Edmund C. Tarbell

Edmund C. Tarbell

Edmund C. Tarbell
Born (1862-04-26)April 26, 1862
Groton, Massachusetts
Died August 1, 1938(1938-08-01) (aged 76)
New Castle, New Hampshire
Nationality American
Education School of the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston
Known for Impressionism, Painting
Movement Ten American Painters

Edmund Charles Tarbell (April 26, 1862 August 1, 1938) was an American Impressionist painter. A member of the Ten American Painters, his work hangs in the Boston Museum of Fine Arts, Metropolitan Museum of Art, National Gallery of Art, Smithsonian American Art Museum, Corcoran Gallery, DeYoung Museum, National Academy of Design, New Britain Museum of American Art, Worcester Art Museum, and numerous other collections. He was a leading member of a group of painters which came to be known as the Boston School.

Early life and education

Edmund C. Tarbell was born in the Asa Tarbell House, which stands beside the Squannacook River in West Groton, Massachusetts.[1] His father, Edmund Whitney Tarbell, died in 1863 after contracting typhoid fever while serving in the Civil War. His mother, Mary Sophia (Fernald) Tarbell, remarried a shoemaking-machine manufacturer. Young "Ned" (as he was nicknamed) and his older sister, Nellie Sophia, were left to be raised by their paternal grandparents in Groton, a frontier town during the French and Indian Wars that the early Tarbell family helped settle.[2]

Girl Reading, 1909

As a youth, Tarbell took evening art lessons from George H. Bartlett at the Massachusetts Normal Art School. Between 1877 and 1880, he apprenticed at the Forbes Lithographic Company in Boston. In 1879, he entered the School of the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, studying under Otto Grundmann. He matriculated in the same class with Robert Reid and Frank Weston Benson, two other future members of the Ten American Painters.

Tarbell was encouraged to continue his education in Paris, France, then center of the art world. Consequently, in 1883 he entered the Académie Julian to study under Gustave Boulanger and Jules-Joseph Lefebvre. Paris exposed him to rigorous academic training, which invariably included copying Old Master paintings at the Louvre Museum, but also to the Impressionist movement then sweeping the city's galleries. That duality would inform his work. In 1884, Tarbell's education included a Grand Tour to Italy, and the following year to Italy, Belgium, Germany and Brittany.

Tarbell returned to Boston in 1886, where he began his career as an illustrator, private art instructor and portrait painter.[3]

Marriage and family

In the Orchard, 1891; Souther siblings, Mrs. Tarbell at far right

Two years after returning to Boston, at age 26 Tarbell married Emeline Souther, an art student and daughter of a prominent Dorchester family. Preferring to work from posed models, Tarbell often painted those immediately at hand—his wife, four children (Josephine, Mercie, Mary and Edmund Arnold Tarbell), and grandchildren. The paintings illustrate their lives.

While teaching at the Museum School in Boston, Tarbell and his family lived from 1886 until 1906 in the Ashmont section of Dorchester, the house belonging to his stepfather, David Frank Hartford. Then they lived on Commonwealth Avenue in Boston at the Hotel Somerset, located beside The Fens and not far from his atelier in the Fenway Studios on Ipswich Street.

In 1905, they bought as a summer residence a Greek Revival house in New Castle, New Hampshire, an island on the Atlantic coast. Tarbell built his studio perched on the bank of the Piscataqua River, ambling there each morning along gardens of peonies, iris and hollyhocks. Through his north-facing wall of glass he could sketch sailboats as they tacked the busy shipping channel between Portsmouth and the ocean. He was an early and avid proponent of the Colonial Revival movement, collecting American antiques (back when most were considered used furniture) and arranging them with Chinese ceramics, Japanese prints and other objets d'art as studio props. Tarbell also collected salvaged architectural elements; his studio's facade featured a Federal fanlight doorway. In the new living room added to the main house, he installed a Georgian mantelpiece attributed to Ebenezer Dearing (1730-1791), a master Portsmouth ship woodcarver. The Tarbells eventually would retire to New Castle.[4]

On the evening of January 23, 2016, the artist's house was destroyed by fire, although his studio and carriage house, long since converted into homes, survived.[5]

Career

In 1889, Tarbell assumed the position of his former mentor, Otto Grundmann, at the Museum School, where he was a popular teacher. He gave pupils a solid academic art training: before they learned to paint, they had to render from plaster casts of classical statues. His students included Margaret Fitzhugh Browne, F. Luis Mora, and Lilian Westcott Hale. So pervasive was his influence on Boston painting that his followers were dubbed "The Tarbellites."

Lady with a Corsage, 1911

But in 1912, the Museum of Fine Arts hired Huger Elliott from the Rhode Island School of Design as Supervisor of Educational Work, charged with reorganizing the Museum School, which until then managed its own affairs. An upheaval ensued. He lectured Tarbell how to teach, then how to paint. Tarbell was incensed, making it no secret that he considered Elliott artistically inept. In December, Tarbell resigned together with Frank W. Benson, his friend and fellow instructor.[6] The men in 1913 discussed founding a society to encourage art and artists in the city. With financial backing from Lilla Cabot Perry, painter and affluent Brahmin, The Guild of Boston Artists opened in 1914. Tarbell was its first president, serving through 1924.

In 1918, Tarbell was hired as principal of the art school at the Corcoran Gallery of Art in Washington, a position he held until 1926. But the Museum of Fine Arts wanted him back at the Museum School, appointing him in 1925 as Chairman of the Advisory Council. For two years he promoted and oversaw construction of the school's new building designed by Guy Lowell. In 1930, however, the school asked Augustus John to recommend English artists as instructors. Tarbell and Benson, advocates of indigenous talent, would again resign.[7]

Works

His 1891 plein air painting entitled In the Orchard established his reputation as an artist. It depicts his wife with her siblings at leisure. Tarbell became famous for impressionistic, richly hued images of figures in landscapes. His later work shows the influence of Johannes Vermeer, the 17th-century Dutch painter. In such works, Tarbell typically portrays figures in genteel Colonial Revival interiors; these studies of light and tone are executed with restrained brushwork and color.[8]

Tarbell painted portraits of many notable individuals, including industrialist Henry Clay Frick, Yale University President Timothy Dwight V, and U.S. presidents Woodrow Wilson, Calvin Coolidge, and Herbert Hoover.[9]

Honors and legacy

"Edmund Tarbell contributed to America's place in the world of art. To him and his work Europe turned its eyes in admiration, as did the whole people in America. Tarbell's works were honest works. In him was none of the transient sensationalism which brought notoriety to others. Tarbell canvases will be speaking to the world centuries from now. His character was as true as his art."[11]

Sampling of paintings

  • 1890 - Three Sisters
  • 1890 - Woman in White
  • 1891 - A Girl Sewing in an Orchard
  • 1891 - In the Orchard
  • 1892 - Girl with Horse
  • 1892-3 - The Bath
  • 1893 - Mother and Child in Pine Woods
  • 1893 - A Summer Idyll
  • 1893 - An Amethyst
  • 1894 - Arrangement in Pink and Gray
  • 1896 - Girl's Head and Shoulders
  • 1897 - Girl in Pink and Green
  • 1898 - Blue Veil
  • 1899 - My Family at Cotuit
  • 1899 - Across the Room
  • 1900 - A Sketch
  • 1902 - Schooling the Horses
  • 1904 - Girl Crocheting
  • 1904 - By the River (Riverbank)
  • 1904 - Summer Breeze
  • 1905 - A Girl Mending
  • 1906-7 Girls Reading
  • 1907 - Preparing for the Matinee
  • 1907 - New England Interior
  • 1907 - Josephine and Mercie
  • 1909 - Girl Reading
  • 1909 - Piscataqua River
  • 1910 - A Girl Mending
  • 1910 - Henry Clay Frick and Helen Clay Frick[12]
  • 1911 - My Children in the Woods
  • 1911 - Woman with Corsage
  • 1912 - Mercie Cutting Flowers
  • 1912 - Dreamer
  • 1913 - Reverie
  • 1914 - Young Girl Studying
  • 1914 - My Family
  • 1916 - Nell and Elinor
  • 1919 - Mary and the Venus
  • 1922 - Mother and Mary
  • 1926 - Peonies and Iris
  • 1928 - Marjorie and Little Edmund

Gallery

References

  1. Johnson, Sanford, Survey of West Groton, Massachusetts Historical Commission 2006
  2. Wight, Charles Henry; Thomas Tarbell and Some of His Descendants New England Genealogical Society, Boston 1907
  3. Buckley, Laurene; Edmund C. Tarbell, Poet of Domesticity (2001); Hudson Hills Press, 1133 Broadway, Suite 1301, New York, NY
  4. Edmund C. Tarbell, Smithsonian American Art Museum and the Renwick Gallery
  5. Suzanne Laurent, The Portsmouth Herald; "Fire destroys Tarbell home in New Castle"; January 24, 2016
  6. Whitehill, Walter Muir, Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, A Centennial History; Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA 1970, p. 433
  7. Strickler, Susan, et al.; Edmund C. Tarbell, Impressionism Transformed (2001); Currier Gallery of Art, 201 Myrtle Way, Manchester, NH
  8. Cox, Kenyon; Edmund C. Tarbell The Guild of Boston Artists
  9. Pursuing His Passion: Edmund C. Tarbell (2001); video, Currier Gallery of Art, 201 Myrtle Way, Manchester, NH
  10. "Book of Members, 1780-2010: Chapter T" (PDF). American Academy of Arts and Sciences. Retrieved 10 April 2011.
  11. "Great American Painter Dies," The Boston Traveler, August 3, 1938, p. 16
  12. Henry Clay Frick and daughter Helen on Flickr

External links

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