Description: FINE ANTIQUE PLEIN AIR LANDSCAPE IMPRESSIONIST OIL PAINTING ON CANVAS BY NOTED LANDSCAPE PAINTER RUPERT LOVEJOY. (American 1885-1975) THIS WORK DEPICTS A SERENE REFLECTIVE BLUE RIVER SURROUNDED BY SCULPTED EARTH TONE TREES AND GREENISH BROWN FOLIAGE. SIMPLY AMAZING. TRANQUIL AND REMARKABLY BEAUTIFUL. EXECUTED IN THE LATE 1960s. VERY GOOD VINTAGE CONDITION. DIMENSIONS: 28” W x 2;” H Rupert Scott Lovejoy (1885 - 1975) was active/lived in Maine. Rupert Lovejoy is known for Coastal other landscape painting. Rupert Scott Lovejoy was born in Portland, Maine on 3 June 1885. His mother was a painter and encouraged his interest in art. After she died, Rupert was pressed by his stepmother to choose between becoming a dentist or an undertaker. He decided in favor of the former and graduated with honors from Tufts University Dental School in 1909. Lovejoy's dream of becoming an artist continued, even grew after he entered professional life. To this end, he attended evening classes at the Portland Art School. As a member of the Portland Camera Club, he gained national and international distinction and won many prizes in pictorial photography. His prints of mountain scenes were used as models of composition. In spite of a busy schedule and family responsibilities, Lovejoy continued to paint. Occasionally the results of his efforts were used to decorate the walls of his office. In 1915 Walter Griffin, a distinguished American impressionist painter, came to Lovejoy for treatment for a dental infection. Favorably impressed by one of Lovejoy's paintings hanging in the office, Griffin encouraged the artist to accompany him on his painting trips in the countryside of Maine. In 1918 Griffin had acquired an old colonial house with an idyllic millpond at Stroudwater in Maine. It was in this setting that Lovejoy watched the impressionist artist at work and he painted under his guidance. Explaining and demonstrating the salient techniques of impressionism, Griffin urged Lovejoy to alternate pigment application from brush to palette knife and also showed him how to obtain vibrant colors in manipulating heavy impasto pigments in juxtaposed dabs and strokes. Griffin, to gain greater brilliance and binding, applied a thin coating of varnish on the canvas before adding pigments. Accordingly, Lovejoy learned Griffin's manner, in addition to several other techniques. As requested by Griffin, Lovejoy kept the older painter's technical mysteries "under his hat" until Griffin's death (Lovejoy, 1975). After Griffin returned to France in 1922, Lovejoy forged ahead with painting in an attempt to develop his own style. He proved his versatility by executing outstanding watercolors. When these were first exhibited at the Contemporary American Watercolors show in Boston, a critic for the Boston Evening Transcript described his work as "delicate and deft." Later critics praised Lovejoy's oil paintings for their color harmony and composition. Lovejoy was capable of capturing the particular essence of atmosphere and the fleeting qualities of nature. He produced successful impressionism in the depiction of his native countryside; indeed, in his mature works his colorful imagery and dashing spontaneity might be termed a kind of American fauvism. Eventually Lovejoy devoted his full time to painting. After Griffin's death, Lovejoy moved closer to his former mentor's residence in Stroudwater and maintained the style that he had developed while training under him. Lovejoy acknowledged his indebtedness to Griffin in an article in the American Art Review, which appeared a few months after Lovejoy's death in Portland, on 4 July 1975. In the posthumous article Lovejoy revealed Griffin's palette of colors and his techniques. Numerous museums have exhibited Lovejoy's works. Among the more outstanding exhibitions were those at the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, the Baltimore Museum of Art, and Bowdoin College. Permanent collections of Lovejoy's art exist in the Colby College Museum of Art, the Tennessee Botanical Gardens and Fine Arts Center, and the Portland Museum of Art. The Hunter Museum of Art in Chattanooga has Lovejoy's Westbrook Street, Stroudwater Village, which shows Griffin's house. Sources: American Painters of the Impressionist Period Rediscovered. Exh. cat. Waterville, ME: Colby College Press, 1975, p. 42; Lovejoy, Rupert, "The Life and Work of Walter Griffin, 1861-1935," American Art Review (September-October 1975): 92-105; Lovejoy, Myrtle Kittridge, This Was Stroudwater (1727-1860). Portland, ME: National Society of Colonial Dames of America, 1985; Preato, Robert R., Sandra L. Langer, and James D. Cox, Impressionism and Post-Impressionism: Transformations in the Modern American Mode, 1885-1945. New York: Grand Central Art Galleries, 1987, pp. 35, 57.
Price: 1250 USD
Location: Pasadena, California
End Time: 2024-08-19T19:32:42.000Z
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Item Specifics
All returns accepted: ReturnsNotAccepted
Artist: Lovejoy
Unit of Sale: Single Piece
Signed By: Lovejoy
Size: Large
Signed: Yes
Material: Canvas
Item Length: 28 in
Region of Origin: Impressionism
Framing: Framed
Subject: Art, Landscape
Type: Painting
Year of Production: 1960s
Original/Licensed Reproduction: Original
Item Height: 24 in
Style: Impressionism, Realism
Features: One of a Kind (OOAK)
Production Technique: Oil Painting
Country/Region of Manufacture: United States
Handmade: Yes
Item Width: 28 in
Culture: Impressionism
Time Period Produced: 1960-1969