Cleveland Impressionist landscape painter, Abel Georges Warshawsky (1883-1962) left Cleveland for New York in 1905 and then spent some years in Paris as an expatriate. In 1910, he returned to Cleveland where he taught art with William Sommer and exhibited paintings continuously through the 1940s.
He was born on December 28, 1883, in Sharon, Pennsylvania, though he grew up in Cleveland, Ohio. He studied with Louis Rorimer at the Cleveland Art Institute, with additional work at the Art Students League, and the National Academy of Design, the latter two institutions in New York City, where Warshawsky went in 1905. The artist travelled to Paris in 1908, where he met Amedeo Modigliani, Paul Signac and Auguste Renoir, as well as American artists Winslow Homer, Leon Kroll, Hugo Robus and William Zorach.
Though he returned to Cleveland in 1910, where he was a member of the Cincinnati Art Club and taught with William Sommer, he maintained a studio in Paris for thirty years, and was quite active in the art world there. He traveled often through France and Italy, returning on a yearly basis to the United States to sell his work, exhibiting from the 1910s to the 1950s. With the death of his first wife, and war threatening in the 1930s, Warshawsky left Europe, building a studio in Monterrey, California, teaching classes, painting portraits, and figures against the backdrop of the Northern California coastline.
Warshawsky, a member and president of the Carmel Art Association, was a painting partner and friend of California artist Sidney Sargent Freeman. Warshawsky painted portraits of John W. (Jack) Raper, 1870-1950, a columnist for "The Cleveland Press" in 1940, and his brother David, 1893-1989, in 1944 in Taxco, Mexico, which are in the collection of the City Club of Cleveland. The latter was a gift to the collection by the sitter's son and his wife, David and Lee Warshawsky. Abel Warshawsky's younger brother, Alexander L. Warshawsky, 1887-1945, was also a painter.
The 1920 portrait of his wife, titled "Paris Unconquered," is set against a background vista of that city. The painting served as the frontispiece of his book of the same title, published in 1957. "Memories of an American Impressionist", a book about Abel G. Warshawsky, edited by Ben L. Bassham, was published by Kent State University Press, in 1980. Nancy Dustin Wall Moure's article, "Abel Warshawsky," appeared in Art of California, in September 1990. His work was part of the exhibition, in 2002, "The Many Faces of Cleveland: A Century of Portraiture", at the Cleveland Artists Foundation. Abel Warshawsky died in 1962. Warshawsky has five paintings in the collection of the Cleveland Museum of Art, as well as work in the Minneapolis Art Institute, Minnesota; Art Institute of Chicago, Illinois; and the Luxembourg Museum in Paris, France.
This is part 1 of a 2-part post on the works of Abel Georges Warshawsky:
c1909 Toward San Giorgio, Venice oil on canvas 63.5 x 81.2 cm |
1911 Boats on the Seine oil on canvas 66 x 81.3 cm |
c1912 Afternoon, Brittany oil on panel 20.3 x 25.4 cm |
1917 Washerwomen at Goyen oil on canvas 64.8 x 81.3 cm The Cleveland Museum of Art, Ohio |
c1920 Portrait of a Woman oil on canvas 81.2 x 63.5 cm |
c1920 Paris Unconquered
This portrait of the artist’s wife set against the backdrop of the city was illustrated in colour for the frontispiece for the book of the same title, written by the artist in 1957.
c1920 Paris Unconquered oil on canvas 60.9 x 50.8 cm |
c1920 Le Pont de la Cité, Martigues oil on canvas 45.7 x 55.4 cm Akron Art Museum, Ohio |
1920 Along the Canal oil on canvas 46.2 x 55 cm |
1922 Paris on Parade oil on canvas 81.2 x 99 cm |
1923 The Seine at Andelys oil on canvas 81.3 x 99.8 cm Akron Art Museum, Ohio |
c1925 Place de l'Opera (Paris in Spring) oil on canvas 81.2 x 64.7 cm |
1926 The Rhone at Avignon oil on board 45.7 x 54.6 cm |
1926 La Pasarelle looking towards the Ile de la Cite and Notre Dame oil on canvas 66 x 81.5 cm |
c1930 Floral still life oil on canvas 54.6 x 45.7 cm |
c1930 Exotic fish oil on board 45.7 x 38.1 cm |
c1930 Angles sur Anglin oil on canvas 63.5 x 78.7 cm |
c1933 View of Uzerche, France oil on canvas 80.6 x 65.4 cm |
1933 Le Goyen a Pont Croix oil on board 31.5 x 39 cm |
1934 Portrait of my wife oil on canvas 81.3 x 66 cm The Cleveland Museum of Art, Ohio © This artwork is known to be under copyright |
c1935 Road to the coast, Pont Croix-Finistère, Brittany oil on fibreboard 38.1 x 49.5 cm Akron Art Museum, Ohio |
1938 The Rhône at Avignon, France oil on canvas 21.6 x 26.7 cm |
1938 Still life with glass bottle oil on canvas 81.2 x 63.5 cm |
c1940s La Petit Boudoir oil on masonite 53.9 x 44.7 cm |
c1940s Highway, Carmel Valley oil on masonite 50.8 x 60.9 cm |
c1940s Flowers in a brown bowl oil on masonite 59.7 x 49 cm |
c1940s Eucalyptus Grove, Highway 1, Carmel, CA oil on masonite 50.8 x 60.9 cm |
1946 Indian Chief oil on panel 29.5 x 25.5 cm |
Note: Dates were not found for the remainder of images in these posts.
A View of the Bridge oil on canvas 66.1 x 81.3 cm |
A View of Paris (Notre Dame) oil on canvas 81.2 x 81.2 cm |
Before the wind, road to Vernay oil on canvas 59.7 x 48.2 cm |
Coastal cliffside oil on canvas 66 x 81.2 cm |
Fishing boats, Concarneau oil on canvas 54.6 x 64.7 cm |
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.