Search Results:

<< Viewing Record 199 of 641 >>
View : Light Box | List View | Image List | Detailed
 


Maker(s):Champney, James Wells
Culture:American (1843-1903)
Title:painting: young woman picking blossoms from a tree branch
Date Made:ca. 1885
Type:Painting
Materials:oil, canvas, wood, gesso, gilding
Place Made:United States; Massachusetts; Deerfield or New York; New York City
Measurements:framed: 42 3/4 in x 26 1/2 in x 3 in; 108.585 cm x 67.31 cm x 7.62 cm
Accession Number:  HD 65.025
Credit Line:Museum Purchase
Museum Collection:  Historic Deerfield

Description:
Framed oil on canvas painting of a young woman picking blossoms from a tree branch, which is unsigned and undated but by James Wells Champney (1843-1003). Born in Boston, James Champney served in the 45th Massachusetts Volunteers from 1862-1863 before being invalided out of the army; he then taught drawing at Dr. Dio Lewis's "Young Ladies Seminary" from 1864-1866. After deciding to become a professional artist, Champney moved to Europe where he studied in France with Pierre Edouard Frere (1819-1886), a well-known French realist genre painter; in Antwerp with Joseph Francois Henri Van Lerius (1823-1876); and in Italy. In 1870, Champney returned to Boston where he opened a studio; in 1873, he was commissioned by "Scribner's Monthly Magazine" to illustrate "The Great South; A Record of Journeys in Louisiana, Texas, the Indian Territory, Missouri, Arkansas, Mississippi, Alabama, Georgia, Florida, South Carolina, North Carolina, Kentucky, Tennessee, Virginia, West Virginia, and Maryland," a series of articles on the Reconstruction South by Edward King (1848-1896) where the two travelled more than 25,000 miles and Champney contributed at least 500 illustrations. In 1873, Champney married Elizabeth Johnson Williams (1850-1922), whom he had met at the "Young Ladies Seminary;" she was a graduate of the Vassar class of 1869 who became a popular children's author of her period and many of whose whose works Champney illustrated. Born in Springfield, Ohio, Elizabeth Williams was the half-sister of Orson Bennet Williams (1834-1912) and daughter of Samuel Barnard Williams (1803-1884), originally of Deerfield, whose second wife was Caroline Johnson (d.1885) whom he married in 1844; the granddaughter of Elijah Williams (1767-1832) who married Hannah Barnard (1772-1853), daughter of Samuel Barnard (1721-1788) of Deerfield, in 1803; and great-granddaugher of Dr. Thomas Williams (1718-1775) of Deerfield. In 1876 the Champneys moved into Samuel Barnard Williams' house in Deerfield where Champney built a studio; they lived in Deerfield for several years while he was professor of art at Smith College in Northampton, Mass., and one of the founders of the Smith Art Gallery. In 1879, Champney opened a studio in New York City, and from that time on the Deerfield became their summer home. James and Elizabeth had two children: Edward Frere (1874-1929) who studied art and became an architect, and Maria Mitchell (1876-1906) who was born in Deerfield, married John Sanford Humphreys in 1899, and was a miniature painter. The painting shows the left profile and full-length figure of a young woman with brown eyes and hair pulled back in a bun at the back of her head; wearing a white undergarment, blue vest and brown skirt associated with French peasant women; standing in her bare feet, while looking up and holding up her right arm to a flowering branch and her left arm down holding folds of her skirt; and other flowering trees in the background. Three preliminary drawings for this painting were in the collection of Dr. George H. Humphreys (1903-2001) of New York City, the son of Maria and John Humphreys, who had been the Valentine Mott Professor Emeritus of Surgery at Columbia-Presbyterian Hospital. Interestingly, another painting in the HD collection (HD 92.016) shows a young woman in a flowering garden standing in a similar pose although wearing an elegant empire-style, lace-trimmed dress.

Tags:
women

Link to share this object record:
https://museums.fivecolleges.edu/detail.php?t=objects&type=ext&id_number=HD+65.025

Research on objects in the collections, including provenance, is ongoing and may be incomplete. If you have additional information or would like to learn more about a particular object, please email fc-museums-web@fivecolleges.edu.

<< Viewing Record 199 of 641 >>