Emmy Lou Packard also known as Betty Lou Packard was a Californian post-war artist known for painting, printmaking and murals.
Background
Emmy Lou Packard was born on April 15, 1914 near El Centro, California, to parents Emma and Walter Packard. Her father founded an agricultural cooperative community in the Imperial Valley and was an internationally known agronomist. Emmy was 13 years old during this trip and a very active artist.
Her mother introduced her to artists Diego Rivera and Frida Kahlo, and this was the beginning of a long friendship and mentorship.
Education
In 1936 Packard graduated from the University of California, Berkeley with her bachelor"s degree and later studied sculpture, mural and fresco painting at the San Francisco Art Institute.
Career
She had a passion for the cause of social justice and peace. In 1927, the Packard family traveled to Mexico for Walter"s consulting job with the Mexican government working on agrarian and land settlement reform issues. In 1934, she eloped to Nevada with the architect Burton Cairns, a recent graduate of the University of California, Berkeley.
They had a baby together, Donald Cairns.
And after his death she traveled to Mexico to live with Rivera and Kahlo, working as their studio assistant. During the time she stayed with Rivera and Kahlo, she took a number of photographs of the couple.
Between 1944–1945, she briefly worked as an illustrator of a labor newspaper for the San Francisco Bay Area shipyards. In the following years, Packard worked in many different genres including.
Murals, mosaics, oil paintings, prints, plexiglass collages and photographs.
Packard designed and executed the mural on the exterior of the dining commons at the University of California, Berkeley in the Lower Sproul student union center. She also designed the terrace parapet which is embellished with an 85-foot long, 5-foot high, bas-relief, Modernist mural depicting California landscape features, including coastal bluffs, cultivated fields, mountains, and rivers located in the central façade of Chávez Student Center at the University of California, Berkeley in the Lower Sproul. Packard was an active community member in the Mission District of San Francisco and San Francisco"s community mural movement.
In 1974 she served as a mural technical adviser for the Bank of America building mural located at Mission Street and 23rd Street, the local artists that painted this mural are Jesús “Chuy” Campusano, Luis Cortázar and Michael Rios.
Emmy Lou Packard died February 22, 1998 in San Francisco, California of diabetes and related illnesses.