Robert William Wood

For other people of the same name, see Robert Wood (disambiguation).
Robert William Wood

Robert W. Wood
Born (1889-03-04)March 4, 1889
Sandgate, Kent, England
Died March 14, 1979(1979-03-14) (aged 90)
Bishop, California, United States
Known for Landscape painting
Movement California Plein-Air Painting, American Impressionism

Robert William Wood (March 4, 1889 – March 14, 1979) was an American landscape painter.[1] He was born in England, emigrated to the United States and rose to prominence in the 1950s with the sales of millions of his color reproductions.[2] He was active in the art colonies of San Antonio, Texas in the 1930s,[3] Monterey, California in the 1940s and Laguna Beach in the 1950s.[4]

Biography

Life and work

Robert William Wood was born in Sandgate, Kent, England, near the White Cliffs of Dover. After emigrating from England in 1910, he roamed the United States from Maine to California in search of landscape subjects. He eventually settled in Laguna Beach, California in 1940.[5]

Robert Wood Reproductions

Wood's work was widely published by a number of publishers. The most prolific publisher of Wood's work was Donald Bonnist's Donald Art Company which distributed more than one-million copies of "October Morn," Wood's most popular print in less than two years. Wood was at the peak of his fame in the 1950s through 1970s when his scenes of the Catskill Mountains in New York, the California coast, the Grand Tetons, the Rocky Mountains, the Texas Hill Country and the Cascades were most popular. His popularity made him a household name in America. Millions of his reproductions were printed in large editions by a number of publishers and titles like "Autumn Bronze," "Early Spring." "Pine & Birch," "Texas Spring," and "The Old Mill" are found in homes across North America.[6]

Studio Locations

He lived in rural Ohio; Seattle, Washington; Portland, Oregon;San Antonio, Texas; Monterey, California; Laguna Beach, California; Woodstock, New York;[7] San Diego, California; and Bishop, California. He was a popular exhibitor at the Laguna Art Festival and a Life Member of the Laguna Art Association.[8] Wood was represented by galleries in Laguna Beach, Los Angeles, San Antonio, Dallas, Austin, Pittsburgh, Philadelphia, Atlanta, and Cleveland.[9]

Later life

Wood moved to the Owens Valley in Bishop, California in the early 1960s with his wife, the artist Caryl Wood. On a large parcel of land with its own trout pond, they built studios for each of them. The Woods sold the property to move to San Diego, California where they restored a Victorian home.[10] After a few years in San Diego, they returned to Bishop where they purchased a smaller property. Wood died in Bishop at the age of eighty-nine, just a month before a large retrospective exhibition was mounted at the Morseburg Galleries in Los Angeles, by Howard Morseburg and the Newport Beach gallery owner Raymond Hagen.[11]

Productivity

Wood was an extremely facile painter and his artistic production was substantial — in excess of 5,000 completed works. His work is sold at galleries specializing in historic American Art and is sold frequently at auction, with his auction record in excess of $40,000.[12]

See also

Notes

  1. Although he was never naturalized as a citizen, his entire career was in the United States, hence his designation as an "American" artist.
  2. These figures came from the Donald Art Company and are referenced by Jeffrey Morseburg in his essays on Robert Wood.net and other web sites.
  3. He was represented in a number of the early San Antonio Plein-Air exhibitions in the late 1920s.
  4. Records of Laguna Art Festival. See also articles in archival section of Robert Wood web site referenced below.
  5. "Rites Pending for Artist Robert Wood". Los Angeles Times. March 17, 1979. p. B1.
  6. Donald Art Company was a leading American art publisher from the 1950s through the 1980s. Its D.A.C.N.Y. legend is found on millions of Wood reproductions.
  7. Flume. The Last Mountain.
  8. Wood exhibited his work at most Laguna Art Festivals from the late 1940s through the early 1960s.
  9. Richard Challis and Larry Kronquist in Laguna Beach, Newman Galleries in Philadelphia, Palmer Galleries in Atlanta, Morseburg Galleries in Los Angeles are several of the galleries.
  10. Images of both these homes are reproduced on the official Robert Wood.Net web site.
  11. Gaston, Godfrey, Robert Wood Retrospective, Exhibition Catalog, Morseburg Galleries, Los Angeles, California, 1979
  12. Ask Art reference site lists hundreds of sales with a high value of more than $40,000.

Sources

Further reading

External links

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