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Hugh Henry BreckenridgePhlox, ca. 1906ca. 1906
ca. 1906
$29,500
£22,079.17
€25,566.30
CA$41,000.18
A$46,180.06
CHF 23,914.99
MX$560,838.48
NOK 303,775.70
SEK 288,156.89
DKK 190,759.77
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About the Item
Provenance
David Ramus, Ltd.;
Menconi and Schoelkopf Fine Art, New York;
Private collection, Atlanta, Georgia, until 2010
Exhibitions
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, The Artist's Garden: American Impressionism and the Garden Movement, 1887-1920, February 12-May 24, 2015. Exhibition also traveled to
Chrysler Museum of Art, June 16- September 6, 2015; Reynolds House Museum of American Art, October 1, 2015- January 3, 2016.
Avery Galleries, Bryn Mawr, Pennsylvania, Living Color Modern Life: Hugh Henry Breckenridge and Arthur B. Carles, October 5-November 2, 2018.
Distinguished as an influential art teacher for more than forty years, Hugh Henry Breckenridge was born in Leesburg, Virginia, but spent most of his adult life in Philadelphia. Breckenridge enrolled as a student at the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts in 1887, and three years later he was awarded the prestigious Cresson Traveling Scholarship, which enabled him to spend a year abroad in Europe. Breckenridge was deeply influenced by the Impressionist art that he encountered there, and during a subsequent trip to Europe in 1909, he was also exposed to more recent trends in avant-garde art. Breckenridge painted landscapes consistently throughout his career using a diverse range of stylistic approaches.
During the early part of his career, Breckenridge adopted the stylistic tendencies of the French Impressionists to convey his unique painterly vision, and later in life he reflected, “I must have been born an Impressionist.” This influence can clearly be seen in his pastel titled Phlox from circa 1906. This work was no doubt executed at Breckenridge’s home in Fort Washington, Pennsylvania, which he nicknamed “Phloxdale,” due to the beautiful phlox garden which he and his wife cultivated there. Breckenridge settled in Fort Washington in 1902, when he and Anshutz found it necessary to move the Darby School to that area after it had outgrown its previous location. Breckenridge’s idyllic garden at Phloxdale was the subject of a number of his finest impressionist paintings, such as Phlox and Hollyhocks from circa 1907. As was often the case, his primary interest in these works seems to be in creating beautiful and vibrant color harmonies, rather than depicting “realistic” views of the outdoors. In Phlox, Breckenridge focuses the composition on a small section of the garden, offering a close-up glimpse of the blossoms and only loosely suggesting the surrounding foliage. He created this piece using pastels, and interestingly, many of his finished works from this period were executed in that medium. Breckenridge actually manufactured his own chalks to ensure that they would maintain as much color permanence as possible. Indeed, the colors in Phlox are remarkable for their brilliance. The purple and white of the flowers seem to vibrate alongside the surrounding ouches of deep blue, green, and even hints of bright orange and red. Breckenridge applied these colors in bold dashes and scribbles in a loose, haphazard manner, which is almost pointillist in its effect.
- Creator:Hugh Henry Breckenridge (1870-1937, American)
- Creation Year:ca. 1906
- Dimensions:Height: 9.5 in (24.13 cm)Width: 12.5 in (31.75 cm)
- Medium:
- Movement & Style:
- Period:
- Condition:All works offered by this seller are in very good to excellent condition. Please contact us for a detailed condition report.
- Gallery Location:Bryn Mawr, PA
- Reference Number:1stDibs: LU2773214899872
Hugh Henry Breckenridge
Born in Leesburg, Virginia in 1870, Breckenridge drew incessantly as a child, and through the encouragement of his teacher Paul Laughlin, he decided to pursue a career as an artist. When he turned fifteen, his parents reluctantly allowed him to open a studio in Leesburg so that he could earn the tuition necessary to attend the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts. In 1887, he enrolled in the Academy, an institution with which he would be affiliated for the majority of his life. Breckenridge won the Academy’s Charles Toppan’s First Prize in 1890 and in 1891, he was awarded the Cresson Traveling Scholarship, which allowed him to pursue his dream of continuing his studies abroad. Breckenridge went to Paris in 1892 and enrolled in the Académie Julian as a student under William Bouguereau, William G. Ferrier, and Lucien Doucet. The academic training Breckenridge received proved beneficial for the portrait work he often did to earn a living, but he was more interested in nonacademic approaches to art. Like many artists at the end of the nineteenth century, he responded enthusiastically to the new and exciting changes in art that were rapidly taking place in Europe and America. He was particularly interested in the exploration of color and color theories. During his time in Paris, he became captivated with Impressionism and his paintings soon began to reflect that interest. Upon his return to the States in 1893, he experimented with Impressionist techniques of painting color and light in landscapes, figurative paintings, and portraits. Back in Philadelphia, Breckenridge began his lifelong teaching career. He first taught classes at the Springside School for Girls in Chestnut Hill, Pennsylvania. In addition, he was offered the post of Secretary of the Faculty at the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts in 1894 and taught there until his death in 1937. In 1900, he and Thomas Anshutz opened the Darby Summer School of Painting outside of Philadelphia, which they relocated to Fort Washington, Pennsylvania, in 1902. Although Anshutz died in 1913, Breckenridge maintained the Darby School until 1918. From 1920 until 1937, he ran the Breckenridge School of Art in Gloucester, Massachusetts, during the summer months. During his second trip abroad during the summer of 1909, Breckenridge was exposed to the latest experiments in painting led by the Post-Impressionists and the Fauves. These experiences made him an early convert to Modernism, which he pursued in his paintings upon his return to America. He kept abreast of the Modernist movement through visits to Alfred Stieglitz’s 291 Gallery in New York, and he subscribed to Stieglitz’s highly influential journal of avant-garde art, Camera Work. In 1913, he shared a studio with Arthur B. Carles in the Fuller Building in New York. The two painters became very close, often painting the same subjects and in the same manner, inspired by Paul Cézanne’s structural brush work and Matisse’s vivid colors. This resulted in what Breckenridge called his “‘tapestry paintings,’ which combined broad, checkerboard brushwork with a vigorous Neo-Impressionist technique.”
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