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Lewis Smith diaries

 Collection — Box: 1
Identifier: A0077

Content Description

This collection consists of four small diaries, three owned and authored by self-taught artist Lewis Smith. The diaries provide insights into Lewis Smith’s life that are hard to trace elsewhere. Entries often point to his daily life, weather, business and personal travel, observations, and activities. The entries are typically rather short, usually under four sentences. The largest, and most recent diary is a "Five Year Diary," where the author can easily compare their day's log with what they had done in previous years on that day. At least one diary documents Smith talking about his artistic practice. The earliest dated diary was authored by his father, Howard E. Smith.

Dates

  • 1904 - 1941

Conditions Governing Access

The collection is open for research. Access to sensitive materials may be restricted at the discretion of the American Folk Art Museum.

Conditions Governing Use

The Lewis Smith diaries are owned by the American Folk Art Museum. The collection is subject to all copyright laws, and is dedicated to public use for research, study, and scholarship.

Biographical Note

Lewis Smith was born in 1907 and spent much of his time creating art in solitude. His father had worked for a railroad company, and Smith reportedly traveled extensively around Ohio and beyond on trains, documenting what he witnessed in his journals and drawings. Smith reused grocery sacks and flattened paper and cardboard packaging material for his numerous drawings made with crayon, marker, colored pencil, and ballpoint pen. Sometimes he incorporated the printed branding on these recycled materials into his compositions, and regularly used both sides for drawing.



Although he touched on a range of subjects, from alleyway scenes to diners, he was especially prolific in drawing strong women posed as boxers and wrestlers showing off their muscles. He covered the walls of his house, barn, and outbuildings in rural Ohio with large-scale paintings of these imagined women. Some of his pieces meticulously depict the interiors and exteriors of specific locomotives, and his many drawings of diners suggest a life on the move. These were usually made on flattened cracker boxes and have a perspective facing the diner stools, with details including a menu with humorous references; neatly stacked coffee cups; and women working behind the counter, sometimes holding serving trays above their heads.



Smith died in 1998 and is not known to have shared his art publicly during his lifetime. Some of the earliest posthumous presentations of his work were by American Primitive Gallery in New York in the late 1990s.

Extent

.25 linear feet

Language of Materials

English

Arrangement

The Lewis Smith diaries is organized chronologically, by author.

Immediate Source of Acquisition

Gift of Susan Wechsler, 2025.

Related Materials

Lewis Smith, Untitled/Untitled, n.d., Colored pencil on brown paper bag (double-sided), 17 x 12 inches, American Folk Art Museum, 2022.6.27a, b
Lewis Smith, Untitled/Untitled, 1978, Colored pencil on brown paper bag (double-sided), 11 x 17 1/2 inches, American Folk Art Museum, 2022.6.28a, b


Lewis Smith, Untitled/Untitled, n.d., Colored pencil, ink, crayon on brown paper bag (double-sided), 17 x 12 inches, American Folk Art Museum, 2022.6.29a,b


Title
A Guide to the Lewis Smith diaries
Status
Completed
Author
Written by Kailee Faber
Date
November 2025
Description rules
Describing Archives: A Content Standard
Language of description
English
Script of description
Latin

Repository Details

Part of the American Folk Art Museum Archives Repository

Contact:
47-29 32nd Place
Long Island City New York 11101 United States
(212) 595-9533