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Thomas Hart BentonSelf Portrait (~24% OFF LIST PRICE, Midwestern Art, American Painter, Modern)1972
1972
$3,777.77
$5,00024% Off
£2,900.96
£3,839.5224% Off
€3,327.86
€4,404.5324% Off
CA$5,308.21
CA$7,025.5924% Off
A$5,944.86
A$7,868.2124% Off
CHF 3,101.93
CHF 4,105.5124% Off
MX$72,613.91
MX$96,106.8524% Off
NOK 39,465.59
NOK 52,233.9724% Off
SEK 37,201.04
SEK 49,236.7824% Off
DKK 24,835.43
DKK 32,870.4924% Off
About the Item
Thomas Hart Benton
Self Portrait
1972
Lithograph
Image Size: 19.5 x 13.75 inches
Matted Size: 28.5 x 22.25 inches
Edition: 300
Signed by hand, lower right
COA provided
Ref.: Fath, 84. In Creekmore Fath's catalog, Benton writes, 'This is a study, from the mirror image of an old artist, 'grandaddy Benton' as all the kids call me.'
*Condition:
- Minute 0.2" tear/puncture (right of chin). Hardly noticeable.
- 7.75" crease from left collar (across wall paneling) to edge of the sheet.
- Otherwise in good condition; no stainig, soiling, foxing or yellowing
Please refer to images and/or video for details.
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Celebrating the legacy of Thomas Hart Benton (1889-1975), a pioneering American painter, muralist, and printmaker. As a leading figure in the Regionalist art movement, alongside Grant Wood and John Steuart Curry, Benton captured the essence of American life with his fluid, sculpted figures depicting everyday scenes.
Born and raised in the Midwest, Benton’s work reflects his deep connection to the region. His artistic journey also took him to Paris, New York City, Martha's Vineyard, and beyond, painting vivid scenes of the American South and West.
Explore the timeless beauty and storytelling in Benton’s art, a true homage to the spirit of America.
#ThomasHartBenton #RegionalistArt #AmericanPainter #ArtHistory #MidwesternArt #GrantWood #JohnSteuartCurry #EverydayScenes #AmericanArt #Muralist #Printmaker #ArtLegacy #ParisArtStudies #NYCArt #MarthasVineyardArt #AmericanSouthArt #AmericanWestArt
- Creator:Thomas Hart Benton (1889-1975, American)
- Creation Year:1972
- Dimensions:Height: 19.5 in (49.53 cm)Width: 13.75 in (34.93 cm)
- Medium:
- Movement & Style:
- Period:
- Framing:Framing Options Available
- Condition:*Condition: - Minute 0.2" tear/puncture (right of chin). Hardly noticeable. - 7.75" crease from left collar (across wall paneling) to edge of the sheet. - Otherwise in good condition; no staining, soiling, foxing or yellowing Please refer to images.
- Gallery Location:Kansas City, MO
- Reference Number:1stDibs: LU608314803902
Thomas Hart Benton
Thomas Hart Benton was born in Neosho, Missouri on April 15, 1889. Even as a boy, he was no stranger to the "art of the deal" or to the smoke-filled rooms in which such deals were often consummated. His grandfather had been Missouri's first United States Senator and served in Washington for thirty years. His father, Maecenas Benton, was United States Attorney for the Western District of Missouri under Cleveland and served in the United States House of Representatives during the McKinley and Theodore Roosevelt administrations. Benton's brother, Nat, was prosecutor for Greene County, Missouri, during the 1930s. As soon as he could walk, Benton traveled with his father on political tours. There he learned the arts of chewing and smoking, and while the men were involved in their heated discussions, Benton delighted in finding new cream colored wallpaper on the staircase wall, at the age of six or seven, and drew in charcoal his first mural, a long multi-car freight train. As soon as he was eighteen, even though his father wanted him to study law, Benton left for Chicago where he studied at the Art Institute during the years 1907 and 1908. He continued his studies in Paris, where he learned delicious wickedness, aesthetic and otherwise. Once back home, he became the leader of the Regionalist School, the most theatrical and gifted of the 1930s muralists and as Harry Truman described him,"the best damned painter in America." Detractors said that Benton was "a fascist, a communist, a racist and a bigot"; the ingenious structure, powerful use of modeling and scale and the high-colored humanity of the murals and easel paintings are retort enough. He was a dark, active dynamo, only 5 ft., 3 1/2 in. tall. He was outspoken, open, charmingly profane; he had a great mane of hair and a face the texture of oak bark. He wore rumpled corduroy and flannel, and walked with the unsteady swagger of a sailor just ashore. He poured a salwart drink, chewed on small black cigars and spat in the fire. Benton was once described as the "churlish dean of regionalist art." If you listened to a variety of art authorities, you would find them equally divided between Harry Truman's assessment of Benton as "the best damned painter in America" and Hilton Kramer who proclaimed Benton "a failed artist." The East Coast art establishment tended to regard Benton as memorable for one reason only: he was the teacher of Jackson Pollock. Benton was married in 1922 to Rita, a gregarious Italian lady, and they had a daughter and a son. At the height of his fame in the 1940s, Benton bungled the buy-out he was offered by Walt Disney and went his own way, completing his last mural in 1975 in acrylics the year of his death. He died in 1975.
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Label signed and numbered by Estate Representative
COA provided by Authorizing Body
Additional COA provided by representing Gallery
Ref.: 924802-909
Image included in the exhibition An Artist at Home in America: Michael Mardikes’ Photographs of Thomas Hart Benton at the Kansas City Public Library (November 20, 2021-May 15, 2022)
One night in late 2020, as Nick Vedros was leaving the home of his Aunt Myrt and Uncle Michael Mardikes, his aunt suddenly asked him, “What are we going to do with all the negatives?” The noted Kansas City photographer was not sure what his 89-year-old aunt was talking about, until she handed him a notebook filled with more than 1000 negatives chronicling Thomas Hart Benton at home and in his studio. They had been filed away for almost seven decades.
This startling discovery was the inspiration for the exhibition, “An Artist at Home in America: Michael Mardikes’ Photographs of Thomas Hart Benton” on view at the Kansas City Public Library Central Library. The exhibition is a must-see, not just for fans of Thomas Hart Benton but for devotees of exemplary photojournalism.
Of the 1,080 photographs Mardikes took, only four had been published in an article he wrote for “This Month in Kansas City” magazine in 1966. The others were never printed, nor was their existence common knowledge. Although Vedros had been aware of his uncle’s assignment with Benton, he was stunned to discover that so much additional material existed.
Vedros, who decided at age 12 to become a photographer himself after seeing his uncle’s work, was determined to organize an exhibition, and was especially interested in doing it as quickly as possible given his uncle’s advanced age and increasing frailty. Collaborating with Dan White, a photographer, master printer and friend since their time together at the University of Missouri journalism school, they selected 34 images to be printed and framed, researching the details with Steve Sitton, the director of the Thomas Hart Benton Home and Studio Historic Site.
Michael Mardikes had had a brief career as a commercial photographer before going on to work in management at the Ford Motor Company and later at UMKC. He made the acquaintance of Benton through Eugene Pyle, a former student of Benton’s and Mardikes’ photography instructor at the Art Institute. In 1955, Benton asked Mardikes to photograph him; Mardikes visited Benton 35 to 40 times, over a period of a few months in late 1955 and early 1956. Sitton told Vedros that not only was Mardikes’ amount of access incredible, but that the resulting body of work was unmatched.
As the project progressed, Benton became focused on a mural commission for the River Club in 1956. Henry Adams, preeminent Benton scholar and former curator at The Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art, provided some context for this particular work: “The commission to paint ‘Traders at Westport Landing’ came at a low point in Benton’s career, 1956, and initiated the late phase of Benton’s mural paintings. It was the first of a series of murals depicting the exploration and settlement of the west, which culminated in the Truman Library mural, which was completed in 1962. All these murals feature trading and friendly contact with the Indians, rather than conflict, and are arresting in their bright color and meticulous rendering of carefully researched detail. The River Club, which commissioned ‘Traders at Westport Landing,’ overlooks the Missouri River and has a panoramic view very similar to the one in Benton’s painting.”
This group of black and white photos not only documents the artist’s working process but also reveals other aspects of his daily life: one memorable image reveals Rita Benton massaging her husband’s stiff shoulders after a long day in his studio. Other images show members of the River Club board visiting Benton’s studio to check on the progress of the mural. One charming image captures a candid moment of Rita Benton and Myrt Mardikes as they collaborated in the Benton kitchen making chicken kapama for their husbands.
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