Description: An unframed watercolor by Alvin Meyer of Fort Meyer, measures 14 by 20 inches. Alvin Meyer was a Chicago artist and sculptor who built a home on Fort Myers Beach in 1938. Trained at the American Academy in Rome, the Maryland Institute of Art, and the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, Meyer was a student of Paul Manship and a winner of the Prix de Rome. He executed sculptures on several Chicago landmarks, including the Board of Trade Building in the downtown Loop area, and the Chicago Daily News Building on Riverside Plaza, one of Chicago’s great public places. The June 29, 1928 issue of the New York Sun featured Meyer’s sculpture, Moon Fountain, in a New York City Garden on East Sixty-Second Street. Meyer created the statuette symbolizing industrial development awarded to the outstanding industrialist of 1950 by the Society of Industrial Realtors. At the society’s 43rd convention on Miami Beach in November, 1950, Thomas J. Watson, president of I.B.M. was the recipient. Meyer’s Florida watercolors were exhibited at the Fort Myers Historical Museum in 1983. The Fort Myers Beach Observer, August 17, 1983, “Of more than passing interest to beach residents and visitors is the current showing of watercolors at the Fort Myers Historical Museum in Fort Myers. Many depict a glimpse of Florida’s past, especially of the earlier beach area. The creative paintings are the work of the late Alvin W. Meyer who first came here from Chicago in 1938. An architectural sculptor, Alvin Meyer designed among others the Chicago Board of Trade building and the Chicago Daily News Plaza. Oncoming to the beach, he acquired the first property, just south of Garl’s Drugstore, from Barron Collier, an early beach developer. While here, Meyer built a studio-home where he had a combined workshop for paintings and sculpture and taught sculpture to the beach school children. His wife, to whom he was married for 33 years, until his death in 1968, is the internationally known Dr. Edith L. Potter, recent widow of Frank Duryea Deats of Pointe Royale, Fort Myers. On Dr. Potter’s retirement from the staff of Chicago Lying-In Hospital (where her perinatology and neo-natal research and books won her world-wide recognition), the Meyers moved in December, 1967 to Palm Point, off Gladiolus Drive, where the Spanish type home which Meyer designed and built became their permanent home, noted for its gardens with subtropical plants, including orchids and bromeliads, which she continues to maintain. Since most of the current ‘Florida Watercolors’ collection by Meyer reflects the 1940’s period of the beach area and the small towns, buildings, and boats where the artist traveled through Southern Florida at that time, it holds much historical interest, depicting the contrasts in life of the pre-developer years.” Meyer is listed in Who Was Who in American Art, 1964-1975, Peter Falk, 1999. Born: 1892, Bartlett, Illinois. Died: 1968. Education: American Academy, Rome, Italy; Maryland Institute of Art; Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts. Exhibits: Chicago Galleries Association, 215 North Michigan, Sculpture and Watercolor Sketches, January, 1948; Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts; Fort Myers Historical Museum, August, 1983, Florida watercolors from the 1940’s. lvin Meyer watercolor, 14 by 20 inches, unframed.
Price: 100 USD
Location: Sarasota, Florida
End Time: 2024-11-28T18:47:44.000Z
Shipping Cost: N/A USD
Product Images
Item Specifics
Restocking Fee: No
Return shipping will be paid by: Buyer
All returns accepted: Returns Accepted
Item must be returned within: 14 Days
Refund will be given as: Money Back
Unit of Sale: Single Piece
Signed By: Alvin Meyer
Size: Medium
Region of Origin: Fort Myers, Florida
Framing: Unframed
Personalize: No
Year of Production: 1943
Original/Licensed Reproduction: Original
Item Height: 14 in
Style: Americana, Art Deco, Art Nouveau, Caribbean, Illustration Art, Impressionism, Tonalism
Features: One of a Kind (OOAK)
Culture: AMERICAN
Item Width: 20 in
Handmade: Yes
Time Period Produced: 1943
Signed: Yes
Period: Early 20th Century (1900-1920)
Material: Cardboard, BOARD
Certificate of Authenticity (COA): No
Subject: Houses, Landscape, Seaside, NIGHT, MONNLIGHT, HOME, FLORIDA, PALM TREES, architecture, WIND, from boat yard, Sarasota
Type: Painting
Theme: Americana, Art, Cities & Towns, People, HARRY FORD HOME, From Sove ? Boat Yard, Sarasota, Florida 1943
Production Technique: Watercolor Painting
Country/Region of Manufacture: United States