- John Fulton Folinsbee
John Fulton Folinsbee (
March 14 ,1892 –May 10 ,1972 ) was an American landscape painter and member of theart colony atNew Hope, Pennsylvania . He is best known today for his impressionist scenes of New Hope andLambertville, New Jersey , particularly the factories, quarries, and canals along theDelaware River . In 1906, at the age of fourteen, Folinsbee contractedpolio , a bout that left his legs permanently paralyzed and his right arm badly weakened. He refused to allow his condition to affect his career, and was an active and prolific painter up to the last year of his life.Folinsbee was born in 1892 in
Buffalo, New York . As a child, he attended classes at the Art Students’ League of Buffalo, but received his first formal training in with the landscape painterJonas Lie when he was fifteen. Between 1907 and 1911, he attended the Gunnery School inWashington, Connecticut , where he studied with Elizabeth Kempton and Herbert Faulkner. He later studied with Birge Harrison and John Carlson in Woodstock (summers, 1912-1914), and also withFrank Vincent DuMond at the Art Students’ League in New York. At Woodstock, he met Harry (Tony) Leith-Ross, who became a life-long friend and later followed him to New Hope. In 1914, Folinsbee married Ruth Baldwin, the daughter of William H. Baldwin, Jr. and Ruth Standish Baldwin (co-founder of theNational Urban League ), whom he had met in Washington, Connecticut. They moved to New Hope in 1916, and had two daughters, Beth and Joan.Early in his career, Folinsbee painted in a tonalist style, with an interest in light and atmosphere that grew directly from his time with Harrison and Carlson in Woodstock. By the late nineteen-teens, he had moved away from tonalism into a more structured, impressionist style. In the mid-1920s, Folinsbee began studying the work of Cézanne, which led to a trip to
France in the summer of 1926. The paintings that resulted from this trip, and those that followed later in the decade, reflect a deep understanding of Cézanne's compositional strategies and a desire to reveal the underlying structure of forms. Folinsbee's exploration of structure led eventually to a analytical, highly individual expressionist style in which he painted for the remainder of his career. His palette darkened, his brushstrokes loosened further, and his sense of light and atmosphere became more dramatic. These later works are concerned with conveying a sense of mood and an intense emotional response to the world around him.Folinsbee always had a sketchbook or a box of 8 x 10 inch canvasboards with him, ready to capture any scene that caught his eye. He and Leith-Ross were famous for spending afternoons on the bridge at New Hope sketching and tossing anything that displeased them into the Delaware River. Although he painted en plein air, directly from nature, Folinsbee would later transform his small-scale sketches into larger paintings in his studio, and frequently made a number of copies of the same scene on different sizes of canvas.
He was represented by Ferargil Gallery for most of his career, and his paintings were exhibited across the country and in several international exhibitions. Folinsbee won nearly every award given by the
National Academy of Design (where he became a full academician in 1929), receiving several of them many times. He also won awards from thePennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts , the Connecticut Academy of Fine Arts, theRhode Island School of Design , the Corcoran Gallery, and theSalmagundi Club , and received a bronze medal at theSesquicentennial Exposition in Philadelphia in 1926. His work is included in major museums, including theSmithsonian American Art Museum and the Corcoran Gallery in Washington, DC, the National Academy of Design, and the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts.Folinsbee was also a teacher, and one of his better-known students, Peter G. Cook (who married his daughter Joan), became a colleague and friend. The two collaborated on three post-office murals in Pennsylvania and Kentucky for the
Section of Painting and Sculpture during the 1930s and 1940s. In the late 1960s, Folinsbee was struck withcancer . The disease further weakened his right arm, and Folinsbee stopped painting in 1971. He died one year later in New Hope.Further reading
Cook, Peter G. "John Folinsbee". New York: Kubaba Books, 1994. ISBN 0-9639104-1-8
Culver, Michael. "The Art of John Folinsbee." "American Art Review" 13, no. 4 (August 2001): 106-111.
Peterson, Brian H. (Editor) (2002). "Pennsylvania Impressionism". Philadelphia: James A. Michener Art Museum and University of Pennsylvania Press. ISBN 0-8122-3700-5.
Folk, Thomas C. "The Pennsylvania Impressionists". Cranbury, NJ: Associated University Presses, 1997.
Hunter, Sam. "American Impressionism: The New Hope Circle". Exh. cat. Fort Lauderdale: The Fort Lauderdale Museum of Art and Richard Stuart Gallery, 1985.
Jensen, Kirsten M. "Contour, Bones, and Skin: Cezanne's Influence on John Folinsbee." "Fine Art Connoisseur" 4, no. 4 (July/August 2007): 51-55.
External links
* [http://www.folinsbee.org/catalogue John Fulton Folinsbee Catalogue Raisonné]
* [http://www.michenermuseum.org/bucksartists/artist.php?artist=76 John Folinsbee in the Bucks County Artists Online Database]
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