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Howard Pyle
King Louis

1899

$49,000
£36,675.77
€42,379.29
CA$67,946.66
A$76,108.99
CHF 39,568.22
MX$939,792.93
NOK 504,067.94
SEK 476,517.82
DKK 316,257.45
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About the Item

Medium: Oil on Panel Signature: Signed "H. Pyle" Lower Right and Inscribed Indistinctly On the Reverse "At the same time he extended toward King Louis the precious memorial" LITERATURE: "The Man of the Hour," McClure's Magazine, December 1899, illustrated Paul Preston Davis, Howard Pyle His Life - His Work, vol. I, New Castle, Delaware, 2004, no. MBPI1746, p. 101 Paul Preston Davis, Howard Pyle His Life - His Work, vol. II, New Castle, Delaware, 2004, no. MBPI1746, pp. 510, 700, illustrated
  • Creator:
    Howard Pyle (1853 - 1911, American)
  • Creation Year:
    1899
  • Dimensions:
    Height: 18 in (45.72 cm)Width: 12.25 in (31.12 cm)
  • Medium:
  • Period:
  • Condition:
  • Gallery Location:
    Fort Washington, PA
  • Reference Number:
    Seller: 41131stDibs: LU38436468132

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"In The Reading-Room" for the article "Old New York Taverns"
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Illustration for the article ”Old New York Taverns” by John Austin Stevens for Harper’s New Monthly Magazine, published May 1890, Page 849. The article explores the significant role...
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Sunday In Old Catskill, Harper's New Monthly Magazine Story Illustration
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Located in Fort Washington, PA
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'Son of Israel'
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Father of His Country
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Signature: Signed & Dated Lower Left:
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Mural Study for "The First Settlement on Manhattan Island"
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Located in Fort Washington, PA
Medium: Oil on Canvas Signature: Unsigned This is a study for the very large Howard Pyle mural now in the historic County Courthouse in Hudson County, New Jersey. It was commissione...
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Artist bio in file (Chase) In 1883 Chase was involved in the organization of an exhibition to help raise funds for a pedestal for the Statute of Liberty. The exhibition featured loans of three works by Manet and urban scenes by the Italian Impressionist Giuseppe de Nittis. Both artists influenced Chase's Impressionistic style that gave rise to a series of New York park scenes. It is also thought that he was influenced by John Singer Sargent's In the Luxembourg Gardens (1879) which was exhibited in New York at this time. Indeed, Chase had met Sargent in Europe in 1881, the two men becoming lifelong friends with Sargent painting Chase's portrait in 1902. On another European trip in 1885, Chase met James McNeill Whistler in London. While Whistler had a reputation for being difficult, the two artists got along famously and agreed to paint one another's portrait. Eventually, however, Whistler's moods began to grate with Chase who wrote home stating "I really begin to feel that I never will get away from here". For his part, Whistler criticized Chase's finished portrait and, according to Hirshler, "complained about Chase for the rest of his life". While no record exists of Whistler's portrait of Chase; Chase's portrait of Whistler remains a well-known piece in his oeuvre. In 1887 Chase married Alice Gerson, the daughter of the manager of a lithography company. Though some fifteen years his junior (Chase was 37), he had known Alice for some time through her family's devotion to the arts. The pair, who would enjoy a happy marriage with Alice in full support of her husband's career, settled initially in Brooklyn where their first child was born. The couple would parent six daughters and two sons and it was only his family that could rival his devotion to his art. 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