any flat and/or empty space including on the bottom of
drawers, backs of pictures, and even under tables. In grade school,
Wilson appeared in nine school plays and expressed his desire to be
an actor. This notion changed however, under the influence of
his father Charles B. Wilson – a professional trombone player. In
the fifth grade Wilson began playing the trumpet, a hobby he would
continue throughout high school.
At this point in his education, Wilson took up drawing again. He started decorating various notebooks and blackboards in an attempt to improve his grades. His strategy proved successful, as after graduation Wilson was able to enroll at the Art Institute of Chicago. At the Art Institute, Wilson began a project whereupon he sketched portraits of numerous members of Oklahoma Indian tribes – a project that would soon become a lifelong artistic journey. While in Chicago, Wilson was also given an award from the Chicago Society of Lithographers and Etchers, and his work was added to the Art Institute collection as well.
In 1941, Wilson completed his education at the Art Institute. Afterwards during his return to Oklahoma, he attended a stomp dance fire at a Quapaw pow wow. Here he met Quapaw Indian Princess, Edna McKibben, the very woman Wilson would later marry the following year. Next, Wilson was called to New York City with a commission from the Associated American Artists. Here he illustrated his first book, The Hill, exhibited a portrait of his wife in a National Academy show, and had his “Freedom’s Warrior” lithograph shown at the Metropolitan Museum of Art.
During the late 1940s, Wilson was kept busy with three one-man shows which took place at the Oklahoma City Art Center, the Amarillo Tri State Fair, and the Smithsonian Museum in Washington D.C. Wilson also continued illustrating; working on over five books including Robert Louis Stevenson’s Treasure Island, and completing a series of Will Rogers national calendars. Perhaps one of his greatest achievements came when the United States Senate selected four of Wilson’s paintings to be shown in 20 world capitals.
Commissioned by the Oklahoma State Legislature, Wilson completed life-size portraits of Will Rogers, Sequoyah, and Senator Robert S. Kerr in 1963 for the state capitol rotunda. These portraits were so successful that they led to a second commission in 1966 for a similar style portrait of Indian athlete, Jim Thorpe. The portrait was unveiled one year later by Elmer Manatwa, Chief of the Sac and Fox Indians, and celebrated with a large Indian pow wow on capitol grounds. Merely three years after, Wilson was commissioned yet again by the Oklahoma Legislature to complete four major murals depicting Oklahoma history for the state capitol – thus cementing his legacy as an Oklahoma Art treasure. Wilson has since been awarded with the Governor’s Art Award and inclusion into the Oklahoma Hall of Fame.
