• C1900 New England Impressionist Landscape Painting Signed William Merritt Post

    C1900-New-England-Impressionist-Landscape-Painting-Signed-William-Merritt-Post-01-qbb
    C1900 New England Impressionist Landscape Painting Signed William Merritt Post
    C1900 New England Impressionist Landscape Painting Signed William Merritt Post
    C1900 New England Impressionist Landscape Painting Signed William Merritt Post
    C1900 New England Impressionist Landscape Painting Signed William Merritt Post
    C1900 New England Impressionist Landscape Painting Signed William Merritt Post
    C1900 New England Impressionist Landscape Painting Signed William Merritt Post
    C1900 New England Impressionist Landscape Painting Signed William Merritt Post
    C1900 New England Impressionist Landscape Painting Signed William Merritt Post
    C1900 New England Impressionist Landscape Painting Signed William Merritt Post

    C1900 New England Impressionist Landscape Painting Signed William Merritt Post
    For sale is a beautiful New England Impressionist Landscape painting by the highly regarded American artist William Merritt Post (1856 – 1935). Probably Circa 1900 to 1910 in age. Post was well regarded during his time for his renditions of New England landscapes. He painted in a tonalist and impressionist style which he merged together and often used very similar settings in his landscapes including tall trees open fields and calm quiet meandering streams under cloudy skies. This painting has all of those qualities. Fresh from a Hudson Valley estate in upstate New York. Signed W MERRITT POST in the lower right corner, which is how he signed after 1884. Due to high definition camera the painting is somewhat darker in hue than pictures outside in natural light. Framed in a contemporary but very appropriate arts and crafts Plein air picture frame. The painting may not have ever been varnished. Hard to tell but we dont notice an obvious varnish layer. Surface grime as associated with age. Two non obtrusive pin sized surface paint losses. One area of circular craquelure in the sky. Framed – 19 1/2 x 23 1/2. Canvas – 16 x 20. William Merritt Post (1856 – 1935). Born on December 11, 1856 in Brooklyn, Post was the son of a commodities merchant. His parents separated after sixteen years of marriage and four children, suggesting a troubled home life. Post’s attraction to nature began in the fall of 1879, when an excursion from Brooklyn to a marshy region made Post think, If I were an artist, this region would be one of the first places I would strike out for. Unlike many artists of the day who studied in Paris, Germany and Holland, Post developed his eye for composition, his technical knowledge of the craft of painting and his deft draftsmanship in the artistic community of New York. At the age of twenty-four, he began taking drawing lessons from the relatively unknown Samuel Frost Johnson. By 1880, Post had already begun painting Hudson River pictures on academic board and signing them W. Paintings during this phase were signed W. By 1884, Post was twenty-eight and had launched a career as a landscapist. That same year, the National Academy of Design accepted for its autumn exhibition one of his paintings signed W. This remained his signature for the rest of his professional life. It was in these years that he became greatly influenced by the landscape painter, Hugh Bolton Jones. Both men were attracted to tightly focused landscape scenes, particularly streams amid trees and meadows, and their primary goal was to capture light at different times of day and in different seasons. This predeliction, in turn, drove both artists to excursions outside of New York into the countryside of the marsh towns in New Jersey and on Long Island. It was in the marsh areas of Milburn, South Orange and Nutley, New Jersey that the country stream emerged as an infinitely variable formula to display subtle reactions to a particular aspect of nature. In the 1890s, Post perfected the country stream motif and the evident salability of these paintings no doubt explains how he became financially independent of his father, and it also obliges us to assume that his significance as an artist depended on his vituoso interpretation of this theme to the end of his long life. Post exhibited continually at the National Academy of Design, the Philadelphia Academy of Fine Arts as well as the Boston Museum of Fine Arts. He also exhibited in Buffalo, Chicago, St. Louis and Washington DC (the Corcoran gallery), receiving many awards. Also an active member of the two watercolor clubs that had been established in New York City, Post was later elected an associate member of the National Academy of Design (1910). Post’s era was really the first when American artists could actually make a living from their art. Biographical dictionaries suggest that there were more than a thousand artists living in New York City at the turn of the century. Many landscape artists spent extended periods of time in the coutryside sketching, which Post had done since the early 1880s. In 1906, Post married his wife, Katherine Van Nest. He was 49; she was 36. They had a daughter, Katherine later Mrs. Gardner, three years after they wed. Even though Post became noted for his landscape paintings done in Connecticut, the Posts always kept an apartment in the city. The Posts first summered in Bethlehem, Connecticut around 1908. With the help of New York architects, the Posts completely remodeled the place adding a studio addition in the process. The Bantam River ran westerly at the back of the property. After settling in his West Morris studio, Post began painting plein-air landscapes, and traveled throughout the northeast, collecting landscape motifs in his sketchbooks. Perhaps more so than any other American artist, he was fascinated with country streams and reflections on water, and concentrated on these themes all of his professional life. Connecticut had been attracting landscape painters for decades, but most of them were attracted to the shoreline colonies at Cos Cob, Old Lyme and Mystic and to an Impressionist approach to landscape painting. Post stands apart for his choice of a rural retreat in the northwest hills of Connecticut and his steady exploration of his chosen theme, the country stream. While his peers turned toward the bright palette of Impressionism, he remained committed to tonalist hues and the rich greens that also appealed to his mentor, Hugh Bolton Jones. Those seeking an escape from the increasingly urban New York metropolitan area, rode the Shepaug Railroad, completed in 1872, into the quiet Litchfield colony, where they helped create and preserve an idealized rural lifestyle, a reminder of an America that they feared was rapidly disappearing. This railroad ran only a few miles from Applewood. When at the age of seventy, Post moved back to Manhattan with his wife to be close to their daughter, Post’s only serious professional effort lay in offering two paintings at the National Academy of Design annual exhibitions about 1930. This was later reduced to one painting per year. William Merritt Post died in New York City of heart problems on March 22, 1935 at the age of seventy-eight. The item “C1900 New England Impressionist Landscape Painting Signed William Merritt Post” is in sale since Friday, May 1, 2020. This item is in the category “Art\Paintings”. The seller is “upstatetreasures14″ and is located in Kingston, New York. This item can be shipped to United States.
    • Medium: Oil
    • Subject: Landscape
    • Date of Creation: 1900-1949
    • Style: Impressionist
    • Originality: Original
    • Listed By: Dealer or Reseller
    • Region of Origin: New England
    • Painting Surface: Canvas
    • Artist: William Merritt Post
    • Size: Medium (up to 36in.)
    • Features: Signed

    C1900 New England Impressionist Landscape Painting Signed William Merritt Post
  • C1900 Mount Hood Landscape Painting By Oregon Artist Eliza Barchus. Signed

    C1900-Mount-Hood-Landscape-Painting-By-Oregon-Artist-Eliza-Barchus-Signed-01-gk
    C1900 Mount Hood Landscape Painting By Oregon Artist Eliza Barchus. Signed
    C1900 Mount Hood Landscape Painting By Oregon Artist Eliza Barchus. Signed
    C1900 Mount Hood Landscape Painting By Oregon Artist Eliza Barchus. Signed
    C1900 Mount Hood Landscape Painting By Oregon Artist Eliza Barchus. Signed
    C1900 Mount Hood Landscape Painting By Oregon Artist Eliza Barchus. Signed
    C1900 Mount Hood Landscape Painting By Oregon Artist Eliza Barchus. Signed
    C1900 Mount Hood Landscape Painting By Oregon Artist Eliza Barchus. Signed
    C1900 Mount Hood Landscape Painting By Oregon Artist Eliza Barchus. Signed
    C1900 Mount Hood Landscape Painting By Oregon Artist Eliza Barchus. Signed
    C1900 Mount Hood Landscape Painting By Oregon Artist Eliza Barchus. Signed
    C1900 Mount Hood Landscape Painting By Oregon Artist Eliza Barchus. Signed
    C1900 Mount Hood Landscape Painting By Oregon Artist Eliza Barchus. Signed

    C1900 Mount Hood Landscape Painting By Oregon Artist Eliza Barchus. Signed
    For sale is an original oil on canvas painting by the well known Portland Oregon landscape painter ELIZA ROSANNA BARCHUS (1857 – 1959). Known for capturing scenes throughout the Pacific North West, here she captures an image that she painted numerous versions of throughout her career, a stunning view of Mount Hood. This appears to be a depiction of Mount Hood probably near dusk with the white snowcapped mountain peak appearing to illuminate from the pink hue of a pacific northwest evening. In the foreground is a slow meandering River. Probably the Columbia River. Signed by the artist lower right corner. Condition: Seems to have been over varnished. Has surface grime under varnish. Needs a proper cleaning. Varnish bloom lower right. Framed in its original period gesso molded gold gilded picture frame. Framed – 19 3/4 x 25 3/4. Canvas – 12 x 18. ELIZA ROSANNA BARCHUS (1857 – 1959). Eliza Rosanna Lamb was born into the life of the raw Wild West in 1857. Her family generally led a nomadic life, frequently moving from town to town by wagon in search of work. For a period of time, her stepfather (her father died soon after she was born) led a colorful life as a US Deputy Marshal under “Wild Bill” Hickok. While a harsh childhood environment to be raised in, she learned the value of hard work, and which she would draw upon throughout her later life. In 1880, at the age of 22, she moved to Portland, Oregon, with her second new husband, John Barchus. That is unknown, but we are grateful that she did! Settling in Portland was her first opportunity to lay down roots. It is likely that she had always dreamed of being an artist. Now, her husband likely gave her the encouragement and resources she needed to fulfill that desire. So in 1884 Barchus took what were probably her only lessons in painting. While Portland already supported several instructors of art, she chose to study under William S. Parrott, likely because she admired his work, both in subject matter – local landscape – and artistic style. She adopted many of his methods, resulting in her early work being quite similar to his. Even today,’Barchus school’ or’Parrott school’ are frequently used terms to describe paintings by turn-of-the-century Oregon artists that align with their style. Within two years of her first lesson, Eliza commenced upon an art career that would ultimately span 50 years. In fact, by 1886 she had become an art instructor herself, advertised in The Oregonian daily newspaper that she had opened painting classes for young women, offering them at the “reduced rate of 50 cents” per lesson. She also began submitting her work at local art fairs, including the Annual Portland Mechanics Fair held each fall. A newspaper reference of Mrs. Barchus’s (sic) specimens will be seen at the fair indicates that she participated in the 1886 Fair. However, it was not until the next year that she hit gold earning the top prize for one of her landscape paintings! She was justifiably proud of her accomplishment. She later had the dime-size medal incorporated into a necklace, which can be seen in early photographs of the artist. In 1888 she was again recognized for her entries at the Fair with a silver medal. With back-to-back medal honors, and local encouragement, Barchus decided to submit an entry to National Academy of Design’s 1890 fall show in New York City. In route to the exhibition, Barchus had a chance encounter in Chicago with Henry Pittock (who later built the Pittock Mansion). He gave her encouragement for her journey and wish of success. At 32 years of age and just six years after starting her career, Barchus had now exhibited at one of America’s most prestigious art association. While Barchus was establishing herself as an artist, family commitments were also growing. Two children were born in the early 1890’s, which undoubtedly demanded her maternal attention. Additionally, her husband’s health began to deteriorate from Brights disease (a kidney ailment), and he died in 1899. Therefore, her talent in painting soon became the sole livelihood for the family. At a time when most women did not work, Barchus became a very adept and enterprising businesswoman. Remarkably, starting in 1891, she arranged for six homes to be built for her family in over a span of about twenty years. Construction costs were frequently paid by barter of her paintings rather than cash. Four of these southeast Portland homes are still in use today. Her savvy was not limited to domestic activities. She was a keeper of a downtown Portland art studio during this period. Her first studio was in the prominent Dekum building and later moved to the Multnomah building. Additionally, she arranged to have examples of her work displayed at other business establishments, including the local cigar & newspaper concessionaire B. Rich in at the famous Portland Hotel when it opened in 1890. With the growing need to support a family, and to assure enough supply of paintings for her flourishing tourist sales, Barchus began to produce standard sizes of popular northwest scenery in assembly-line type fashion. A collection of similarly unfinished paintings illustrate that she would work on ten or more paintings of a single scene at the same time: first painting the sky, then the background, and then moving toward the foreground with various layers of paint, likely letting each previous effort dry before beginning the next. She now reduced the detail elements that her earlier paintings had and a the “‘Barchus'” style developed appeared in her work. Popular scenes included the tremendous geologic formations of the region: local mountains Mount Hood, Mount Rainier, Mount St. Helens, and Mount Three Sisters, Multnomah Falls, Rooster Rock and Crater Lake. At arguably the peak of her career, Portland played host to the world with the 1905 Lewis and Clark Centennial Exposition and Oriental Fair. Barchus obtained a concessionaire’s booth to sell paintings in the fair grounds. These lithographs later evolved into successful postcard sales for many years afterwards. At the end of the Fair, Barchus again earned recognition by being awarded a the gold medal for the best collection of paintings of Pacific Coast scenery. Helen Barchus was primarily a studio painter and used photographs or literary descriptions as the source of many of her compositions. However, she did enjoy to traveling and such trips tended to be for the purpose of painting. The normal output of such a trip for an artist would typically be sketches that would later be used to complete finished oils upon return to the studio. However, it does not appear that Barchus produced sketches as none have been located. Therefore, it can be assumed that she completed paintings while on these trips, which she used for subsequent paintings. This would explain the large variety of scenery still intact in the artist’s collection at the time she finally laid down her brushes and pallet in the mid 1930’s. Remarkably, Barchus found time for leisurely pursuits. One was writing poetry. These covered a variety of topics, including war, friendship, and of course, nature’s beauty. Many she copyrighted, sometimes using her maiden name of Rosanna Lamb as a pseudonym – Rosanna Lamb. She incorporated some of these creative writings incorporated into her advertising material that promoted the sale of paintings. By the late 1920’s Barchus was in her 70’s. Her eyesight began to fail her and arthritis progressively became a problem. The quality of her paintings correspondingly suffered from crude execution of brush stroke and lack of color blending. By the mid 30’s she acknowledged that her facilities would no longer enable her to continue painting. After fifty years, and literally thousands of paintings- possibly as many as 7,500, she quietly laid down her pallet and brushes. She died several years later, in 1959, at the age of 102. The item “C1900 Mount Hood Landscape Painting By Oregon Artist Eliza Barchus. Signed” is in sale since Thursday, May 2, 2019. This item is in the category “Art\Paintings”. The seller is “upstatetreasures14″ and is located in Kingston, New York. This item can be shipped to United States, Canada, United Kingdom, Denmark, Romania, Slovakia, Bulgaria, Czech republic, Finland, Hungary, Latvia, Lithuania, Malta, Estonia, Australia, Greece, Portugal, Cyprus, Slovenia, Japan, China, Sweden, South Korea, Indonesia, Taiwan, South africa, Thailand, Belgium, France, Hong Kong, Ireland, Netherlands, Poland, Spain, Italy, Germany, Austria, Bahamas, Israel, Mexico, New Zealand, Singapore, Switzerland, Norway, Saudi arabia, United arab emirates, Qatar, Kuwait, Bahrain, Croatia, Malaysia, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Costa rica, Panama, Trinidad and tobago, Guatemala, Honduras, Jamaica, Barbados, Bangladesh, Bermuda, Brunei darussalam, Bolivia, Ecuador, Egypt, French guiana, Guernsey, Gibraltar, Guadeloupe, Iceland, Jersey, Jordan, Cambodia, Cayman islands, Liechtenstein, Sri lanka, Luxembourg, Monaco, Macao, Martinique, Maldives, Nicaragua, Oman, Peru, Pakistan, Paraguay, Reunion, Viet nam, Uruguay.
    • Medium: Oil
    • Subject: Mount Hood
    • Date of Creation: 1900-1949
    • Originality: Original
    • Region of Origin: Portland Oregon
    • Listed By: Dealer or Reseller
    • Painting Surface: Canvas
    • Artist: Eliza Barchus
    • Features: Signed
    • Size: Medium (up to 36in.)

    C1900 Mount Hood Landscape Painting By Oregon Artist Eliza Barchus. Signed