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Vic Donahue was born in Croyden (Philadelphia),
Pennsylvania on August 28, 1918. He was an artist and retoucher for
the Omaha World Herald until WWII, where he served for four years as
Combat Artist in the US Marine Corps. He spent time as a free lancer
in New York, then moved to Vermont and became neighbor and friend to
Norman Rockwell. He moved to Tuscon in 1962 and resided there for
some time before finally returning to Omaha. His work mainly
consists of watercolor illustrations and has been shown at the
Museum of Modern Art in New York, the National Gallery in Washington
D.C., and the Whitney Gallery and Joslyn Museum in Omaha. He was
nominated twice for the Pulitzer for the best newspaper feature of
the year, and is well known for his portrait of Pope John XXIII
which has been reproduced on calendars, prayer cards, etc.
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