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The American Landscape from 1830 -1980

    Childe Hassam (1859-1935)

    Gathering Salt Hay, Cos Cob

    Executed 1902

    Signed and dated lower left

    Pastel on paper

    18 X 22 inches

    Ex-Collection:
    The Artist

    The Cage Gallery, Cleveland
    (lender to the 1928 exhibition)

    Private Collection, California until 2005

    Exhibitions:
    The Cleveland Museum, The Fifth Exhibition of Watercolors and Pastel, March11 - April 28, 1928

    This work will be included in the forthcoming Catalogue Raisonne being compiled by Stuart Feld and Kathleen Burnside

     

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Born in Dorchester, Massachusetts, Childe Hassam became one of America's most noted Impressionist painters, but he never labelled himself in that way because he was more interested in the emotional content of his paintings than the technique of applying color. He also completed over 550 etchings and drypoints and about 45 lithographs, most of them after he was 56 years old.

He left high school to work as a wood engraver and illustrator and then in the 1870s, studied art at the Lowell Institute and the Boston Art Club under Ignaz Gaugengigl. In 1883, he had his first one-man exhibition of watercolors at the prestigious Williams & Everett Gallery in Boston, and that same year, he and his wife, Kathleen Maude Doan, traveled to Europe and lived for three years in Paris.

Destined to become one of America's foremost impressionists, this journey was his first opportunity to view that style of painting. He studied at the Academie Julian under Louis Boulanger and Jules Lefebvre, but he rejected the Academy's teaching methods of conformity to focus on the tenets of Impressionism.

He was a founder of the Ten American Painters, active from 1898 to 1919 in rebellion against what the members perceived as mediocrity of the Society of American Artists, a group led by John La Farge and George Inness who earlier had defected from the National Academy of Design.

In 1899, he settled in New York and spent most of the rest of his life painting east coast landscapes although he did mural decoration in Portland, Oregon. Many of his paintings in the 1890s and 1900s were scenes of New York City where he loved to capture the life of the city combined with his unique sense of color and mood. It was a time when New York was building many skyscrapers, and the skyline was ever-changing.

He also painted on the Isles of Shoals off the coast of New Hampshire where he often painted in the famous gardens of artist Celia Baxter at Appledore. He also painted many landscapes around East Hampton, New York at the invitation of his friend Gaines Ruger Donoho. In 1919, he and his wife purchased a home there adjacent to Donoho's widow.

From 1903, he began painting in Old Lyme, Connecticut, where his influence turned the focus of Art Colony painters from the sombre palette of Tonalism to the bright colors and quick brush strokes of Impressionism. He also painted in California, and in 1925, made drawings of the colonial churches in Charleston, South Carolina, from which he created etchings. During World War I, he painted a series of flags asserting his strong patriotism, and he did a handful of portraits, which in his later years he recalled as numbering about eight. The artist died in 1935.

 

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