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"Garage in Provincetown" Joseph Solman, Urban Landscape by Expressionist Artist
By Joseph Solman
Located in New York, NY
Joseph Solman
Garage in Provincetown
Signed with initials lower right
Graphite on paper
8 7/8 x 11 7/8 inches
Joseph Solman was born in 1909 in Vitebsk, in what is now Belarus, the...
Category
20th Century Abstract Expressionist Figurative Paintings
Materials
Paper, Graphite
"Chateau" European School, Castle Above Mountainous European Landscape Panting
Located in New York, NY
European School
Chateau
Oil on wood
9 5/8 x 7 1/2 inches
Category
19th Century Realist Figurative Paintings
Materials
Wood, Oil
"Nymphs in a Landscape" Narcisse Diaz de la Peña, 19th Century Idyllic Landscape
Located in New York, NY
Narcisse Diaz de la Peña
Nymphs in a Landscape
Estate sale seal lower left
Oil on board
9 1/4 x 11 1/4 inches
Narcisse Diaz de la Peña was born in 1808 in...
Category
19th Century Romantic Figurative Paintings
Materials
Oil, Board
"Into the Woods" Henry Prellwitz, Lyrical Woman In Wooded Landscape Painting
By Henry Prellwitz
Located in New York, NY
Henry Prellwitz
Into the Woods
Oil on board
11 1/2 x 8 3/4 inches
Henry Prellwitz studied art at the Art Students League of New York, where his chief mentor was Thomas Wilmer Dewing; he later became its director.[3] He also studied at the Académie Julian in Paris.
In 1892, he set up his studio in the Holbein Studios building on West 55th Street in Manhattan, where his future wife, the artist Edith Mitchill, also had a studio. They married in 1894 and had a son, Edwin.
By the mid 1890s, he was teaching portrait painting at the Pratt Institute, where one of his students was the Cubist artist Max Weber.
In 1899, Henry and Edith moved to the north shore of Peconic Bay on Long Island, where their artist friends Irving Ramsay Wiles and Edward August Bell were already established. They painted plein air paintings and also worked in adjoining studios at High House, their Peconic Bay home.
Prellwitz painted Impressionist and Tonalist waterscapes of Peconic Bay and allegorical figure paintings such as the 1904 Lotus and Laurel. He exhibited mainly on the east coast and at expositions like the St. Louis World's Fair, where he won a silver medal. He won the Third Hallgarten Prize from the National Academy of Design (NAD) in 1893 for The Prodigal Son, and his Venus won the Thomas B. Clarke Prize at the 1907 NAD exhibition for the best figure composition by an American citizen painted in the United States.
Both Prellwitzes disappeared into obscurity for several decades after their deaths in the early 1940s. Rediscovered in the 1980s, they have been called one of the best-kept secrets in art...
Category
Early 20th Century Modern Figurative Paintings
Materials
Oil, Board
$3,600 Sale Price
20% Off
"Lady in a Interior" Addison Thomas Millar, 19th Century American Genre Painting
By Addison Thomas Millar
Located in New York, NY
Addison Thomas Millar
Lady in a Interior
Oil on canvas board
14 x 10 inches
Millar's father emigrated to the United States from Scotland in 1845. He grew up in Warren, Ohio. During his primary education, he took some painting lessons from John Bell, a local landscape painter.
In his late teens, he won three consecutive awards from The Youth's Companion, in their annual art contests. This prompted his parents to allow him to go to Cincinnati to take formal lessons from the genre painter, De Scott...
Category
19th Century American Impressionist Figurative Paintings
Materials
Canvas, Oil, Board
"Fishing in Autumn" Frederick Dickinson Williams, Early 20th Century Landscape
Located in New York, NY
Frederick Dickinson Williams
Fishing in Autumn, 1914
Signed and dated lower left
Oil on board
9 1/4 x 6 7/8 inches
Frederick Dickinson W...
Category
1910s Academic Figurative Paintings
Materials
Board, Oil
"Rowboat in a Summer Landscape" George Bacon Wood, Pleine Air Landscape
Located in New York, NY
George Bacon Wood
Rowboat in a Summer Landscape
Signed lower left
Oil on wood panel
6 1/4 x 8 inches
Born in Philadelphia, landscape painter George Bacon Wood, Jr., studied at the ...
Category
Late 19th Century Academic Figurative Paintings
Materials
Oil, Wood Panel
"The Riverbank" Charles Sprague Pearce, American Impressionist Boat Sketch
By Charles Sprague Pearce
Located in New York, NY
Charles Sprague Pearce
The Riverbank, circa 1900
Signed lower left, inscribed verso
Oil on canvas
7 1/2 x 5 1/2 inches
Charles Sprague Pearce made a successful career painting high...
Category
Early 1900s American Impressionist Figurative Paintings
Materials
Canvas, Oil
"A Sunny Corner" Eugenie M. Heller, Impressionist Garden Landscape In Bloom
Located in New York, NY
Eugenie M. Heller
A Sunny Corner, circa 1900
Signed lower right
Oil on board
10 1/2 x 8 1/2 inches
Eugenie M. Heller (1867 - 1952) was active/lived in New York, Massachusetts.
Heller studied with Weir, Whistler, Amen-Jean, Grasset and Rodin. Eugenie Heller...
Category
Early 1900s American Impressionist Figurative Paintings
Materials
Oil, Board
"Tree in Winter" Delos Palmer Jr, Sketch of Tree 20th Century Impressionist Work
Located in New York, NY
Delos Palmer Jr.
Tree in Winter
Signed lower left
Oil on Masonite
10 x 8 inches
Delos Palmer, Jr. was born January 26, 1890 in New York City. His father was Dr. Delos Palmer, a socially prominent Park Avenue dentist. His mother was Jennifer Emma Banta. His parents were both born in NYC, where they married in 1880 and had five children. There had three sons and two daughters. He was the fourth born. They lived in a private townhouse at 48 West 50th Street, with a cook, a waitress, and a nurse to assist in his father's dental practice on the ground floor.
They lived a privileged life and the children all went to the best private schools. He graduated high school in June of 1908.
He studied at The Art Students League from 1911 to 1915 with the renowned American Impressionist, George Bellows. According to the artist, "Bellows was a good influence on me. He taught me how to paint what I see and what I feel!"
In 1916 Palmer moved to the historic Holbein Studios at 139 West 55th Street. He worked there until 1920, when he moved to the more fashionable Greenwich Village, where he became a successful society portraitist.
He was 27 years old during the Great War, so he was not selected for military service.
In 1923 Palmer began to sell interior story illustrations to Metropolitan Magazine, The Saturday Evening Post, and Liberty.
In 1924 he married Helen Smith Romme and moved to Stamford, CT, where they raised a daughter and two step-sons.
The fateful market crash of 1929 ended Palmer's high society portrait business, but he soon found work through his contacts at Liberty magazine's MacFadden Publishing, which also produced several crime and detective magazines such as Master Detective and True Detective.
He then began to paint pulp covers for Dime Mystery, Clues, Frontier Stories, Action Stories, Western Trails, All Star Adventure, Complete Western Book...
Category
Early 20th Century American Impressionist Figurative Paintings
Materials
Masonite, Oil
$1,200 Sale Price
20% Off
"Pueblo Indians, Taos, New Mexico" Georgina Klitgaard, Modernist Figures
By Georgina Klitgaard
Located in New York, NY
Georgina Klitgaard
Pueblo Indians, Taos, New Mexico
Signed lower right
Oil on canvas
18 x 24 inches
Georgina Klitgaard’s art has sometimes gotten lost in the critical propensity to...
Category
Mid-20th Century American Modern Landscape Paintings
Materials
Canvas, Oil
"Color Sketch, Shakespeare Garden" Jennie Brownscombe, circa 1890 Impressionism
Located in New York, NY
Jennie Brownscombe
Color Sketch, Shakespeare Garden, c. 1890s
Signed lower left
Oil on board
7 1/8 x 9 1/4 inches
The artist was born in a log cab...
Category
1890s American Impressionist Figurative Paintings
Materials
Board, Oil
"Untitled" Larry Calcagno, Trompe-l'œil Mixed-Media Minimalist Composition
By Larry Calcagno
Located in New York, NY
Larry Calcagno
Untitled
Mixed media on canvas
36 x 23 1/3 inches
Lawrence Calcagno, better known as Larry, was an artist who gained notoriety during t...
Category
20th Century Modern Figurative Paintings
Materials
Canvas, Mixed Media
"The Humber River" George Ennis, Intense Color American Modernist Landscape
Located in New York, NY
George Ennis
The Humber River
Signed lower left
Oil on canvas
20 x 24 inches
Ennis studied at Washington University in St. Louis and at the Chase School. He was a member of the Fed...
Category
Early 20th Century American Modern Landscape Paintings
Materials
Canvas, Oil
"Market Scene, North Africa" Martha Walter, Female Impressionist Scene of Market
By Martha Walter
Located in New York, NY
Martha Walter
Market Scene, North Africa
Signed lower right
Watercolor on paper
9 x 9 inches
Martha Walter was best known as a painter of colorful beach scenes and landscapes. Infl...
Category
Early 20th Century Impressionist Figurative Paintings
Materials
Paper, Watercolor
"Mothers and Children, North Africa" Martha Walter, Impressionist Watercolor
By Martha Walter
Located in New York, NY
Martha Walter
Mothers and Children, North Africa
Signed lower right
Watercolor on paper
6 1/2 x 7 1/2 inches
Martha Walter was best known as a painter of colorful beach scenes and ...
Category
Early 20th Century American Impressionist Figurative Paintings
Materials
Paper, Watercolor
"Woman Reading in an Interior" Vaclav Vytlacil, Loose Brushwork Portrait
By Vaclav Vytlacil
Located in New York, NY
Vaclav Vytlacil
Woman Reading in an Interior, circa 1915
Signed lower right
Oil on canvas
16 x 20 inches
As a child, Vytlacil had taken art classes at the Art Institute of Chicago....
Category
1910s Impressionist Interior Paintings
Materials
Canvas, Oil
"Marblehead Harbor, Grey Day" John Rettig, 1919 Marine Landscape Work
Located in New York, NY
John Rettig
Marblehead Harbor, Grey Day, 1919
Signed and dated lower right
Oil on academy board
15 x 18 inches
Dubbed as the “Wizard of Scenic Creation”, John Rettig was best known...
Category
1910s American Impressionist Figurative Paintings
Materials
Oil, Illustration Board
"Gloucester Boats" Frederick Mulhaupt, Impressionist Gloucester Scene
Located in New York, NY
Frederick John Mulhaupt
Gloucester Boats
Signed lower left
Oil on board
12 x 16 inches
Born in Rock Port, Missouri, in 1871, Mulhaupt studied...
Category
Early 20th Century American Impressionist Figurative Paintings
Materials
Oil, Board
"Spanish Moss, Georgia" Georgina Klitgaard, Modernist Southern Flora Painting
By Georgina Klitgaard
Located in New York, NY
Georgina Klitgaard
Spanish Moss, Georgia
Signed lower right
Oil on artist's board
12 x 16 inches
Georgina Klitgaard’s art has sometimes gotten lost in the critical propensity to as...
Category
Mid-20th Century American Modern Landscape Paintings
Materials
Canvas, Oil
"Catskill Mountains" Georgina Klitgaard, Country Landscape Modernist Hills
By Georgina Klitgaard
Located in New York, NY
Georgina Klitgaard
Catskill Mountains
Signed lower right
Oil on canvas
24 x 30 inches
Georgina Klitgaard’s art has sometimes gotten lost in the critical propensity to assign artist...
Category
Early 20th Century American Modern Figurative Paintings
Materials
Canvas, Oil
"Washington Square Park" Georgina Klitgaard, People in Cityscape Modernist Scene
By Georgina Klitgaard
Located in New York, NY
Georgina Klitgaard
Washington Square Park, New York
Oil on canvas
25 1/2 x 31 inches
Georgina Klitgaard’s art has sometimes gotten lost in the critical propensity to assign artists...
Category
Early 20th Century American Modern Figurative Paintings
Materials
Canvas, Oil
"Bearsville, New York" Georgina Klitgaard, Modernist New York Wooded Landscape
By Georgina Klitgaard
Located in New York, NY
Georgina Klitgaard
Bearsville, New York
Signed lower right
Oil on canvas
26 1/4 x 32 inches
Georgina Klitgaard’s art has sometimes gotten lost in the critical propensity to assign ...
Category
Early 20th Century American Modern Figurative Paintings
Materials
Canvas, Oil
"Central Park South" Georgina Klitgaard, Female Modernist New York Cityscape
By Georgina Klitgaard
Located in New York, NY
Georgina Klitgaard
Central Park South
Signed lower right
Oil on canvas
40 1/2 x 28 inches
Georgina Klitgaard’s art has sometimes gotten lost in the critical propensity to assign ar...
Category
Early 20th Century American Modern Landscape Paintings
Materials
Oil
"Fodder Stacks, Bearsville" Georgina Klitgaard, Modernist Country Landscape
By Georgina Klitgaard
Located in New York, NY
Georgina Klitgaard
Fodder Stacks, Bearsville
Signed lower right
Oil on canvas
24 x 30 inches
Georgina Klitgaard’s art has sometimes gotten lost in the critical propensity to assign...
Category
Early 20th Century American Modern Landscape Paintings
Materials
Canvas, Oil
"Arroyo Seco, New Mexico" Georgina Klitgaard, Modernist Southwest Oil Landscape
By Georgina Klitgaard
Located in New York, NY
Georgina Klitgaard
Arroyo Seco, New Mexico
Signed lower right
Oil on canvas
28 x 42 inches
Georgina Klitgaard’s art has sometimes gotten lost in the critical propensity to assign a...
Category
1940s American Modern Figurative Paintings
Materials
Canvas, Oil
"Newton’s Farm" Georgina Klitgaard, Modernist Hazy Autumn Landscape Painting
By Georgina Klitgaard
Located in New York, NY
Georgina Klitgaard
Newton’s Farm
Signed lower right
Oil on canvas
24 1/2 x 30 1/2 inches
Georgina Klitgaard’s art has sometimes gotten lost in the critical propensity to assign art...
Category
Early 20th Century American Modern Figurative Paintings
Materials
Canvas, Oil
"Truck Gardens" Georgina Klitgaard, Modernist Country Landscape With Train
By Georgina Klitgaard
Located in New York, NY
Georgina Klitgaard
Truck Gardens
Signed lower right
Oil on canvas
26 x 36 inches
Georgina Klitgaard’s art has sometimes gotten lost in the critical propensity to assign artists to ...
Category
Early 20th Century American Modern Figurative Paintings
Materials
Canvas, Oil
"Fodder Stacks, Bearsville" Georgina Klitgaard, Modernist Agricultural Landscape
By Georgina Klitgaard
Located in New York, NY
Georgina Klitgaard
Fodder Stacks, Bearsville
Signed lower right
Oil on canvas
18 x 22 inches
Georgina Klitgaard’s art has sometimes gotten lost in the critical propensity to assign...
Category
Early 20th Century American Modern Landscape Paintings
Materials
Canvas, Oil
"Johnny Walker’s Place" Georgina Klitgaard, 1929 American Modernist Landscape
By Georgina Klitgaard
Located in New York, NY
Georgina Klitgaard
Johnny Walker’s Place, circa 1929
Signed lower right
Oil on canvas
34 x 42 inches
Georgina Klitgaard’s art has sometimes gotten lost in the critical propensity t...
Category
1920s American Modern Figurative Paintings
Materials
Oil
"Pueblo Indians, Taos, New Mexico, " Georgia Klitgaard, Southwest Landscape
By Georgina Klitgaard
Located in New York, NY
Georgina Klitgaard
Pueblo Indians, Taos, New Mexico
Signed lower right
Oil on canvas
18 x 24 inches
Georgina Berrian was born in Spuyten Duyvil, New York in 1893. She was educated a...
Category
Mid-20th Century Modern Landscape Paintings
Materials
Canvas, Oil
$5,200 Sale Price
20% Off
"Winter Landscape with Stream" Carl Rudolph Krafft, Early 20th Century Landscape
By Carl Rudolph Krafft
Located in New York, NY
Carl Rudolph Krafft
Winter Landscape with Stream
Signed lower right and with thumbprint
Oil on canvas
25 x 30 inches
Carl Rudolph Krafft was born in 1884 in Reading, Ohio, and his ...
Category
Early 20th Century American Impressionist Figurative Paintings
Materials
Canvas, Oil
"View of Arizona Desert near Wickenberg" Will Foote, Impressionist Western Scene
Located in New York, NY
Will Foote
View of Arizona Desert near Wickenberg, circa 1927
Signed lower center; titled and dated on the reverse
Oil on artist's board
12 x 16 inches
Foote was born on June 29, 1874 in Grand Rapids, Michigan, and died on January 27, 1965, in Sarasota, Florida. He was in Old Lyme, 1901-65; and in Cos Cob, 1903.
Will Howe Foote was one of the earliest artists at Old Lyme and one who adopted the town as home. He first went there the summer of 1901 with his uncle, William H. Howe, a painter of cattle, who had been told about the beauties of the countryside by Henry Ward Ranger. Foote had himself heard of Old Lyme when he had met Clark Voorhees in France. He and his uncle were both from Grand Rapids, Michigan, where Foote's father was an executive in the furniture industry that made the city famous. Encouraged to be an artist by his father, he began his professional training at the Art Institute of Chicago in 1894. He became friends there with a fellow Michigan student, Frederick Frieseke, who would study with him again at the Art Students League in New York, where Foote worked in 1895-96 under H. Siddons Mowbray and Kenyon Cox.
In 1897 he and Frieseke went to the Academic Julian in Paris, where Foote studied under Jean-Paul Laurens and Benjamin Constant. He was at Julian's until 1900, except for an Italian trip, summers at Laren, Holland, or Etaples, France, and a short period at Whistler's school in Paris. He exhibited twice at the Old Salon, and when he returned to the United States in 1900, he had a one-man exhibition in his hometown.
Will Howe Foote's paintings were well received on his return from abroad. He exhibited frequently at the National Academy of Design and became an associate member in 1910. His awards included a bronze medal at the St. Louis Exposition in 1904 and a silver medal at the Panama-Pacific Exposition in San Francisco in 1915.
Once he visited Old Lyme, Foote returned every summer. In 1902 he was hired as assistant to Frank DuMond at the Lyme Summer School of Art, which was sponsored by the Art Students League of New York. Sometime in 1903 he also taught a session in Cos Cob. After 1906, when the League moved its Lyme classes to Woodstock, New York, Foote continued in Old Lyme as a private instructor.
In 1907 he was married to Helen Kirtland Freeman, whom he had met a year or two earlier when she had come to the Lyme art colony as a student of Henry Rankin Poore. Fellow artist William Chadwick was best man at the wedding. The Footes began building a house on Sill Lane in Old Lyme and upon its completion in 1909 spent every spring, summer and fall there, where Foote devoted full time to painting. The Gregory Smiths, old friends from Grand Rapids, arrived in Old Lyme in 1910 and became neighbors. Foote's early works in Connecticut, such as A Summer's Night reflect the artist's interest in soft, atmospheric scenes dominated by a single, overriding tone. The arrival of Childe Hassam and Walter Griffin...
Category
1920s American Impressionist Figurative Paintings
Materials
Oil, Board
"Rockport Harbor" Kathryn E. Cherry, Female American Impressionist Landscape
Located in New York, NY
Kathryn E. Cherry
Rockport Harbor
Signed lower right
Oil on canvas board
10 1/2 x 12 inches
Kathryn Cherry was an influential St. Louis painter, ceramicist, designer, and art educa...
Category
Early 20th Century American Impressionist Figurative Paintings
Materials
Oil, Illustration Board
"Forest Landscape" John F. Carlson, circa 1925 American Impressionist Landscape
By John F. Carlson
Located in New York, NY
John F. Carlson
Forest Landscape, circa 1925
Signed lower right
Watercolor on paper
Sight 21 x 24 1/2 inches
The native Swede John Fabian Carlson became a household name in New Yor...
Category
1920s American Impressionist Landscape Paintings
Materials
Paper, Watercolor
"Ring Around the Rosy" Theodore Wendel, circa 1880 Caricature of Duveneck Boys
By Theodore Wendel
Located in New York, NY
Theodore Wendel
Ring Around the Rosy (Duveneck Boys Caricature), circa 1880
Oil on board
12 x 22 3/4 inches
Theodore Wendel is one of the most respected American impressionists and major museums and collectors are eager to purchase exquisitely rendered works like View from the Artist’s Farmhouse, Ipswich, MA that display Wendel’s finest period of impressionism. He is considered the “most French” of American painters along with Theodore Robinson and Childe Hassam.
Wendel was born in Midway, Ohio, and lived in Newport (RI), Boston (1889-1898) and Ipswich (MA, 1898-). As a boy, he joined a circus as an acrobat. He studied with Thomas Noble at the McMicken School of Art at the University of Cincinnati, where he met and became a life long friend of Joseph DeCamp. He and DeCamp traveled to Munich, Germany, in 1878, to study with Frank Duveneck at the Munich Academy and they became known as “The Duveneck Boys.” Duveneck, Chase, Whistler, Twachtman and Wendel painted landscapes and figural paintings in Polling, Florence, and Venice from 1878-1880. Most of his paintings from this period disappeared and are very rare. He sailed for Newport, Rhode Island in 1882 and lived briefly in New York. In 1883, he exhibited in Cincinnati with Twachtman, DeCamp and Potthast and in that year Wendel and Louis Ritter...
Category
1880s Impressionist Figurative Paintings
Materials
Oil, Board
"Birth Tear/Tear" Judy Chicago, 1985 Abstracted Surreal Figure Giving Birth
By Judy Chicago
Located in New York, NY
Judy Chicago
Birth Tear/Tear, 1985
Signed, dated, and numbered in margin
Serigraph on Stonehenge Natural White
Image 25 x 35 inches
Sheet 30 x 40 inches
Judy Chicago’s “Birth Tear/T...
Category
1980s Feminist Abstract Paintings
Materials
Paper
$6,800 Sale Price
20% Off
"Gloucester Harbor" Laura Woodward, Cape Ann Marine Scene, Hudson River School
By Laura Woodward
Located in New York, NY
Laura Woodward
Gloucester Harbor, circa 1880
Signed lower left
Oil on canvas
18 x 24 inches
Provenance:
Private Collection, United Kingdom
Priory Fine ...
Category
1880s American Impressionist Figurative Paintings
Materials
Canvas, Oil
"Autumn Wood Interior" John E. Costigan, Early 20th Century Landscape Painting
Located in New York, NY
John Edward Costigan
Autumn Wood Interior, 1946
Signed, lower left "J.E. Costigan N.A."
Oil on canvas
24 x 30 inches
John Costigan was a self-taught painter and trained printer dis...
Category
1940s Impressionist Landscape Paintings
Materials
Oil
John E. Costigan"Autumn Wood Interior" John E. Costigan, Early 20th Century Landscape Painting, 1946
$19,200 Sale Price
20% Off
"Through the Woods" John E. Costigan, Early 20th Century Landscape Painting
Located in New York, NY
John Edward Costigan
Through the Woods
Signed lower right
Oil on masonite
30 x 27 1/2 inches
John Costigan was a self-taught painter and trained printer distinguished by his impres...
Category
Mid-20th Century Landscape Paintings
Materials
Canvas, Oil
"Risen Moon" Frederick Judd Waugh, Coastal Landscape, Rocky Coast Marine Scene
By Frederick Judd Waugh
Located in New York, NY
Frederick Judd Waugh
Risen Moon
Signed lower right, Grand Central Art Galleries Inc. label on verso
Oil on board
25 x 30 inches
Mainly known as a marine painter. Waugh's sea paintings were enthusiastically received; for five consecutive years, he was awarded the Popular Prize at the Carnegie International Exhibition. Waugh was the son of a well-known Philadelphia portrait painter, Samuel Waugh...
Category
1920s American Impressionist Figurative Paintings
Materials
Oil, Canvas
"Cronus Waiting" David Hare, Mythological Allegory Surrealist Scene
By David Hare
Located in New York, NY
David Hare
Cronus Waiting, 1990
Acrylic on linen
72 x 42 inches
“Freedom is what we want,” David Hare boldly stated in 1965, but then he added the caveat, “and what we are most afraid of.” No one could accuse David Hare of possessing such fear. Blithely unconcerned with the critics’ judgments, Hare flitted through most of the major art developments of the mid-twentieth century in the United States. He changed mediums several times; just when his fame as a sculptor had reached its apogee about 1960, he switched over to painting. Yet he remained attached to surrealism long after it had fallen out of official favor. “I can’t change what I do in order to fit what would make me popular,” he said. “Not because of moral reasons, but just because I can’t do it; I’m not interested in it.”
Hare was born in New York City in 1917; his family was both wealthy and familiar with the world of modern art. Meredith (1870-1932), his father, was a prominent corporate attorney. His mother, Elizabeth Sage Goodwin (1878-1948) was an art collector, a financial backer of the 1913 Armory Show, and a friend of artists such as Constantin Brancusi, Walt Kuhn, and Marcel Duchamp.
In the 1920s, the entire family moved to Santa Fe, New Mexico and later to Colorado Springs, in the hope that the change in altitude and climate would help to heal Meredith’s tuberculosis. In Colorado Springs, Elizabeth founded the Fountain Valley School where David attended high school after his father died in 1932. In the western United States, Hare developed a fascination for kachina dolls and other aspects of Native American culture that would become a recurring source of inspiration in his career.
After high school, Hare briefly attended Bard College (1936-37) in Annandale-on-Hudson. At a loss as to what to do next, he parlayed his mother’s contacts into opening a commercial photography studio and began dabbling in color photography, still a rarity at the time [Kodachrome was introduced in 1935]. At age 22, Hare had his first solo exhibition at Walker Gallery in New York City; his 30 color photographs included one of President Franklin Roosevelt.
As a photographer, Hare experimented with an automatist technique called “heatage” (or “melted negatives”) in which he heated the negative in order to distort the image. Hare described them as “antagonisms of matter.” The final products were usually abstractions tending towards surrealism and similar to processes used by Man Ray, Raoul Ubac, and Wolfgang Paalen.
In 1940, Hare moved to Roxbury, CT, where he fraternized with neighboring artists such as Alexander Calder and Arshile Gorky, as well as Yves Tanguy who was married to Hare’s cousin Kay Sage, and the art dealer Julian Levy. The same year, Hare received a commission from the American Museum of Natural History to document the Pueblo Indians. He traveled to Santa Fe and, for several months, he took portrait photographs of members of the Hopi, Navajo, and Zuni tribes that were published in book form in 1941.
World War II turned Hare’s life upside down. He became a conduit in the exchange of artistic and intellectual ideas between U.S. artists and the surrealist émigrés fleeing Europe. In 1942, Hare befriended Andre Breton, the principal theorist of surrealism. When Breton wanted to publish a magazine to promote the movement in the United States, he could not serve as an editor because he was a foreign national. Instead, Breton selected Hare to edit the journal, entitled VVV [shorth for “Victory, Victory, Victory”], which ran for four issues (the second and third issues were printed as a single volume) from June 1942 to February 1944. Each edition of VVV focused on “poetry, plastic arts, anthropology, sociology, (and) psychology,” and was extensively illustrated by surrealist artists including Giorgio de Chirico, Roberto Matta, and Yves Tanguy; Max Ernst and Marcel Duchamp served as editorial advisors.
At the suggestion of Jacqueline Lamba...
Category
1990s Abstract Figurative Paintings
Materials
Linen, Acrylic
"A Toast" Louis Charles Moeller, American 19th Century Realist Genre Painting
Located in New York, NY
Louis Charles Moeller
A Toast
Signed lower right
Oil on canvas
12 x 16 inches
Louis Charles Moeller was a master of American genre painting. His meticulously detailed, highly finish...
Category
19th Century Realist Figurative Paintings
Materials
Canvas, Oil
"Cathedral Rocks, Yosemite Valley" George Henry Smillie, West, 19th Century
By George Henry Smillie
Located in New York, NY
George Henry Smillie
Cathedral Rocks, Yosemite Valley, 1871
Signed and inscribed board verso "Cathedral Rocks-Morning-Yo-semite Valley Aug. 71 Geo. H. Smillie", also inscribed "Yo-se...
Category
1870s Academic Landscape Paintings
Materials
Canvas, Oil, Board
"Girl with Doll" Charles Sprague Pearce, American Impressionism, Figurative
By Charles Sprague Pearce
Located in New York, NY
Charles Sprague Pearce
Girl with Doll, circa 1895
Signed lower left
Oil on canvas
10 x 14 inches
Provenance:
Estate of William S. Barrett
Pierce Galleries, East Bridgewater, Massach...
Category
1890s Impressionist Figurative Paintings
Materials
Canvas, Oil
"Musical Conductor" Amy Londoner, Ashcan School, Figurative Concert Scene
By Amy Londoner
Located in New York, NY
Amy Londoner
Musical Conductor, 1922
Signed and dated lower right
Pastel on paper
Sight 18 x 23 inches
Amy Londoner (April 12, 1875 – 1951) was an American painter who exhibited at the 1913 Armory Show. One of the first students of the Henri School of Art in 1909. Prior to the Armory Show of 1913, Amy Londoner and her classmates studied with "Ashcan" painter Robert Henri at the Henri School of Art in New York, N.Y. One notable oil painting, 'The Vase', was painted by both Henri and Londoner.
Londoner was born in Lexington, Missouri on April 12, 1875. Her parents were Moses and Rebecca Londoner, who moved to Leadville, Colorado, by 1880. In 1899, Amy took responsibility for her father who had come to Los Angeles from Leadville and had mental issues. By 1900, Amy was living with her parents and sister, Blanche, in the vicinity of Leadville, Denver, Colorado. While little was written about her early life, Denver City directories indicated that nineteenth-century members of the family were merchants, with family ties to New York, N.Y. The family had a male servant. Londoner traveled with her mother to England in 1907 then shortly later, both returned to New York in 1909. Londoner was 34 years old at the time, and, according to standards of the day, should have married and raised a family long before. Instead, she enrolled as one of the first students at the Henri School of Art in 1909.
At the Henri School, Londoner established friendships with Carl Sprinchorn (1887-1971), a young Swedish immigrant, and Edith Reynolds (1883-1964), daughter of wealthy industrialist family from Wilkes-Barre, PA. Londoner's correspondence, which often included references to Blanche, listed the sisters' primary address as the Hotel Endicott at 81st Street and Columbus Avenue, NYC. Other correspondence also reached Londoner in the city via Mrs. Theodore Bernstein at 252 West 74th Street; 102 West 73rd Street; and the Independent School of Art at 1947 Broadway. In 1911, Londoner vacationed at the Hotel Trexler in Atlantic City, NJ. As indicated by an undated photograph, Londoner also spent time with Edith Reynolds and Robert Henri at 'The Pines', the Reynolds family estate in Bear Creek, PA.
Through her connections with the Henri School, Londoner entered progressive social and professional circles. Henri's admonition, phrased in the vocabulary of his historical time period, that one must become a "man" first and an artist second, attracted both male and female students to classes where development of unique personal styles, tailored to convey individual insights and experiences, was prized above the mastery of standardized, technical skill. Far from being dilettantes, women students at the Henri School were daring individuals willing to challenge tradition. As noted by former student Helen Appleton Read, "it was a mark of defiance,to join the radical Henri group."
As Henri offered educational alternatives for women artists, he initiated exhibition opportunities for them as well. Troubled by the exclusion of work by younger artists from annual exhibitions at the National Academy of Design, Henri was instrumental in organizing the no-jury, no-prize Exhibition of Independent Artists in 1910. About half of the 103 artists included in the exhibition were or had been Henri students, while twenty of the twenty-six women exhibiting had studied with Henri. Among the exhibition's 631 pieces, nine were by Amy Londoner, including the notorious 'Lady with a Headache'. Similarly, fourteen of Henri's women students exhibited in the groundbreaking Armory Show of 1913, forming about eight percent of the American exhibitors and one-third of American women exhibitors. Of the nine documented works submitted by Londoner, five were rejected, while four pastels of Atlantic City beach scenes, including 'The Beach Umbrellas' now in the Remington Collection, were displayed.
Following Henri's example, Londoner served as an art instructor for younger students at the Modern School, whose only requirement was to genuinely draw what they pleased. The work of dancer Isadora Duncan, another artist devoted to the ideals of a liberal education, was also lauded by the Modern School. Henri, who long admired Duncan and invited members of her troupe to model for his classes, wrote an appreciation of her for the Modern School journal in 1915. She was also the subject of Londoner's pastel Isadora Duncan and the Children: Praise Ye the Lord with Dance. In 1914, Londoner traveled to France to spend summer abroad, living at 99 rue Notre Dames des Champs, Paris, France. As the tenets of European modernism spread throughout the United States, Londoner showed regularly at venues which a new generation of artists considered increasingly passe, including the annual Society of Independent Artists' exhibitions between 1918 and 1934, and the Salons of America exhibition in 1922. Londoner also exhibited at the Morton Gallery, Opportunity Gallery, Leonard Clayton Gallery and Brownell-Lambertson Galleries in NYC. Her painting of a 'Blond Girl' was one of two works included in the College Art Associations Traveling Exhibition of 1929, which toured colleges across the country to broad acclaim.
Londoner later in life suffered from illnesses then suffered a stroke which resulted in medical bills significantly mounting over the years that her old friends from the Henri School, including Carl Sprinchorn, Florence Dreyfous, Florence Barley, and Josephine Nivison Hopper, scrambled to raise funds and find suitable long-term care facilities for Londoner. Londoner later joined Reynolds in Bear Creek, PA. Always known for her keen wit, Londoner retained her humor and concern for her works even during her illness, noting that "if anything happens to the Endicott, I guess they will just throw them out." Sprinchorn and Reynolds, however, did not allow this to happen. In 1960, Londoner's paintings 'Amsterdam Avenue at 74th Street' and 'The Builders' were loaned by Reynolds to a show commemorating the Fiftieth Anniversary of the Exhibition of Independent Artists in 1910, presented at the Delaware Art Center, Wilmington, DE. In the late 80's, Francis William Remington, 'Bill Remington', of Bear Creek Village PA, along with his neighbor and artist Frances Anstett Brennan, both had profound admiration for Amy Londoner's art work and accomplishments as a woman who played a significant role in the Ashcan movement. Remington acquired a significant number of Londoner's artwork along with Frances Anstett Brenan that later was part of an exhibition of Londoner's artwork in April 15 of 2007, at the Hope Horn...
Category
1920s Ashcan School Figurative Paintings
Materials
Paper, Pastel
"Senator" William Gropper, Social Realism, WPA Political Art, Caricature
By William Gropper
Located in New York, NY
William Gropper
Senator
Signed lower center
Oil on board
16 x 12 1/4 inches
ACA Galleries, New York
Private Collection, New York
Bonhams, American Art Online, August 23, 2023, Lot 3...
Category
Mid-20th Century American Realist Figurative Paintings
Materials
Oil, Board
"In Foreign Parts" Eugene Higgins, Southwestern Pueblo, Modern Figurative
By Eugene Higgins
Located in New York, NY
Eugene Higgins
In Foreign Parts, circa 1913
Signed lower right
Watercolor on paper
Sight 17 x 13 inches
Born William Victor Higgins in 1884 to a Shelbyville, Indiana farm family where the only art Victor was aware of as a child was his father's love of flowers. "He loved their forms and their colors, and he tended his garden as a painter might work a canvas." At the age of nine, Victor met a young artist who traveled the Indiana countryside painting advertisements on the sides of barns. He purchased paints and brushes so the young Higgins could practice his own artwork on the inside of his father's barn. He also taught Victor about art museums and especially about the new Chicago Art Institute. This information never left the young artist, and he saved his allowance until his father allowed him at the age of fifteen to attend Chicago Art Institute. He worked a variety of jobs to finance his studies both there and at the Academy of Fine Arts.
Victor Higgins traveled to New York in 1908, where he met Robert Henri, who became a significant influence by depicting every-day scenes and stressing the importance of the spirit and sense of place as important factors in painting. Higgins was also greatly affected by the New York Armory Modernism Show of Marsden Hartley in 1913.
While Victor Higgins was in Chicago he met former mayor and avid collector Carter H. Harrison who was to prove instrumental in the growth of Higgins career for several years. Harrison agreed to support Higgins for four years to go to Paris and Munich and paint and study in the great museums in Europe. While at the Academie de la Grande Chaumier in Paris (1910-1914) he met Walter Ufer, who was another Chicago artist being sponsored by Carter Harrison. This meeting was not only a life-long friendship, but the beginning of a great change in the way Higgins looked at "American" art. He decided that America needed it's own authentic style rather than the 19th Century classic style he was taught in Europe. Very soon after returning to Chicago in 1914, Harrison sent him and Walter Ufer on a painting trip to Taos, New Mexico for a year in exchange for paintings. Higgins made other similar agreements and was able to support himself with his painting. This trip was a life-changing experience and introduced Higgins to the authentic America he had been looking for.
In 1914 Taos was an isolated village about twelve hours from Santa Fe on an impossible dirt road. But the colorful life of the pueblo people and the natural beauty drew a collection of artists who became the Taos art colony, from which the Taos Society of Artists was founded in 1915. Victor Higgins became a permanent resident within a year of his arrival and a member of the society in 1917, exhibiting with Jane Peterson in 1925 and with Wayman Adams and Janet Scudder in 1927. The members would travel around the country introducing the Southwest scenes with great success. He remained a member until the Society's dissolution in 1927. Higgins was the youngest member of the group of seven. Other members were Joseph Henry Sharp, Bert Phillips...
Category
1910s American Modern Figurative Drawings and Watercolors
Materials
Paper, Watercolor
"Untitled" Bob Thompson, Figurative Work on Paper, Black Abstract Artist
By Bob Thompson
Located in New York, NY
Bob Thompson
Untitled, 1964
Felt tip pen on printed paper
11 x 20 1/2 inches
Provenance:
The artist
Kathy Komaroff Goodman (gift from the artist)
Hollis Taggart, New York
Exhibited...
Category
1960s Modern Figurative Drawings and Watercolors
Materials
Paper, Watercolor
"Brighton Beach" Nathan Hoffman, New York, Sunny Day Landscape Impressionism
Located in New York, NY
Nathan Hoffman
Brighton Beach, July 31, 1946
Signed, dated, and estate stamped on the reverse
Oil on artist's board
10 x 13 1/2 inches
Provenance:
Esta...
Category
1940s American Impressionist Landscape Paintings
Materials
Oil, Board
"The Beach" Nathan Hoffman, Brooklyn, New York, Sunny Day Landscape
Located in New York, NY
Nathan Hoffman
The Beach
Estate stamped on the reverse
Oil on artist's board
10 1/4 x 14 inches
Provenance:
Estate of the artist
Born in Russia, the s...
Category
1940s American Impressionist Landscape Paintings
Materials
Oil, Board
"Boy from Mansos, " Karl Zerbe, Green Figurative "Degenerate" Art Collage
By Karl Zerbe
Located in New York, NY
Karl Zerbe (1903 - 1972)
Boy from Mansos, 1963
Collage and acrylic on canvas
35 x 23 inches
Signed lower right
Provenance:
Lee Nordness Galleries, New York
Karl Zerbe was born on September 16, 1903 in Berlin, Germany. The family lived in Paris, France from 1904–1914, where his father was an executive in an electrical supply concern. In 1914 they moved to Frankfurt, Germany where they lived until 1920. Karl Zerbe studied chemistry in 1920 at the Technische Hochschule in Friedberg, Germany.
From 1921 until 1923 he lived in Munich, where he studied painting at the Debschitz School, mainly under Josef Eberz. From 1924 until 1926 Karl Zerbe worked and traveled in Italy on a fellowship from the City of Munich. In 1932 his oil painting titled, ‘’Herbstgarten’’ (autumnal garden), of 1929, was acquired by the National-Galerie, Berlin; in 1937, the painting was destroyed by the Nazis as "Degenerate art...
Category
1960s Post-War Abstract Paintings
Materials
Canvas, Acrylic
$2,800 Sale Price
30% Off
"Pyroclastic Fever, " Nigel Cooke, Contemporary Painting, Lightning Skyscape
By Nigel Cooke
Located in New York, NY
Nigel Cooke (Born 1973)
Pyroclastic Fever, 2002
Oil on canvas
60 1/2 x 84 1/2 inches
Signed, titled and dated "NIGEL COOKE 'PYROCLASTIC FEVER' 2002 Nigel C...
Category
Early 2000s Contemporary Abstract Paintings
Materials
Canvas, Oil
$32,000 Sale Price
20% Off
"Playground, Carl Schurz Park" George Picken, New York City, East River, UES WPA
By George Picken
Located in New York, NY
George Picken
Playground, Carl Schurz Park, 1938
Signed and dated lower left
Oil on canvas
28 x 36 inches
Provenance:
Estate of the artist
A native New Yorker, George Picken was born in 1898. His father, an artist and photographer, emigrated from Scotland; his mother came from Wales. They joined other European immigrants settling in New York City’s Hell’s Kitchen. Picken enlisted in the army during World War I and saw action at Verdun. After the war, he stayed in France and like many Americans returning from the vibrant Paris art scene, was inspired by the radical movement known as Impressionism. Upon his return Picken decided to follow in his father’s footsteps and become an artist.
George began his studies in 1919 at the Art Students League during Robert Henri, Max Weber, and John Sloan’s tenure. There he took classes in studio art, illustration, and etching through 1923 studying extensively with George Bridgman. The writings of French philosopher Henri Bergson were widely circulated among the artistic community and looking at Picken’s early paintings one cannot help but wonder if as a young artist he was influenced by Bergson’s ideas. Bergson said, "[There are] two profoundly different ways of knowing a thing. The first implies that we move round the object; the second that we enter into it. The first depends on the point of view at which we are placed and on the symbols by which we express ourselves. The second neither depends on a point of view nor relies on any symbol. The first kind of knowledge may be said to stop at the relative; the second, in those cases where it is possible, to attain the absolute.”
Picken’s recognition came early with showings of his work while he was a student. His drawings were published in the New Masses, a significant left-wing publication. The New York Public Library honored him with one-man shows in 1924 and 1928 and his work was included in group exhibitions at the Louis Comfort Tiffany Foundation, the Whitney Studio Club, Montross Gallery, and the Art Students League. During this time Picken married Viola Carton, one of Reginald Marsh’s models, and they lived in Westchester. Later they moved to Yorkville in Manhattan between 82nd street and East End Avenue where they began their family. Picken’s grandson Niles Jaeger recalled that, “Grandpa’s home and studio were in a five-story walk-up apartment, heated only by a coal stove. But there were wonderful views of the East River and the Queensborough Bridge...
Category
1930s American Realist Landscape Paintings
Materials
Canvas, Oil
$22,400 Sale Price
20% Off
"Playing with Grandfather" Tomkins Harrison Matteson, Family Genre Scene
Located in New York, NY
Tomkins Harrison Matteson
Playing with Grandfather, 1869
Signed and dated lower left
Oil on canvas
29 5/16 x 24 3/16 inches
Provenance:
Sotheby's New York, May 24, 2001, Lot 150
Estate of a New Hampshire Collector
Tompkins H. Matteson was one of the most noted painters in upstate New York during the 1850s and was well-known for genre and historical subjects. Born in Peterboro, New York, he studied and exhibited at the National Academy of Design - established himself as a portrait painter in Sherburne, New York before moving in 1841 to New York City. In 1850, he returned to Shelburne, where he spent the remainder of his life.
A follower of William Sidney Mount...
Category
1860s Realist Figurative Paintings
Materials
Canvas, Oil
"The Doubtful Bill" Charles Blauvelt, 19th Century Genre Painting Money Interior
Located in New York, NY
Charles Blauvelt
The Doubtful Bill, 1868
Signed and dated lower left
Oil on canvas
12 1/4 x 9 1/2 inches
Provenance:
Private Collection, Connecticut...
Category
1860s Figurative Paintings
Materials
Canvas, Oil
"Untitled, " Crash, Pop Art, Street Art Graffiti, Figure with Clock
By John Crash Matos
Located in New York, NY
Crash
Untitled, 1989
Signed and dated lower left
Watercolor and ink on paper
30 x 20 1/2 inches
A contemporary of Keith Haring and a modern-day master of this present day art form o...
Category
1980s Street Art Figurative Paintings
Materials
Paper, Ink, Watercolor
"Pleased to See You, " Crash, Pop Art, Street Art Graffiti
By John Crash Matos
Located in New York, NY
Crash
Pleased to See You, 1989
Signed and dated lower left
Watercolor and ink on paper
30 x 20 1/2 inches
A contemporary of Keith Haring and a modern-day master of this present day ...
Category
1980s Street Art Figurative Paintings
Materials
Paper, Ink, Watercolor
"Nude, " Arnold Blanch, Woodstock School, WPA, Figurative
By Arnold Blanch
Located in New York, NY
Arnold Blanch
Nude
Signed lower right
Oil on board
20 x 16 inches
Provenance:
G. David Thompson Collection, Pittsburgh
Private Collection, New York
Bo...
Category
1930s Realist Nude Paintings
Materials
Oil, Board
$1,240 Sale Price
50% Off
"Municipal Building, Manhattan, New York, " Ruth Anderson, Impressionist Scene
Located in New York, NY
Ruth Anderson
Municipal Building, Manhattan, circa 1918
Oil on canvas
25 x 19 inches
Ruth A. Anderson was born in Carlisle, Pennsylvania in 1891 and die...
Category
1910s Impressionist Figurative Paintings
Materials
Canvas, Oil