Skip to main content
Want more images or videos?
Request additional images or videos from the seller
1 of 9

Jane Camp
Jane Camp - 20th Century Pastel, On the River Bank

Unknown

$354.40
$44320% Off
£268.91
£336.1420% Off
€307.48
€384.3420% Off
CA$495
CA$618.7520% Off
A$550.37
A$687.9720% Off
CHF 287.37
CHF 359.2220% Off
MX$6,699.38
MX$8,374.2320% Off
NOK 3,666.78
NOK 4,583.4720% Off
SEK 3,435.59
SEK 4,294.4920% Off
DKK 2,294.74
DKK 2,868.4320% Off
Shipping
Retrieving quote...
The 1stDibs Promise:
Authenticity Guarantee,
Money-Back Guarantee,
24-Hour Cancellation

About the Item

A charming pastel scene depicting three figures sat on a river verge of a river bank at sunset. The sunset in the distance casts a warm glow over the scene. Captured in a loose impressionist style. Signed to the lower right. Presented in a wooden frame. On paper.
  • Creator:
    Jane Camp
  • Creation Year:
    Unknown
  • Dimensions:
    Height: 20.48 in (52 cm)Width: 24.41 in (62 cm)
  • Medium:
  • Period:
  • Condition:
    Some light scuffing to the frame.
  • Gallery Location:
    Corsham, GB
  • Reference Number:
    Seller: rt1821stDibs: LU881312183252

More From This Seller

View All
M. Clarke - Framed 20th Century Pastel, Through the Fields
Located in Corsham, GB
A subtle pastel landscape depicting an overgrown grassy meadow at day break, with lingering low lying fog. The artist has signed to the lower right corner. The picture is well presen...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Landscape Drawings and Watercolors

Materials

Pastel

Nola Armstrong - 20th Century Pastel, Glorious June
Located in Corsham, GB
Signed. Presented in a white-painted wooden frame. Pastel Society label with title verso. On paper.
Category

20th Century Still-life Drawings and Watercolors

Materials

Pastel

Phyllis D. Trengove - 20th Century Pastel, Morning Mist
Located in Corsham, GB
A delightful pastel painting by Phyllis D. Trengove, depicting a woodland scene with bluebells. Artist's label to the reverse. Signed to the lower right-hand corner. Well-presented i...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Landscape Drawings and Watercolors

Materials

Pastel

Julia Gascoigne Palmer - Framed Contemporary Pastel, Parkland Landscape
Located in Corsham, GB
A energetic landscape in pastel. Signed lower right. Presented in a large contemporary frame. On paper.
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Landscape Drawings and Watercolors

Materials

Pastel

Nola Armstrong - 20th Century Pastel, Indecision
Located in Corsham, GB
Signed. Presented in a light wooden frame. Title inscribed on the label verso. On paper.
Category

20th Century Figurative Drawings and Watercolors

Materials

Pastel

John Chapman - Framed 20th Century Pastel, River landscape
Located in Corsham, GB
Landscape in pastel. Signed lower right and dated '95. Smartly mounted in a large oak frame. On paper.
Category

20th Century Landscape Drawings and Watercolors

Materials

Pastel

You May Also Like

'Six Corners A80' Original pastel drawing signed by Jan Richardson-Baughman
Located in Milwaukee, WI
Titled, signed, and dated in lower margin. A move to an eighty-acre farm in Western Michigan from Detroit suited Janet Richardson Baughman to a tee. She and her three siblings loved country life, and relished the many humorous adjustments to their new surroundings. The one-room schoolhouse she attended, for example, contrasted sharply to her earlier city school. Sports programs had been fairly sophisticated in the city. Rural sports consisted of her teacher piling everyone in her car, including the trunk, and then driving the children to another one-room schoolhouse for games. When Janet reached the sixth grade, a chapter in American history closed because all of the one-room schoolhouses were annexed by the nearest cities, but that unusual educational experience is something Janet fondly remembers. Growing up in a family that was very artistic, it is not surprising that Janet loved drawing. She and her brothers and sisters would make Christmas decorations for the Christmas tree and had ongoing art projects all year long. Her architect father was an artist in his free time. As the children have become adults, they are all involved in artistic endeavors from carving to sculpture. Janet's high school years were spent riding and showing her horses. "That was my life," she says. Living on the farm allowed her freedom to indulge her love of animals including the dogs that were so special to her. Active in 4H, Janet became an accomplished seamstress and an excellent cook. She took no art classes in high school although she sometimes helped her father with drafting. Starting college with the intention of majoring in speech and drama, Janet took an art class only because it was required. She found the art classes so appealing that she took one after another. Eventually, having taken every art class offered, the university had to design independent studies for her. With her beloved horses back on the farm, Janet discovered a new passion, and that was ceramics. First working as a waitress during college to earn income, Janet later became a Student Assistant and lived at the Ceramics Studio. As an assistant, she would make clay and glazes, fire the kiln, and assist the instructor however she could. At first, she had planned to become a high school teacher, but she was encouraged to earn her graduate degree and pursue her artistic endeavors, in addition to teaching. Janet graduated in 1975 with a BFA in Ceramics and Weaving from Central Michigan University in Mt. Pleasant, MI. Following her mentor's advice, she went to Indiana State University in Indiana for her graduate work where she studied under Dick Hay. Demanding, but very laid back personally, he expected a lot from Janet, and she grew from his expectations. She joined the National Council for Education in the Ceramic Arts (NCECA) which is a ceramics networking organization. It has a national conference each year where ceramists, educators and studio artists meet. She was on the Board of Directors for two years. Janet received her MFA in 1977. Moving back to Western Michigan, Janet found teaching positions with various colleges and taught art history, ceramics and a myriad of classes. However, she never forgot her mentor's advice, which was to continue her craft. Janet met a businessman/artist, John Baughman, who sold her artwork around the country. Janet bought a studio and her work was selling so well that she no longer needed to supplement her income with teaching. Janet and John had a business relationship for several years until life took one of those magical twists, and their relationship blossomed into much more. Later, the two of them were married. John and Janet bought acreage and moved to the country. Turning one of their buildings into a studio, the pair became extremely successful influencing them to concentrate only on their artwork and discontinue the sales end of his business. Janet says it has been very, very good for them and has caused different things to happen. The challenges of commissions make her think in directions that it is unlikely she would have done on her own. Janet is an extremely talented artist. It is difficult to believe when one sees her pastel, mixed media of pencil, oils and collage landscapes done on paper that this is the same artist that designs and makes very sophisticated and stylized ceramics. The natural beauty that abounds where she lives inspires her artwork. Interestingly, she also derives inspiration from her ceramics for her paintings although the two are quite different in style. Her paintings are stylized and readable, but she does not look for minute detail when she paints. These soft landscapes create a feeling of bucolic peace and serenity although Janet does not consciously paint a message. Janet says of her work, that it is like a dance or conversation in her head, which she expresses through her art. Janet lives an almost idyllic rural existence with her artist/husband who she says is "the love of her life." They work together everyday, and for them it is the perfect partnership because they compliment one another so well. Together they raise and train horses, and are expecting three foals within a year. In addition, she loves to garden and after the tradition of her grandmother and mother, has a huge vegetable garden. She and her husband love to cook. They enjoy golfing together as well. Their three grown children are still very important in their lives, and Janet sews intricate costumes for her daughter when she shows her horse. In the future, Janet thinks that living in Virginia with horses and continuing with her art would be perfect. She, along with her husband, would like to spend a summer in Provence...
Category

1990s Landscape Drawings and Watercolors

Materials

Pastel

1963 "Pond" Pastel Impressionist Landscape Drawing NYC Female Artist
By Edith Isaac-Rose
Located in Arp, TX
Edith Isaac-Rose "Pastel Landscape Pond" 1963 Pastel on paper 13.5"x10" unframed Signed and dated lower left in pencil. Came from a portfolio of her work Born in Chicago in 1929, and neé Ganansky-Teitelbaum, she graduated from The Art Institute of Chicago in 1951 and moved to New York in 1959 where she lived ever since. Taking as her professional name her parents’ first names, Edith was a prolific artist working first as an abstract expressionist then turning in the 1980s to figurative, political work consisting of drawings, paintings, and embroideries which she called “Daily Rage”. She had been represented by the Phyllis Kind Gallery and her work is in the Hirshhorn Museum as well as numerous private collections. Edith, along with her partner of 35 years, Bea Kreloff, (1925-2016), founded Art Workshop International in 1981 where they held art and writing workshops in Assisi, Italy, Monhegan Island, Maine, and Puerto Escondido, Mexico. They were both actively involved with the anti-war movement, gay liberation...
Category

Mid-20th Century American Impressionist Landscape Drawings and Watercolors

Materials

Paper, Oil Pastel

Untitled (Pastel #3)
Located in Bryn Mawr, PA
A native of Philadelphia, John Pierce Barnes began his artistic training at the Philadelphia School of Industrial Design. He then attended the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, ...
Category

Early 20th Century American Impressionist Landscape Drawings and Waterco...

Materials

Pastel

20th century landscape pastel drawing colorful grass path hills sky signed
By Wolf Kahn
Located in Milwaukee, WI
'Study for Connecticut at Putney' is an original pastel drawing by American artist Wolf Kahn. The landscape is an exploration of color and light: it is rendered in cool blues and purples with fields of subtle yellow, the pastels treated with the same gesture as Kahn's paintbrush on a canvas. Indeed, this pastel was a study executed en plein air for a painting – the painting now sometimes called 'Bend in the River' – that he later created in the studio. This process of creating studies, selecting the best of the studies, and then recreating them as paintings was typical of Kahn's studio process and makes this pastel a significant example of the artist's creative output. 9 x 11 inches, artwork 15.5 x 18.13 inches, frame Signed 'W. Kahn' lower right Framed to conservation standards using archival materials including 100 percent rag matting. Housed in a gold finish wood moulding. Acquired directly from the artist. Wolf Kahn, the youngest of four siblings, was born into a well-to-do artistic family. His father was the conductor of the Stuttgart Philharmonic Symphony, and his mother came from a family of art collectors.(1) During 1938, Kahn took his first art lessons, but most of his initial drawings were of military or historical events. The next year Kahn was sent to England for safety following the ascendancy of Hitler to power, and in 1940, he immigrated to the United States. In 1942, he entered New York's High School of Music and Art, and while there, he was employed by a commercial art firm doing illustrations. After a stint in the Navy, Kahn entered Hans Hofmann's school, and among his fellow students were Neil Blaine, Jane Freilicher, Allan Kaprow and Larry Rivers. His initial results were done with a dark palette and abstracted forms, and although Hofmann's style of teaching was difficult, Kahn has consistently praised him for teaching him the value of control and understanding.(2) Kahn's first exhibition was a 1951 group show in a loft with several other artists in lower Manhattan. From this impromptu show, a group effort evolved called the Hansa Gallery Cooperative.(3) In 1953, Wolf Kahn had a one-man show at this gallery, which was reviewed by Fairfield Porter, and at this same time bolder, more vivid colors began to appear in his work. By the mid-1950's, on a summer trip to Provincetown, Kahn's paintings indicated a new direction of softening warm colors in the manner of Bonnard. He was included in Meyer Shapiro's seminal exhibition, The New York School: The Second Generation at the Jewish Museum, and by the end of the 1950s, he had developed his abstracted landscape style for which he is best known. In 1966, he made his first "barn" painting on Martha's Vineyard that reduced the complexities of detail of the architecture to a more basic shape, a stylistic convention that is evident in the Museum's painting. Kahn has since commented frequently on his use of color as a unique and specific component of each work as the situation demands, where the gradual buildup of the colors resembles the beauty and translucent nature of pastels.(4) Since then Kahn has had one-person exhibitions at the Kansas City Art Institute, Chrysler Museum, San Diego Museum of Art, Fort Lauderdale Museum of Art and the Columbus Museum, among others. His work is in the permanent collections of numerous museums throughout the United States. Footnotes: 1. Much of the biographical information is drawn from Justin Spring, Wolf Kahn (New York: Harry N. Abrams, 1996). 2. Spring, 21. Wolf Kahn draws this from a 1973 address to the College Art Association. 3. This group included Jane Wilson...
Category

1970s Contemporary Landscape Drawings and Watercolors

Materials

Pastel, Paper

"Shallow River" Pastel Painting by Tom Perkinson
By Tom Perkinson
Located in Wiscasset, ME
Painting is essentially unframed and in excellent condition. Tom Perkinson was born in Indianapolis, Indiana in 1940. He was raised in the country and developed a love for the natural landscape. He discovered that he had a talent for art while in elementary school. Art quickly became his chosen passion. During high school he studied at John Herron Institute of Art in Indianapolis. After high school, he studied at the Chicago Academy of Art. He left Indiana to pursue an undergraduate degree in Oklahoma. Each year while attending the university, he was invited to stage an annual exhibit of his work. His early work focused on the landscape, but also included still lifes and city scenes. At that time, his favorite artists were the early American painters...
Category

Vintage 1980s American Paintings

'Early Morning Light' Oil Pastel on Board Landscape
Located in Toronto, ON
Masterful blending of oil pastels brings great softness to this pond study. With cattails in the foreground hanging over the water and a darker red foliage behind the plant life of t...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Impressionist Landscape Drawings and Water...

Materials

Oil Pastel, Board