after Will Henry Stevens
by Jodie Marie Anne Richardson Traugott aka jm-ART
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Price
$1,600
Dimensions
22.000 x 28.000 x 1.000 inches
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Title
after Will Henry Stevens
Artist
Jodie Marie Anne Richardson Traugott aka jm-ART
Medium
Painting - Oil On Canvas
Description
This is my reproduction of a work by Will Henry Stevens, called The Louisana Coast. It is a very textured knife-painted oil.
This painting has been featured in the Fine Art America/Pixels group board:
LYRICAL TREES VIBRANT WAVELENGTH OF COLOR NO PHOTOS
12/11/2021
Will Henry Stevens (1881-1949) was a pioneer of Modernism in the American South who worked simultaneously in both abstract and representational styles. Stevens was incredibly inspired by nature and never stopped working in the outdoors. With diverse influences from Sung Dynasty painting and Taoist philosophy to the Modern masters Paul Klee and Wassily Kandinsky, Stevens found an artistic voice truly his own. Inspired by the landscapes of coastal Louisiana and the mountains of western North Carolina and eastern Tennessee where he summered, Stevens translated the geometry of nature into abstract compositions, or at times what scholar Jessie Poesch, Ph.d. called “semi-abstracts.” These latter paintings were a result of working in both the abstract and representational simultaneously.
Born in Vevay, Indiana on the Ohio River, Stevens studied at the Cincinnati Academy of Art. He then worked as a designer at the Rookwood Pottery in Cincinnati where his work took him to New York where he remained to study at the Art Students League. He taught in Louisville, Kentucky for almost a decade during which time he exhibited regularly in Cincinnati and Louisville. In 1920, Ellsworth Woodward invited Stevens to teach at Newcomb College in New Orleans, a position he held until 1948. He taught the female students at Newcomb College and would invite them along on his summer teaching positions to various locales, but mainly in western North Carolina and eastern Tennessee.
In 1944, Stevens was given an exhibition at Black Mountain College in North Carolina where the esteemed Josef Albers was teaching at the time. He wrote to Stevens about the show: “I am impressed with your sensitive musicality for color and your ability to handle a multitude of forms and combine them in an organic whole….many artists could learn from you about color and composition.”
Stevens work is included in the collections of the Ogden Museum of Southern Art, the Smithsonian Institution, the Morris Museum of Art, the Greenville County Museum of Art, The Historic New Orleans Collection, the New Orleans Museum of Art, among others.
borrowed from Amanda Winstead Fine Art
Uploaded
August 25th, 2013
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