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Donald Bernard Anderson

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Donald Bernard Anderson Veteran

Birth
Chicago, Cook County, Illinois, USA
Death
7 Jun 2020 (aged 101)
Burial
Cremated Add to Map
Memorial ID
View Source
Donald B. Anderson, an oil and gas exploration executive, painter, and patron of the arts, died of natural causes peacefully at his home in Roswell on Sunday evening. He was 101 years old.

Don Anderson was born on April 6, 1919, in Chicago, Illinois, the youngest son of Hugo and Hilda Anderson.

After graduating from Purdue University with a degree in mechanical engineering, he enlisted in the U.S. Navy during World War II, rising to the rank of Lieutenant Commander of supply ships in the Caribbean and Pacific. After the war, Anderson came to New Mexico to work with his brother, Robert O. Anderson, on oil exploration with Malco Oil and Gas. He moved to Roswell in 1946 with his wife, Patricia Gaylord Anderson; there, they had three children, including his daughter Sarah Anderson, who survives him.

In 1963, Anderson established Anderson Oil Company, one of several ventures through which he undertook oil exploration in Alaska, Wyoming, and elsewhere. In between oil exploration, Anderson and his family explored the world on extensive travels around the globe, sailing in the Pacific, going on safari in Africa with Jane Goodall, or flying across Soviet Russia with his family, somewhat to the bemusement of locals who assumed they must be dignitaries, since foreign tourism was then unknown in Russia.

Don desired to live in a community with more artists, which led him to found the Roswell Artist-in-Residence program in 1967, a year-long grant that has so far offered more than 253 artists room to live and work in its 53 years of existence. His practice of buying works from artists on the grant led to an art collection so large that he ultimately created the Anderson Museum of Contemporary Art on East College Boulevard to display it.

Another local monument to his creative interests is The Henge, the massive sprayed-concrete structure that sits behind his home near Berrendo Road in northeastern Roswell. Designed by the artist Herb Goldman, the Henge is a three-story edifice that leads from underground rooms painted with murals to walkways and staircases leading up to doors out to viewpoints at the very top of the building.

Although he tended to reject the name recognition and social status that accrue to art patrons, he amassed a number of significant awards, including the Governor’s Award for Achievement in the Arts, New Mexico in 1984; The Skowhegan School Governors’ Award for Lifetime Achievement in the Arts in1990; and the National Governor’s Association Award for Distinguished Service to the Arts in 2006.

Don never cared much about the monetary value of the works he collected; he delighted, instead, in the creative spirits that produced them. Himself self-taught as a painter, he gradually produced larger and larger canvases, and his work was displayed in a number of group and one-man shows around the country, including a brief stint of gallery representation in New York City. He ultimately decided that he preferred to paint for his own enjoyment, and stopped selling his work, except on special occasions. Many of his paintings are displayed in the Anderson Museum.

He was predeceased by his two sons his first wife, Pat Anderson in 1978; his sons, : Donald Anderson Jr. and Joseph Anderson; and by his siblings: Hugo Anderson, Robert O. Anderson, and Helen Anderson-Cooney.

In 1980, Anderson married Sally Midgette Anderson, the widow of an artist who had been on the Roswell grant a decade earlier. She survives him.

In addition to his wife and daughter (married to Ken Farnsworth), Anderson is survived by two stepchildren: Anne Midgette (Greg Sandow) and Dameron Midgette (Deb Midgette); five grandchildren, four step-grandchildren, and two great-grandchildren.

A memorial service for Don will be held at the Anderson Museum at a later date.

In lieu of flowers, the family requests donations to the Roswell Artist in Residence Program, 409 East College Boulevard, Roswell, NM.

Don’s tribute was beautifully written in his honor by his loving family.
Donald B. Anderson, an oil and gas exploration executive, painter, and patron of the arts, died of natural causes peacefully at his home in Roswell on Sunday evening. He was 101 years old.

Don Anderson was born on April 6, 1919, in Chicago, Illinois, the youngest son of Hugo and Hilda Anderson.

After graduating from Purdue University with a degree in mechanical engineering, he enlisted in the U.S. Navy during World War II, rising to the rank of Lieutenant Commander of supply ships in the Caribbean and Pacific. After the war, Anderson came to New Mexico to work with his brother, Robert O. Anderson, on oil exploration with Malco Oil and Gas. He moved to Roswell in 1946 with his wife, Patricia Gaylord Anderson; there, they had three children, including his daughter Sarah Anderson, who survives him.

In 1963, Anderson established Anderson Oil Company, one of several ventures through which he undertook oil exploration in Alaska, Wyoming, and elsewhere. In between oil exploration, Anderson and his family explored the world on extensive travels around the globe, sailing in the Pacific, going on safari in Africa with Jane Goodall, or flying across Soviet Russia with his family, somewhat to the bemusement of locals who assumed they must be dignitaries, since foreign tourism was then unknown in Russia.

Don desired to live in a community with more artists, which led him to found the Roswell Artist-in-Residence program in 1967, a year-long grant that has so far offered more than 253 artists room to live and work in its 53 years of existence. His practice of buying works from artists on the grant led to an art collection so large that he ultimately created the Anderson Museum of Contemporary Art on East College Boulevard to display it.

Another local monument to his creative interests is The Henge, the massive sprayed-concrete structure that sits behind his home near Berrendo Road in northeastern Roswell. Designed by the artist Herb Goldman, the Henge is a three-story edifice that leads from underground rooms painted with murals to walkways and staircases leading up to doors out to viewpoints at the very top of the building.

Although he tended to reject the name recognition and social status that accrue to art patrons, he amassed a number of significant awards, including the Governor’s Award for Achievement in the Arts, New Mexico in 1984; The Skowhegan School Governors’ Award for Lifetime Achievement in the Arts in1990; and the National Governor’s Association Award for Distinguished Service to the Arts in 2006.

Don never cared much about the monetary value of the works he collected; he delighted, instead, in the creative spirits that produced them. Himself self-taught as a painter, he gradually produced larger and larger canvases, and his work was displayed in a number of group and one-man shows around the country, including a brief stint of gallery representation in New York City. He ultimately decided that he preferred to paint for his own enjoyment, and stopped selling his work, except on special occasions. Many of his paintings are displayed in the Anderson Museum.

He was predeceased by his two sons his first wife, Pat Anderson in 1978; his sons, : Donald Anderson Jr. and Joseph Anderson; and by his siblings: Hugo Anderson, Robert O. Anderson, and Helen Anderson-Cooney.

In 1980, Anderson married Sally Midgette Anderson, the widow of an artist who had been on the Roswell grant a decade earlier. She survives him.

In addition to his wife and daughter (married to Ken Farnsworth), Anderson is survived by two stepchildren: Anne Midgette (Greg Sandow) and Dameron Midgette (Deb Midgette); five grandchildren, four step-grandchildren, and two great-grandchildren.

A memorial service for Don will be held at the Anderson Museum at a later date.

In lieu of flowers, the family requests donations to the Roswell Artist in Residence Program, 409 East College Boulevard, Roswell, NM.

Don’s tribute was beautifully written in his honor by his loving family.


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