Elizabeth Nourse Pastel Mother & Child Pastel Original
New Pricing - Own this Renown Salon Artist
| Start Price |
USD 8,750.00 |
| Current Price |
USD 8,750.00 |
| Time Left |
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| Bid Count |
0 |
| Buy It Now Price |
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| Reserve Price |
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| Start Time |
Friday, May 09, 2008 |
| End Time |
Monday, May 19, 2008 |
| Location |
Fairfax, Virginia |
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Description
From a private collection of my aunt, now 104, personal friend of the artist during much of her Paris life. This pastel and (I believe) charcoal measures approximately 10" x 6-1/3" and is double matted and beautifully archivally framed for lasting preservation. The total framed picture 16"W x 18" H. Appraised by noted art appraiser and auction house Adam Weschler & Son, Washington DC at $30,000. This pastel is quintessential Nourse, reflecting her trademark subject of mother and child, reflecting the quiet love of this thoughtful mother for her placid, nestling sweet infant. More than reasonably priced for prompt sale. Many thanks for looking. A note about the pictures: I could not remove from frame without having to redo--a costly proposition. I attemped to scan in the frame, and that is the first picture shown. This picture is darker than the original. Others are pictures taken with a digital camera, and are much closer in tone to the original, but I had problems with glare. For those unfamiliar with this noted artist, I have included information on her history and accomplishments. Her paintings and drawings can be found in important museums and private collections throughout the world. Elizabeth Nourse 1859-1938 Biography Elizabeth Nourse's considerable reputation as a Salon painter was acquired in Paris during the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, when that city was the leading international art center. Nourse was acclaimed by her fellow artists and the public alike, not only for her technical skill but also for the unique personal vision she brought to her subject matter. She was one of the first American women to be elected a member of Société Nationale des Beaux-Arts, and she won many awards in the international expositions of the time, in Chicago, Nashville, Paris, Saint Louis, and San Francisco. She was consistently invited to enter the annual juried exhibitions that were a prominent feature of the American art scene—at the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, the Carnegie Institute, the Art Institute of Chicago, the Cincinnati Art Museum, and the Corcoran Gallery of Art. As a final accolade the French government bought her painting Les volets clos for its permanent collection of contemporary art to hang in the Musée du Luxembourg with the work of such artists as James Abbott McNeill Whistler, Winslow Homer, and John Singer Sargent. Nourse's career parallels that of other expatriate artist of the pre-World War I period, but certain aspects of it are unique. With Mary Cassatt and Cecilia Beaux, she was one of the few women painters to achieve international recognition for her work and, like them, faced certain obstacles that a male artist did not encounter. She first had to prove that she was a serious professional since most women painters, now matter how gifted, were considered "Sunday painters" who would eventually marry or become teachers and fail to produce a significant body of work. To acquire professional status she had to be recognized by the all-male juries of the Salons and international exhibitions and to be favorably reviewed by the art critics, who also were mostly men. As a Victorian lady she could not easily advance her career by forming friendships in these groups, as a male artist could; the social interchange of the café, so much a part of the artistic life of Paris in her day, was denied to her. To compensate for these disadvantages, she always had the total support of her family and of a large network of women friends who admired her work, publicized it, and bought it. Unlike Cassatt, Nourse did not have an independent income nor did she teach, as Beaux did. Yet from 1883 until her death in 1938, a period of fifty-five years, she earned her living as a professional artist and supported her older sister, Louise, as well. She was also unusual among both men and women expatriates in being almost entirely American trained. Except for a few months' study in New York and later in Paris at the Académie Julian (where critics told her she needed no further schooling), her style was formed at the McMicken School of Design in Cincinnati. Nourse had not only developed an individual technique before she went to Paris but had also found her subject matter. Her interest in the peasant themes so popular among the Salon painters of her day was simply an extension of her preoccupation with the simple subjects she had painted in the Midwest—the daily routine of rural folk, especially women at work, mothers and children, portraits of Negro women and girls, and country landscapes. Like every memorable artist, Nourse was able to express in her work an original personal vision that is immediately evident to the viewer, who may know nothing about her life. Her biography explains, however, why she brought such deep conviction to her portrayal of working people, particularly to women; to the importance of motherhood; and to the beauty found in the simplest aspects of daily life and of nature. These subjects, banal in the hands of someone less sincere and less skilled, reflected her basic values and Nourse was able to infuse them with a special sense of their importance and their universal meaning. Written by :Mary Alice Heekin Burke and Lois Marie Fink. Elizabeth Nourse, 1859–1938: A Salon Career (Washington, D.C.: Smithsonian Institution Press for the National Museum of American Art and the Cincinnati Art Museum, 1983).
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