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Period: 1920s
Pair of 1923 Automobile Show Original Illustrations
Located in Fort Washington, PA
Medium: Unknown
Signature: Unsigned
Each framed illustration measures to 14.25" x 11.25."
One illustration is impressed "Strathmore Drawing Board" imprint.
Category
1920s Figurative Paintings
Materials
Paint
"The Number One Boy, " Saturday Evening Post Story Illustration, May 1922
Located in Fort Washington, PA
Signature: Signed Lower Right
Illustration for "The Number One Boy" by John Taintor Foote, appearing in The Saturday Evening Post for May 20th, 1922.
Caption: "It will be hard to m...
Category
1920s Figurative Paintings
Materials
Canvas, Oil
The Black Hunter
Located in Fort Washington, PA
Signature: Signed Lower Right
"I claim this place of honor...”
Story illustration: “The Black Hunter”, author: James O. Curwood, Cosmopolitan, November 1925;
Category
1920s Figurative Paintings
Materials
Canvas, Oil
Something Went Bump in the Night
By William Prince
Located in Fort Washington, PA
Date: 1924
Medium: Oil on Canvas
Dimensions: 26.60" x 21.50"
Signature: Signed and Dated
The Country Gentleman, October 11, 1924, cover illustra...
Category
1920s Figurative Paintings
Materials
Canvas, Oil
The Eyes have "It" - Liberty Magazine Cover
Located in Fort Washington, PA
Original cover for Liberty magazine, published February 16, 1929.
Having just inherited a large sum of money from Uncle Ulysses, Lil and Sandy are on their winter vacation in Florid...
Category
1920s Figurative Paintings
Materials
Canvas, Oil
No Sir - ee! Woman Suffrage is the Curse of the Country, Liberty Magazine Cover
Located in Fort Washington, PA
Original cover for Liberty magazine, published October 13, 1928
Great Uncle Ulysses Grant Simpson comes to visit Sandy and Lil and stays for dinner, an event that he considers the c...
Category
1920s Figurative Paintings
Materials
Canvas, Oil
Washington's Birthday, Woman's World Magazine Cover
Located in Fort Washington, PA
Approximate Date: February, 1923
Medium: Oil on Board
Signature: Signed and Titled
Size: 20.00" x 16.00"
Washington's Birthday, Woman's World magazine cover, February 1923
Category
1920s Figurative Paintings
Materials
Board, Oil
You Go There Yourself!, Liberty Magazine Cover
Located in Fort Washington, PA
“For the Love o’ Lil: The Picture Story of an American Family”
In 1926, under his long-term contract to produce a cover per week for Liberty magazine, Leslie Thrasher introduced a s...
Category
1920s Figurative Paintings
Materials
Canvas, Oil
Waking Up for the Hunt, Elks Magazine Cover
Located in Fort Washington, PA
Medium: Oil on Canvas on Board
Signature: Signed Lower Left
Elks Magazine Cover, November 1927
Provenance: From the Estate of Charles Martignette
Category
1920s Figurative Paintings
Materials
Canvas, Oil, Board
Cream of Wheat Advertisement
By Roy Spreter
Located in Fort Washington, PA
Medium: Oil on Board
Signature: Signed Lower Right
"The Most Eminent Baby Specialists..." Cream of Wheat Advertisement
Category
1920s Figurative Paintings
Materials
Oil, Board
In the Hands of Time, The Elks Magazine Cover
Located in Fort Washington, PA
The Elks Magazine Cover, Feb 1926
Signed Lower Right
Category
1920s Figurative Paintings
Materials
Canvas, Oil
"I'd Love To, " Liberty Magazine Cover, 1929
Located in Fort Washington, PA
Original cover for Liberty magazine, published November 2, 1929.
Sandy hides behind the newspaper at the breakfast table as Lil suddenly asks “Who is Marianthe? You talked about her...
Category
1920s Figurative Paintings
Materials
Canvas, Oil
"Crashing the Gate, " Liberty Magazine Cover, 1928
Located in Fort Washington, PA
“Crashing the Gate: Sandy Paves the Way to His Big Business Scoop,” original cover for Liberty magazine, published March 10, 1928
Sandy confidently struts down the street, dapperly ...
Category
1920s Figurative Paintings
Materials
Canvas, Oil
And Why Not?, Liberty Magazine Cover
Located in Fort Washington, PA
“And Why Not?: Lil and Sandy Warm Up Their Imagination,” original cover for Liberty magazine, published April 7, 1928
As Mr. and Mrs. Morse leave for a date night at the local lodge, Lil and Sandy spend an evening in front of the fireplace at the Morse home. Sandy turns on sentimental music, gathers marshmallows and a toasting fork, and lights the logs in his father-in-law’s fireplace. The fireplace’s golden glow becomes a picture frame for the couple’s dreams of their future son. Sandy excitedly imagines their baby going to college and being the “head of every class, scholarships galore, and captain of basketball, hockey, crew, and football.” Little Sandy is also imagined to be a brave soldier and even serve as future president of the United States. “Dreams of their son…red embers on the hearth…Their fireplace fantasy!” (Liberty magazine, April 7, 1928)
“For the Love o’ Lil: The Picture Story of an American Family”
In 1926, under his long-term contract to produce a cover per week for Liberty magazine, Leslie Thrasher introduced a signature cast of characters that appeared each week, telling a serialized story through his illustrations. Liberty touted its new cover serial as “something no magazine has ever done before…Heretofore, all magazine cover...
Category
1920s Figurative Paintings
Materials
Canvas, Oil
"Setting off our crackers"
By Edward John Prittie
Located in Fort Washington, PA
Date: 1927
Medium: Oil on Canvas
Dimensions: 27.00" x 18.00"
Signature: Signed Lower Right
"We Amused Ourselves for an Hour or More, Darting in and out Among the Crowd and Setting off our Crackers", The Story of a Bad Boy...
Category
1920s Figurative Paintings
Materials
Canvas, Oil
Illustration for "The Ineligibles"
Located in Fort Washington, PA
Date: 1922
Medium: Oil on Canvas
Dimensions: 25.00" x 25.00"
Signature: Signed Lower Left
"Tain't 'cause they don't want us, Nobbs. It's 'cause we're inel'gible" (Nobbs laid hi...
Category
1920s Figurative Paintings
Materials
Canvas, Oil
Trail's End, Book Illustration
Located in Fort Washington, PA
Date: 1921
Medium: Oil on Canvas
Dimensions: 30.00" x 21.00"
Signature: Signed Lower Right
This illustration was published in Trail's End by George W. Ogden, Grosset & Dunlap, ...
Category
1920s Figurative Paintings
Materials
Canvas, Oil
Les Trois Graces
Located in Eversholt, Bedfordshire
JEAN SOUVERBIE (1891-1981)
LES TROIS GRACES
Signed lower right
PROVENANCE
Private Collection
Paisnel Gallery, London
Private Collection
Souverbie painted compositions of figures, ...
Category
Cubist 1920s Figurative Paintings
Materials
Oil
The Piano Recital - Impressionist Figurative Interior Oil by Frederick Frieseke
Located in Marlow, Buckinghamshire
Signed and dated oil on canvas figure in interior painting by American impressionist painter Frederick Carl Frieseke. The piece depicts a young girl in a pink dress seated at a piano...
Category
American Impressionist 1920s Figurative Paintings
Materials
Oil, Canvas
Maxwell House Coffee Illustration
Located in Fort Washington, PA
Signed by Artist Lower Right
Maxwell House Coffee Illustration
Few artists have ever pulled on our nation's heartstrings, particularly in reference to family and generations, as adeptly as Norman Rockwell. From his earliest advertisements to his patriotic World War II subjects, Rockwell's virtuoso was in his ability to capture the essence of American culture and a view of a more innocent time in our country's history. Rockwell states: "I was showing the America I knew and observed to others who might not have noticed. And perhaps, therefore, this is one function of the illustrator. He can show what has become so familiar that it is no longer noticed. The illustrator thus becomes a chronicler of his time." (as quoted in Norman Rockwell: A Definitive Catalogue, Stockbridge, Massachusetts, 1986, p. xii)
Recognizing the need for reminiscence from young and old alike, Rockwell effectively captures a timeless scene: Here, two old friends gingerly and jovially play a game of chess, sipping coffee as they wait for their furry friend to make the next move. The work is executed in Rockwell's signature descriptive style of finely drawn, clear realism with a wealth of fascinating detail. In discussing his career, Rockwell commented, "I was showing the America I knew and observed to others who might not have noticed. And perhaps, therefore, this is one function of the illustrator. He can show what has become so familiar that it is no longer noticed. The illustrator thus becomes a chronicler of his time." (as quoted in Norman Rockwell: A Definitive Catalogue, Stockbridge, Massachusetts, 1986, p. xii)
Rockwell seemingly utilizes one of his favorite models in the present work-James K. Van Brunt. The artist recalled his initial meeting with Van Brunt in 1924 in New Rochelle, New York: "I remember it was June and it was terribly hot. I was working in my underwear and not getting along too well because my brushes were slippery with perspiration. Suddenly the downstairs door banged and I heard someone come up the stairs treading on each step with a loud, deliberate thump...A tiny old man with a knobby nose, an immense, drooping mustache, and round, heavy-lidded eyes stamped bellicosely into the studio. 'James K. Van Brunt, sir,' he said, saluting me and bowing all at once. 'Five feet two inches tall, sir. The exact height of Napoleon Bonaparte!' And he pushed out his thin little chest, which was encased in a fawn colored vest. 'I have fought the Confederate Army at Antietam, Fredericksburg, and in the Wilderness,' he said. 'I have battled the nations of the Sioux under Dull Knife, Crazy Horse and Sitting Bull. I have fought the Spaniards, sir, in Cuba.' And he rapped his cane on the floor and looked at me very belligerently. Then, having ascertained that I wasn't going to contradict him, he took off his gloves and his wide brimmed hat, laid them on a chair, and patted his mustache. 'This mustache, sir,' he said, 'is eight full inches wide from tip to tip. The ladies, sir, make much of it.' And he winked at me and walked over to my mirror to stare at his mustache." (My Adventures as an Illustrator, New York, 1994, p. 206)
Van Brunt was a consummate professional as a model, carefully practicing his poses in the mirror in advance of a session and, at times, inspiring the idea for the cover illustration. Rockwell stated that he used to suggest a cover almost every time they saw one another and referred to the day when Van Brunt first showed up at his studio as "one of the luckiest days of my life." (My Adventures as an Illustrator, p. 206)
James K. Van Brunt appeared in ten Post covers by Rockwell, as well as countless other paintings used as advertisements, such as the present work. Given Van Brunt's distinctive visage with his mustache, the editor at the Post, George Horace Lorimer, complained. "Rockwell recalled, 'Mr. Lorimer said to me, 'I think you're using that man too much. Everybody's beginning to notice it. Maybe you'd better stop for a while. That mustache of his is too identifiable.' Rockwell informed Van Brunt of the problem, 'If you take off your mustache I can use you again...Otherwise I just can't.' Two weeks later Van...
Category
1920s Figurative Paintings
Materials
Oil
Couple's 25th Wedding Anniversary
Located in Fort Washington, PA
Signed by artist lower left corner.
Literature:
Laurie Norton Moffatt, Norman Rockwell: A Definitive Catalogue, Stockbridge, Massachusetts, 1986, vol. I, no. A242, p. 362, illustrated
Notes:
Painted circa 1925. A letter from Norman Rockwell to the Graham family discussing the painting accompanies the lot.In April 1921, Dodge Brothers entered into a burgeoning partnership with the Graham Brothers, an Evansville, Indiana family-run, truck manufacturing business, headed by three siblings, Joseph B., Robert C. and Ray A. Graham. By 1920, their company was building complete truck and bus bodies with various engines which, in April 1921 caught the attention of Dodge’s president, Frederick J. Haynes. Haynes saw the Graham product as a way to get Dodge into the heavy truck business without compromising their own car production. The two companies agreed to have Graham Brothers build trucks solely with Dodge engines and drive trains, and sell them exclusively through Dodge dealerships nationwide. The partnership resulted in a new name, Graham Brothers, Inc., a company relocation to Detroit, and the opening of numerous factories nationwide over the next several years. In 1925, Joseph, Robert and Ray were appointed Dodge directors and executives, and were among the largest stockholders of the company. By 1926, Graham Brothers, Inc. was the largest exclusive truck manufacturer in the world. In later years, the brothers went on to build the Graham-Paige Motors Corporation, further expanding their success in the automotive business.Around 1925, the current painting was commissioned from Normal Rockwell...
Category
1920s Figurative Paintings
Materials
Oil
A Dark Futurist
Located in Fort Washington, PA
Medium: Oil on Paper Laid on Panel
Signature: Signed Lower Right
Initialed lower right: M.P.
Signed on the reverse: Maxfield Parish
Initialed and numbered by the artist's son on the reverse: M.P. Jr. / No. 68.
When Maxfield Parrish painted the comical A Dark Futurist in 1923 for Life magazine, he had already established himself as America's leading book and magazine illustrator. His early artwork for children's classics like L. Frank Baum's Mother Goose in Prose (1897), Kenneth Grahame's Dream Days (1900), and Eugene Field's Poems of Childhood (1904) popularized his signature atmospheric settings, cobalt blue-and-gold palette, and dreamy figures inhabiting magical worlds. Likewise, his covers for Century, Collier's, Harper's Bazaar, Ladies' Home Journal, Life, and Scribner's Magazine were highly desirous and instantly recognizable, often more stylized than his book imagery; no other journal illustrator could match Parrish's winning combination of precise draftsmanship, strong graphic design, and amusing characters.
According to David Apatoff, Art Critic, The Saturday Evening Post, "Parrish abandoned his customary heavy details and rainbow colors to present a bolder, more high-contrast design silhouetted against a stark white background - a treatment more suitable for a modern magazine cover vying for attention on a crowded newsstand.
A Dark Futurist is silhouetted against a white field with no background or details to prop it up. The composition is carefully centered with only differences in the hands and the artist's necktie to break the symmetry. These are crucial to the success of the design.
Just as important as Parrish's clean, high-contrast style in these pictures is the refreshing humor and sophistication in content, which is usually absent from Parrish's fairytale paintings.
A Dark Futurist shows us a different kind of modernism. Parrish steps out of his timeless fairy tales to tweak one of the most incendiary artistic movements of his day. Futurism, with its militant manifesto and its outspoken artists, was all the rage in Europe. Parrish pokes them, showing a "dark" and anxious futurist with pursed lips and thick glasses, poised to paint but not exactly sure of, or optimistic about, what the 'future' will hold. This suggests that Parrish was alert to, and had opinions about, current events of the day - something one might never guess from his usual subject matter."
In his early Collier's illustrations, Parrish also developed memorable themes that he would return to in his 1920s magazine work. One of his most popular characters was the "seer," or man with keen visual powers, most often depicted as an artist, but also appearing as a tourist, scientist, and philosopher. Parrish's seer was recognizable by particular physical attributes: round glasses, indicating his visual and analytical acuity, and an overcoat and/or hat signifying his role as observer of the outside world.
A Man of Letters, sold last year at Heritage Auctions, was one of the first Life covers Parrish rolled out for Gibson, and he repeated the character of the artist-seer, emphasizing the comic spin, for two later editions: A Dark Futurist (Life, March 1, 1923) captures a Parrish-like artist in foggy round glasses and a long green coat...
Category
1920s Figurative Paintings
Materials
Paper, Oil, Panel
The Knave of Hearts: List of Characters
Located in Fort Washington, PA
Medium: Oil on Board
Signature: Signed
Sight Size 20.13" x 16.38", Framed 26.00" x 23.00"
Maxfield Parrish’s popularity as an illustrator began with his early work for magazine publishers. An Easter 1895 cover for Harper’s Bazaar, one of the leading publications of the day, was followed by a successful foray into book illustration beginning in 1897 when Parrish completed illustrations for Frank Baum’s Mother Goose in Prose. His unique style and vivid imagination were well suited to illustrating children’s literature and resulted in numerous commissions. The List of Characters is one of 26 paintings, which appeared as an illustration in Louise Saunders' book, The Knave of Hearts. Lawrence S. Cutler and Judy Goffman Cutler write, “The last book Parrish illustrated, The Knave of Hearts (1924), was his masterpiece. When Parrish discovered this children’s play, he proposed an illustrated edition to Scribner’s, to which the publisher enthusiastically agreed …It was written by Louise Saunders, who was the wife of Maxwell Evarts Perkins of Scribner’s, an important editor in the 20th century and discoverer of authors Thomas Wolfe, Ernest Hemingway, F. Scott Fitzgerald and others. The couple were summer residents at Cornish and close friends of the Parrishes” (Maxfield Parrish and the American Imagists, Edison, New Jersey, 2004, p. 172). According to Coy Ludwig, “The artist’s enthusiasm was shared by the publisher, who requested sketches or more precise information upon which to base a cost analysis, as final approval could not be given until the costs were estimated. Parrish prepared an elaborate dummy or mock-up of the proposed publication, complete with watercolor sketches of the illustrations, and sent it to the publisher early in 1921 …The twenty-six paintings for The Knave of Heartswere executed within three years, and the book, a sumptuous production, was published on October 2, 1925… The volume, selling for ten dollars, was packaged in a telescoping box...
Category
1920s Figurative Paintings
Materials
Oil, Board
Ask for Hires and Get the Genuine
Located in Fort Washington, PA
Medium: Oil on Paper Laid to Board
Signature: Signed with the Artists Initials M.P Lower Center
Coy Ludwig, Maxfield Parrish, New York, 1973, plate 35, p. 133, illustrated in color
Category
1920s Figurative Paintings
Materials
Paper, Oil, Board
Place de la République, 20th Century Oil on Canvas by Edouard Léon Cortès
Located in Madrid, ES
EDOUARD LÉON CORTÈS
French 1882 - 1969
PLACE DE LA RÉPUBLIQUE
signed "EDOUARD CORTÈS." (lower right)
oil on canvas
19-3/4 x 25-1/2 inches (50 x 64.5 cm.)
framed: 27-3/4 x 33-3/8 inches (70 x 84.5 cm.)
PROVENANCE
Private Collector, Madrid
An elegant night view of the Parisian Republic Square, with amazing light effects that catch us.
This work executed based on brushstrokes of long and safe strokes that make the forms vibrate with vivid color.
Parisian nightlife is trapped in this corner of Paris. The monumental sculpture that symbolizes freedom and that presides over the square serves as a reference behind the tram between a light chiaroscuro. Meanwhile, the effervecent and lively life of the cafes that surround it vibrate strongly with its bright lights.
Èdouard León Cortés (1882–1969) was a French post-impressionist artist of French and Spanish ancestry. He is known as "Le Poète Parisien de la Peinture" or "the Parisian Poet of Painting" because of his diverse Paris cityscapes in a variety of weather and night settings.
Cortes was born on August 6, 1882, in Lagny-sur-Marne, about twenty miles east of Paris. His father, Antonio Cortés, had been a painter for the Spanish Royal...
Category
Post-Impressionist 1920s Figurative Paintings
Materials
Canvas, Oil
Blowing Bubbles
By Edmund Adler
Located in Missouri, MO
Edmund Adler (Rode)
"Blowing Bubbles"
Oil on Canvas
22 x 27 inches
32 x 37 inches framed
Signed Lower Right
Edmund Adler (Austrian) 1876-1965
Kno...
Category
Realist 1920s Figurative Paintings
Materials
Canvas, Oil
Femme au Chat
By Micao Kono
Located in West Hollywood, CA
Micao Kono was born in Japan, but moved to work in Paris in the 1920's. His style, a mixture of Japanese watercolor and figurative Art Deco. He often mixed egg tempera into his oils ...
Category
Art Deco 1920s Figurative Paintings
Materials
Oil
"L'irremediable - Les Fleurs des Mal"
Located in West Hollywood, CA
Belgian Symbolist artist Jan Frans DeBoever (1872 - 1948), created symbolist/allegorical paintings throughout his lifetime. He centralized on allegorical and literary subjects, gener...
Category
Symbolist 1920s Figurative Paintings
Materials
Oil
L'ingenue
By Ron Blumberg
Located in West Hollywood, CA
An early, rare oil on canvas by American artist Ron Blumberg.
Blumberg was classically trained at La Grande Academie Chaumiere in Paris, 1932, before moving to New York where he b...
Category
1920s Figurative Paintings
Materials
Canvas, Oil
Les DeMoiselle D'allagorie
Located in West Hollywood, CA
An original oil on canvas by prolific French artist Helene Perdriat. Perdriat specialized in figurative, genre subjects of the 1920's and 1930's French...
Category
Art Deco 1920s Figurative Paintings
Shadows
Located in West Hollywood, CA
Presenting an original mixed media watercolor by Hungarian artist Bela Kadar.
Bela Kadar was a historically important artist, is work was included as part of the degenerate art movement of Nazi Germany. His works appeared illustrated in the famous German arts magazine Der Sturm...
Category
Expressionist 1920s Figurative Paintings
Materials
Gouache
Auto Portrait
Located in West Hollywood, CA
Presenting a lovely self portrait by Swiss artist Juliette Calame’. “Auto-Portrait” is an original vintage oil on panel, signed, c.1925, with an image dimension of 29 x 19.5 inches.
Category
Impressionist 1920s Figurative Paintings
Materials
Oil, Panel
Le Miroir
By Jean Jannel
Located in West Hollywood, CA
An original oil on canvas by French artist Jean Jannel, known for his figurative, genre portraits.
Le Miroir, is an original oil on canvas, signed, c.1930...
Category
1920s Figurative Paintings
Materials
Canvas, Oil
Les Amies
By Micao Kono
Located in West Hollywood, CA
Micao Kono was born in Japan, moving to work in Paris in the 1920's. His style, a mixture of Japanese watercolor and figurative Art Deco. He often mixed egg tempera into his oils to ...
Category
Art Deco 1920s Figurative Paintings
Materials
Canvas, Oil
Duet
Located in West Hollywood, CA
Presenting an exceptional Art Deco oil painting by Austrian artist Richard Geiger. Geiger specialized in Art Deco imagery, in particular, he enjoyed using figures from the Italian Theater...
Category
Art Deco 1920s Figurative Paintings
Materials
Oil, Canvas
Venus
By Edmond Vandercammen
Located in West Hollywood, CA
Presenting an exceptional and rare mixed media watercolor by Belgian artist Edmond Vandercammen.
Vandercammen was classically trained and well ...
Category
Surrealist 1920s Figurative Paintings
Materials
Watercolor
Margit
By Otto Tetjus Tugel
Located in West Hollywood, CA
Presenting a rare oil on panel by German artist Otto Tugel.
Otto Tugel worked in Germany before settling in New York. This is an early oil on panel, signed in monogram, dated 1925.
Category
Expressionist 1920s Figurative Paintings
Materials
Oil, Panel
The Zodiac
By Vladimir Ullianoff
Located in West Hollywood, CA
An original mixed media watercolor/gouache by Russian artist Vladimer Ullianoff.
Ullianoff was credited for his large paintings and mural work in venues such as Graumans Chinese Theater...
Category
1920s Figurative Paintings
Materials
Mixed Media
Mademoiselle Jannel
By Jean Jannel
Located in West Hollywood, CA
An original mixed media gouache by French artist Jean Jannel, known for his figurative, genre portraits.
Mademoiselle Jannel, is an original mixed media gouache, c.1930. We acquir...
Category