Lot 28
  • 28

Ernest Leonard Blumenschein 1874 - 1960

Estimate
300,000 - 500,000 USD
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Description

  • Ernest Leonard Blumenschein
  • Arizona Dam (Arizona; Red Symphony; Arizona Canyon)
  • signed E.L. BLUMENSCHEIN lower left
  • oil on canvas
  • 52 by 39 in.
  • 132.1 by 99.1 cm
  • Painted from 1932 to 1957.

Provenance

Collection of the artist, 1959
Stedman Collection
Acquired from Nedra Matteucci Galleries, New York, 1998

Exhibited

Washington, D.C., Corcoran Gallery, Thirteenth Exhibition of Contemporary American Oil Painting, December 1932-January 1933
New York, National Arts Club, 1934
New York, World's Fair, American Art Today, 1939 (as Red Symphony)
New York, Grand Central Art Galleries, 1943 (as Red Symphony)
Santa Fe, New Mexico, Museum of New Mexico, A Retrospective Exhibition of the Life Work of Ernest Blumenschein, May-June 1948, no. 39
Las Cruces, New Mexico, New Mexico College of Agriculture & Mechanic Arts, Blumenschein: A Retrospective Exhibition, December 1958-January 1959, illustrated (as Arizona)
Phoenix, Arizona, Pheonix Art Museum, Visitors to Arizona 1846 to 1890, 1980, no. 74

Literature

Peter H. Hassrick and Elizabeth J. Cunningham, "In Contemporary Rythmn: The Art of Ernest L. Blumenschein," Norman, Oklahoma, 2008, illustrated as a detail p. 202, illustrated p. 211
Reginald Fisher, "Museum's First Retrospective Exhibition," El Palacio, vol. 55, no. 6, June 1948, p. 164

Condition

Unlined. Under UV: There are a few areas of inpainting at lower center and lower left, and a few scattered spots in the center of the composition.
In response to your inquiry, we are pleased to provide you with a general report of the condition of the property described above. Since we are not professional conservators or restorers, we urge you to consult with a restorer or conservator of your choice who will be better able to provide a detailed, professional report. Prospective buyers should inspect each lot to satisfy themselves as to condition and must understand that any statement made by Sotheby's is merely a subjective qualified opinion.
NOTWITHSTANDING THIS REPORT OR ANY DISCUSSIONS CONCERNING CONDITION OF A LOT, ALL LOTS ARE OFFERED AND SOLD "AS IS" IN ACCORDANCE WITH THE CONDITIONS OF SALE PRINTED IN THE CATALOGUE.

Catalogue Note

Ernest Blumenschein's artistic career began at an early age with formal training in music, which instilled in him both discipline and dedication to the arts. While attending the Cincinnati College of Music at the encouragement of his father, Blumenschein took classes at the Art Academy of Cincinnati, where his passion for painting evolved into a lifelong career. Blumenschein's interest in the American West started while he was continuing his art studies at the Académie Julian in Paris; there he met three young American artists -- Bert Phillips, Eanger Irving Couse and Joseph Henry Sharp. Sharp told stories of his time spent sketching in New Mexico, a spark which ignited and developed in Blumenschein a yearning to explore the West as soon as the opportunity presented itself. Returning from Paris in 1896, Blumenschein quickly settled into a successful career as an illustrator in New York, and was able to venture out west on a sketching trip with Phillips by 1898. Their travels were disrupted when a broken wagon wheel left them stranded just twenty miles north of Taos. Blumenschein carried the wheel on horseback into the valley to have it repaired and was stunned by the sight of the vast mountains and desert plateaus of northern New Mexico. He vowed to live and paint in this extraordinary place someday, but could only stay a few months during this short trip. Over the next decade, Blumenschein moved between New York, Paris and Giverny working on commissions from magazines and painting portraits, variously exhibited in the Paris Salons and the Salmagundi Club. First returning to Taos in the summer of 1911, he visited yearly, before relocating there permanently in 1920.

In 1915, Blumenschein, along with Phillips, Couse, Sharp, Oscar Berninghaus and W. Herbert Dunton, founded the Taos Society of Artists "to promote the highest possible standards in painting, to educate the public about the western scene through their art, to circulate joint exhibitions for the purpose of sales and mutual promotion, and to encourage excellence in allied forms of art such as sculpture, architecture, music and literature" (Peter H. Hassrick, In Contemporary Rhythm: The Art of Ernest L. Blumenschein, Norman, Oklahoma, 2008, p. 94). Together, yet in their individual styles, they painted the local culture and people of Taos while forming a blossoming art colony.  They sought to preserve their subjects' Native American heritage by celebrating its traditions and extolling their modern day lives. Blumenschein greatly respected the Taos people for their dignity and religious integrity and sympathized with the difficulties they faced as a culture in transition, endangered by the increasingly dominant Anglo-Christian way of life.

Blumenschein began to create large-scale oils which at once incorporated a symbolic visual lexicon and an intensely colorful, three-dimensional format. Patricia Broder notes, "As he matured he became a master of composition, concentrated on the fundamental structure of his painting, and studied the dynamics of linear pattern and the balance of masses. Above all, he was a painter of vision and imagination. He believed that as an artist he must record his own reaction to life and not merely imitate nature" (Taos: A Painter's Dream, p. 81). Blumenschein was a perfectionist when it came to his work, destroying pictures that did not meet his high standards. He chose to paint for the major national competitive exhibitions of his era, earning critical acclaim and many awards along the way. He considered approximately fifty paintings worthy of representing his mature aesthetic. Treasured by private collectors and museums, the greatest number of his paintings can be found in the Stark Museum of Art in Texas and the Gilcrease Museum in Oklahoma. Several others can be found at institutions scattered across the country including the Denver Art Museum, the New Mexico Museum of Art, the Dallas Museum of Art, and the Smithsonian American Art Museum.