Alongside
By Tod Lindenmuth
Located in Missouri, MO
Society of Independent Artists in New York. He married artist and illustrator Elizabeth Boardman Warren
1940s American Modern Figurative Prints
Color
Alongside
By Tod Lindenmuth
Located in Missouri, MO
Society of Independent Artists in New York. He married artist and illustrator Elizabeth Boardman Warren
Color
Fog Bound
By Tod Lindenmuth
Located in Missouri, MO
New York. He married artist and illustrator Elizabeth Boardman Warren, whom he met in Provincetown
Color
Sold
H 24 in W 28 in
"Thick Outside, " Tod Lindemuth, Provincetown Fishermen at Docks with Boat, WPA
By Tod Lindenmuth
Located in New York, NY
Society of Independent Artists in New York. He married artist and illustrator Elizabeth Boardman Warren
Canvas, Oil
St. Augustine Florida
By Tod Lindenmuth
Located in Wilton Manors, FL
Boardman Warren, whom he met in Provincetown, and with whom he had two children. They were both very active
Oil, Panel
$19,000
H 9.63 in W 11.25 in
'Taos Placita' — American Southwest Regionalist Masterwork
By Gustave Baumann
Located in Myrtle Beach, SC
Gustave Baumann, 'Taos Placita', color woodcut, 1947, edition 125. Baumann 132. Signed, titled, and numbered '20-125' in pencil; with the artist’s Hand-in-Heart chop. A superb, richl...
Woodcut
Thick Outside
By Tod Lindenmuth
Located in Milford, NH
A fine Cape Cod scene with fisherman heading out on the dock in heavy fog by American artist Tod Lindenmuth (1885-1976). Lindenmuth was born in Allentown, Pennsylvania, and later w...
Canvas, Oil
Tod Lindenmuth was a semi-abstract painter and graphic artist who did much to promote modernist styles. Although he was much influenced by Abstract Expressionism, his subject matter was realistic enough to be recognizable. He did linoleum cuts and was one of the first to work with that medium, and towards the end of his life, he experimented with collage. In the 1930s, he had commissions for the Public Works of Art Project and the Works Progress Administration. Lindenmuth was born in Allentown, Pennsylvania. He studied with Robert Henri at the New York School of the Arts in Manhattan, and in Provincetown with E. Ambrose Webster and George Elmer Browne. He first exhibited in Provincetown in 1915 and between 1917 and 1928 served on the jury for the Provincetown Art Association’s "First Modernistic Exhibition.” He exhibited regularly with the Society of Independent Artists in New York. He married artist and illustrator Elizabeth Boardman Warren, whom he met in Provincetown, and with whom he had two children. They were both very active in Provincetown, but in 1934, they visited St. Augustine, Florida, for the first time and went on to establish a winter studio in the Fatio House on Aviles Street and became active and respected members of the arts community there. In 1940, the couple moved permanently to St. Augustine. They never owned a car and sought subjects on long walks around St. Augustine. In 1940, Lindenmuth turned away from graphic arts and focused on landscape painting. One of his landscapes, Spanish Cedar and Live Oak along the Moat, St. Augustine, depicted a huge tree on a historic site whose excavations showed that St. Augustine had an early role in validating Spanish claims to North America. In 1940, the Lindenmuth's moved their summer studio from Provincetown to Rockport, Massachusetts, and became regular exhibitors of the Rockport Artist Association. He once said, “the marine subjects of Provincetown and Rockport, Massachusetts, are favorite painting spots but the landscape of the South with its subtle and tropical aspects furnishes a lot of material for the artist, particularly around St. Augustine.” For the remainder of their painting careers, they divided their time seasonally between Rockport and St. Augustine. In 1968, they retired to Jacksonville, Florida, living in Wesley Manor (Westminster Woods) on Julington Creek. Lindenmuth died in Jacksonville in 1976 at age 91.