WILLIAM STANLEY HASELTINE (1835-1900)
WILLIAM STANLEY HASELTINE (1835-1900)
WILLIAM STANLEY HASELTINE (1835-1900)
2 More
PROPERTY OF THE TOLEDO MUSEUM OF ART, SOLD TO BENEFIT THE ACQUISITIONS FUND
WILLIAM STANLEY HASELTINE (1835-1900)

Capri

Details
WILLIAM STANLEY HASELTINE (1835-1900)
Capri
signed with initials 'W.S.H' (lower left)
oil on canvas
14 x 24 ¾ in. (35.6 x 62.9 cm.)
Provenance
The artist.
Helen Haseltine Plowden, England, daughter of the above.
Gift to the present owner from the above, 1952.
Literature
S.E. Strickler, The Toledo Museum of Art: American Paintings, Toledo, Ohio, 1979, pp. 58, 148, pl. 62, illustrated.

Brought to you by

Quincie Dixon
Quincie Dixon Associate Specialist, Head of Sale

Lot Essay

Among Haseltine's most frequently depicted European subjects, the rocky shores of Capri, located in the Bay of Naples, captivated the artist during his first visit in 1858. Haseltine returned again in 1865 before making subsequent trips throughout the late 1860s and 1870s following his permanent settlement in Europe. "To virtually all the European exhibitions in which he participated he sent paintings of Capri...Images of the site were popular with patrons...The fascination with phenomena like natural bridges and arches was part of the nineteenth-century obsession with geology and conjured images of divinity in nature." (A. Henderson, "Haseltine in Rome," in Expressions of Place: The Art of William Stanley Haseltine, exhibition catalogue, San Francisco, California, 1992, pp. 42-43)

More from 19th Century American and Western Art

View All
View All