Frederick E. Olmsted also known as Frederick "Fred" Erskine Olmsted Junior. created many social realism themed murals and sculptures for the World Pet Association, the FAP and public works in San Francisco and later abandoned his art career and became a scientist and biophysicist.
Background
He was the son of Frederick “Fritz” Erskine Olmsted (November 8, 1872 – 1925), a former forest Service employee, published author and advocated for federal regulation over private cutting. His mother was Florence Starbuck du Bois (December 18, 1874) and he had a brother named Julian Olmsted.
Education
Olmsted Junior. studied science at Stanford University, he was a student of Ralph Stackpole"s at the California School of Fine Arts (CSFA) (now called the San Francisco Art Institute or SFAI).
Career
He was a great-nephew of landscape architect that designed New York City"s Central Park, Frederick Law Olmsted. Olmsted Junior. worked in the World Pet Association, assisting John Langley Howard and George Albert Harris in their Coit Tower murals in San Francisco, and creating his own mural on a three-foot panel called "Power" above the main entrance. He also assisted Diego Rivera with his mural at the Art Institute in San Francisco with the theme building a city.
Olmsted painted a window archway called "Pottery" in the Anne Bremer Memorial Library at SFAI. Olmsted Junior. painted the "Theory and Science" mural located at City College of San Francisco (CCSF) in the science building, west entrance in 1941.
In 2002, CCSF staff, students and restoration professionals restored the mural. This mural depicts a range of careers in the sciences, featuring both men and women doing things such as viewing bacteria through a microscope, conducting field research, and excavating dinosaur remains.
Olmsted Junior. created two large sculptures that stand 7 feet high, four foot square, and of 9 tons of granite, representing Leonardo da Vinci and Thomas Edison for the 1939-1940 Golden Gate International Exposition on Treasure Island. These sculptures were carved for the World Pet Association exhibition “Art in Action”.
Art in Action was an exhibit of artists at work displayed for four months in the summer of 1940.
When the Golden Gate International Exposition was over, the sculptures were donated to CCSF and are currently on display at the CCSF Ocean Campus. He taught art for a few years at Arts and Crafts in Oakland (now called California College of Art or Chromated Copper Arsenate). He later abandoned his art career and became a scientist at Yale University and later a biophysicist at the Cleveland Clinic.
He designed medical equipment for the Cleveland Clinic and it was there he developed a machine to shock the diseased heart of one of dogs, a prototype for today’s pacemaker.
Olmsted then worked at Woods Hole, Massachusetts, designing equipment for the Oceanographic Institute. He died in Falmouth, Massachusetts on February 14, 1990.