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Ernest Lawson by William Glackens 1910
oil on canvas 76.2 x 63.5 cm |
Continuing
the intermittent theme on the New York "Ashcan School" (see Introduction
Oct 2012, William Glackens Oct 2012, Robert Henri Oct - Nov 2012,
George Luks Nov 2012, Everett Shinn Nov 2012, George Bellows
Dec 2012, John Sloan Dec 2012) the
next artist I'm featuring is Ernest Lawson.
Ernest Lawson (1873 – 1939) a progressive artist and member of a
group of artists called The Eight, achieved early recognition with his
impressionist landscape paintings but later in life experienced personal
tragedy and artistic isolation.
Born in Nova Scotia in 1873, Lawson studied at the Art Students League, New
York, from 1891 to 1892 and took summer classes in Cos Cob, Connecticut, under
J. Alden Weir and John Twachtman. Lawson’s early work has delicate tones and
harmonious textures reminiscent of Twachtman’s style. While living in France
from 1893 to 1896, Lawson briefly attended the Académie Julian. During this
time, he met the Impressionist painter Alfred Sisley, an encounter that
confirmed Lawson's love of painting outdoors, and his first success came when
the Paris Salon accepted two paintings in 1894.
Returning to New York in 1898, Lawson concentrated on certain sites of upper
Manhattan - their light, seasons, and times of day - a body of work that marked
the height of his career. These characteristic works depicting the
semi-industrial landscape of New York and the lower Hudson River employ thick
impasto, strong contour lines, and areas of bold, yet harmonious colour to
create highly structured compositions that appeared quite progressive at the
time. They are often constructed of horizontal bands denoting land, water, and
sky, while a delicate network of vertical lines creates foreground grasses and
trees that reach past the middle ground toward a hazy horizon.
Lawson joined the rebellion against the National Academy of Design when his
work was rejected in 1905 and through his friend William Glackens, became a
member of The Eight, a group of American artists who were dedicated to
challenging the dominance of the Academy. Lawson also participated in the
Independent Artists exhibition in 1910 and the Armory Show in 1913. He won
numerous awards including gold medals at the Pennsylvania Academy (1907) and
Panama Pacific Exposition (1915). A year’s stay in Spain in 1916 with his wife
and two daughters may have been the highlight of his private life, but
financial troubles and bouts of alcoholism subsequently caused him to lose his
family and many patrons. Impoverished and in ill health, Lawson accepted
teaching positions in Kansas City and Colorado Springs during the 1920s. In
1936 he moved to Florida, where he died of an apparent heart attack in 1939.
This is part 1 of a 5-part post on the works of Ernest Lawson:
|
1891 Woodland Scene |
|
1893c View of a Garden in a Paris Suburb
oil on canvas 74.3 x 82.5 cm |
|
1894 Barges on the Seine
oil on canvas 63.5 x 76.2 cm |
|
1894-1910c The Harlem River from High Bridge
oil on canvas 50.8 x 61 cm |
|
1895 Moret-sur-Loing
oil on canvas 66 x 132.1 cm |
|
1898 Canal Scene in Winter
oil on canvas 55.8 x 66 cm |
|
c1898 Canal Scene In Winter |
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1899 River Scene in Winter
oil on canvas 76.2 x 76.2 cm |
|
1900-10c Red Barns In Spring |
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1900 On the Hudson River
oil on canvas 36.8 x 43.2 cm |
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1900 On the Hudson River
oil on canvas 36.8 x 43.2 cm |
|
c1900 Spring Morning
oil on canvas 41 x 51.1 cm |
|
1903-06c Spring
oil on canvas |
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1904 Morningside Heights
oil on canvas 87.9 x 103.2 cm |
|
1905 Inwood on Hudson, in the Snow
oil on canvas 48.9 x 61 cm |
|
1906 Aqueduct At Little Falls, New Jersey
oil on canvas 40.6 x 50.8 cm |
|
1906 Farm Landscape |
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1906 Harlem River in Winter
oil on canvas 63.5 x 76.2 cm |
|
1906 Excavation - Penn Station
oil on canvas 47 x 61.6 cm |
|
c1906 By the River
oil on panel 57.1 x 74.9 cm |
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1907 Blue Night
oil on canvas 63.5 x 76.2 cm |
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1907 Floating Ice - Snow Bound Boats, Winter On The River |
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1907 Harlem River in Winter
oil on canvas 45.8 x 61.2 cm |
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1907 River in Winter
oil on canvas 50.8 x 61 cm |
|
1907 Wet Night, Gramercy Park ( After Rain: Nocturne )
oil on canvas 66.6 x 73.6 cm |
|
c1907 The Broken Fence, Spring Flood
oil on canvas 76.7 x 61.1 cm |
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1907-10 Winter Landscape, Washington Bridge
oil on canvas 45.8 x 61 cm |
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1907-10 Brooklyn Bridge
oil on canvas 51.8 x 61 cm |
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c1907 Ice in the River
oil on canvas 50.8 x 61 cm |
|
c1908-10 Boys Bathing
oil on canvas 64.5 x 77 cm |
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1908 Ice on the Hudson
oil on canvas 83.8 x 101.6 cm |
|
c1908-10 Summer Afternoon
oil on canvas 40.9 x 51.3 cm |
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c1908 An Abandoned Farm
oil on canvas 73.4 x 91.1 cm |
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1910 Harlem River, Winter
oil on canvas 101.6 x 127 cm |
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1910 Central Park
oil on canvas 61 x 71.1 cm |
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1910 High Bridge—Early Moon
oil on canvas 50.8 x 61 cm |
|
1910 Nova Scotia, On The Harlem |
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1910 Spring Thaw |
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1910 Shadows, Spuyten Duyvil Hill |
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1910 Washington Bridge |
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1910 Winter, Connecticut |
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c1910 New York Street Scene
oil on canvas 81.6 x 60.96 cm |
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c1910-15 Dunwoodie, Upper New York
oil on canvas 51.7 x 61 cm |
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