Research Catalog
Childe Hassam : American impressionist
- Title
- Childe Hassam : American impressionist / Ulrich W. Hiesinger.
- Author
- Hiesinger, Ulrich W., 1943-
- Publication
- Munich ; New York : Prestel, [1994], ©1994.
Items in the Library & Off-site
Filter by
1 Item
Status | Format | Access | Call Number | Item Location |
---|---|---|---|---|
Text | Use in library | ND239 H27 H53 | Off-site |
Holdings
Details
- Additional Authors
- Jordan-Volpe Gallery.
- Description
- 191 pages : illustrations (some color); 31 cm
- Summary
- Childe Hassam has long been recognized as America's foremost Impressionist painter, yet the sheer size and variety of his output have hindered a full appreciation of his work. The present volume seeks to remedy this by offering, for the first time, a comprehensive survey of the artist's career.
- That career began in his native Boston, where he worked as an illustrator and a watercolor painter. Hassam absorbed the principles of Impressionism during three crucial years spent in Paris in the mid-1880s. Largely self-taught, he emerged from his stay a brilliant colorist with a style uniquely his own. On his return to the United States, Hassam settled in New York, and the next two decades saw him produce his finest work, as he painted ceaselessly in the cities and the coastal resorts of the east.
- Believing that the artist should paint his own time in the most modern manner, and convinced that the beauties of America rivaled those to be found anywhere, Hassam was an early experimenter with pure color and sought to capture specific effects of light in landscapes and everyday city scenes alike. His virtuosity encompassed everything from radiant New England skies to the haunting glare of lamplight in a snow-covered park.
- Flower-filled gardens in Villiers-le-Bel and on the Isles of Shoals, the bustling boulevards of Paris and the carriage-lined squares of Old New York, the quaint harbor towns of Newport and Gloucester - these and other unassuming subjects were transformed by the artist's fresh vision. Hassam was also the first to proclaim the majestic dignity of New England churches in his work.
- .
- This monograph is notable for its careful selection and analysis of Hassam's finest oils and watercolors, many of them in private collections and never published before. A number of errors in previous publications on the artist, ranging from falsely identified works to details of Hassam's travels, are corrected here, and new information is provided on such a classic painting as Grand Prix Day.
- Recently discovered letters shed new light on the artist's views and on his personality, a strange mixture of irreverence and New England propriety. These letters are printed in an appendix, together with other writings by Hassam and interviews with him. A bibliography and a chronology that plots the artist's movements year by year add to the value of the book as an essential reference work on the Impressionist movement in America and its most important exponent.
- Subject
- Hassam, Childe, 1859-1935
- Note
- Published in conjunction with an exhibition held at the Jordan-Volpe Gallery, New York, from May 20 to July 1, 1994.
- Bibliography (note)
- Includes bibliographical references and index.
- Contents
- Introduction: A Profile of the Artist -- Ch. I. Early Years in Boston, 1859-1886 -- Ch. II. Paris, 1886-1889 -- Ch. III. Exploring America, 1889-1896 -- Ch. IV. A Period of Transition, 1897-1908 -- Ch. V. Late Years, 1909-1935. App. A. Letters from Paris, 1886-1889. App. B. Other Writings, Interviews.
- ISBN
- 3791313649
- OCLC
- ocm30591932
- Owning Institutions
- Columbia University Libraries