Guy Carleton Wiggins (1883-1962)

細節
Guy Carleton Wiggins (1883-1962)

New England Farmlands

signed 'Guy Wiggins' lower left--signed again, dated '1929' and inscribed with title on the reverse--oil on canvas
25 x 30in. (63.5 x 76.2cm.)
來源
Grand Central Art Galleries, New York
R.H. Love Galleries, Chicago, Illinois
展覽
Columbus, Georgia, The Columbus Museum of Art, Masterworks of American Impressionism from the Pfeil Collection, 1992, pp. 275-277, no. 87. (This exhibition travelled extensively.)

拍品專文

Although best known for his snowy cityscapes of New York, Guy Wiggins did produce a significant number of landscape paintings. The majority of these landscapes depict the area around Old Lyme, Connecticut where both Guy and his father Carleton took residence in the mid-teens. Just after the turn of the century, Old Lyme became an appealing destination for American Impressionists and grew into a loosely structured artist's colony, popularized by an early visit of Childe Hassam.

New England Farmlands of 1929 most likely depicts the Connecticut countryside on a bright summer day. Painted with thick, unconnected brushstrokes in a loose, rapid fashion, this picture reveals the influence of both Impressionism and Post-Impressionism on Wiggin's style by the early 1920s.