- Alexander Helwig Wyant
Infobox Artist
bgcolour = #6495ED
name = Alexander Helwig Wyant
imagesize = 180px
caption = Alexander H. Wyant
birthname =
birthdate = birth date |1836|1|11|
location =Port Washington, Ohio
deathdate = death date and age |1892|11|29|1836|1|11|
deathplace =
nationality = American
field =Landscape art ,Painting
training =
movement =Tonalism
works =
patrons =
influenced by =George Inness
influenced =
awards =Alexander Helwig Wyant, was born
January 11 ,1836 , in Ohio - and he diedNovember 29 ,1892 in New York, New York. He was an American landscape painter. Also known as Alexander Wyant, A. H. Wyant, he was active as an artist in Arkville,New York , andKeene Valley, New York among other places.Biography
Alexander Wyant was born at
Port Washington, Ohio . He started painting beside theOhio River when he was inCincinnati, Ohio . A landscape painter in the style ofGeorge Inness , whom he later met inNew York City . His early paintings followed closely theHudson River School tradition, while the later—infused with low-key colors, atmospheric features and poetic interpretation—are representative oftonalism . [ [http://www.trocadero.com/antiquesroyale/items/564504/item564504store.html] brief biography retrieved online Dec.17, 2007]Raised in Defiance, Ohio, Alexander H. Wyant worked during his teens as a sign painter in nearby Port Washington. In 1857 he was impressed with some paintings by George Inness at an exhibition in Cincinnati and soon left for New York to meet Inness. After returning to Cincinnati, Wyant secured the support of Nicholas Longworth and went to study in New York in 1860. He went on a trip that started in Paris in 1860 where he saw Corot and Dupré's works before moving on to
Germany . [Press Company Frontier Press Company. (2004) "Masters of Achievement", Kessinger Publishing. p. 929. ISBN 1-4179-4248-7.]After an interlude of two years in Cincinnati, he moved back to
New York City in 1863. He exhibited for the first time at theNational Academy of Design in 1864 and was elected an associate there in 1868 and an academician in 1869. Wyant went abroad in 1865, studying for a few months with the Norwegian painterHans Gude inDüsseldorf andKarlsruhe, Germany [cite encyclopedia | title = Alexander Helwig Wyant | encyclopedia = | volume = 29 | pages = 579 | publisher = Encyclopedia Americana Corporation | date = 1920 | id = | url = http://books.google.com/books?id=4hbhBsRAOAoC&pg=PA579as_brr=1#PPA579,M1 | accessdate = 2008-03-09] , and making brief stops inEngland andIreland before settling again in New York. After 1866 Wyant gradually shifted toward a more fluid handling of paint, with increasing reliance on a palette emphasizing shades of white, gray, and the earth colors. From 1867 he exhibited his watercolors almost annually and was instrumental in the founding of the American Watercolor Society in 1878.A partial stroke while on a government expedition to Arizona and New Mexico in 1873 led to paralysis of his right arm. Between 1874 and 1880 he worked in his studio in New York City, teaching himself to paint with his left hand. After his marriage in 1880, he began to spend most of his time in Keene Valley, New York. He moved in 1889 to Arkville, New York (in the Catskills). He frequently painted in the
Adirondacks as well as in theCatskills . He died in 1892 in New York City shortly after completing "Arkville Autumn Landscape," his last painting. He was only moderately appreciated during his lifetime, though after his death his works were eagerly sought for.Career
Wyant's signature style was developed slowly and not without several false starts along the way. Special contributions came from his initial contact with Inness shortly after that artist's sojourn in France; the startling revelations disclosed to Wyant by his study of
John Constable andJ. M. W. Turner and his stroke in 1873, which accelerated the artist's movement away from the sort of detailed examination of natural facts that one finds, for example, in his well-known, "Mohawk Valley," in the collection of theMetropolitan Museum of Art . In his later years Wyant's solitary, introspective mood came to blend more closely than ever with his landscapes, especially those from the Arkville area, where a kindred spirit, J. F. Murphy, also worked.He was a member of the
Century Association and theNational Academy .Exhibitions included the following venues:
National Academy of Design , 1865-92; Brooklyn Art Association, 1867-92;Boston Art Club , 1877-82;Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts , 1879-81;Art Institute of Chicago ; andMetropolitan Museum of Art .Public collections that include Wyant's work can be found in the
National Museum of American Art ,Brooklyn Museum ,Metropolitan Museum of Art ,Toledo Museum of Art ,Tennessee State Museum , and the Kentucky Art Museum.References
Other sources
*1911
*Smithsonian American Art Museum ,Washington, DC. External links
* [http://www.bostonartclub.com Boston Art Club official website]
* [http://www.topofart.com/artists/Alexander_Helwig_Wyant/ Picture of Alexander H. Wyant]
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