- Edmund Charles Tarbell
Infobox Artist
bgcolour = #6495ED
name = Edmund Charles Tarbell
imagesize =
caption = Edmund Charles Tarbell
birthname =
birthdate = birth date |1862|4|26|
location =Groton (town), Massachusetts
deathdate = death date and age |1938|8|1|1862|4|26|
deathplace =
nationality = American
field =Impressionism ,Painting
training =School of the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston
movement =
works =
patrons =
influenced by =
influenced =
awards =Edmund Charles Tarbell (
April 26 ,1862 –August 1 ,1938 ) was anAmerican Impressionist painter. He was a member of theTen American Painters .Tarbell was born at West Groton, Massachusetts, to a family that
immigrated fromEngland in 1647. His father, Edmund Whitney Tarbell, died in 1863 after contractingtyphoid fever while serving in theAmerican Civil War . His mother, Mary Sophia Fernald, thereupon remarried to David Frank Hartford and moved with him toMilwaukee, Wisconsin , leaving young "Ned" and his sister, Nellie Sophia, to be raised by theirpaternal grandparents in Groton.As a youth, Tarbell took evening art
lessons from George H. Bartlett at the Massachusetts Normal Art School. Between 1877 and 1880, heapprenticed at the ForbesLithographic Company inBoston . In 1879, he entered theSchool of the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston , studying underOtto Grundmann . Matriculating in the same class were two other future members of the Ten American Painters, Robert Reid andFrank Weston Benson .Because of his talent, Tarbell was encouraged to continue his education in
Paris, France , then center of theart world . Consequently, in 1883 he entered theAcademie Julian to study underGustave Boulanger andJules-Joseph Lefebvre . Paris exposed him to anacademic training , which invariably included copyingOld Master paintings at theLouvre Museum , but also to the Impressionism movement then sweeping the city's galleries. Thatduality would imprint his work. In 1884, Tarbell's education included aGrand Tour toItaly , and then again the following year to Italy,Belgium ,Germany andBrittany .Tarbell returned to
Boston in 1886, earning a living as anillustrator , private art instructor andportrait painter. He married Emeline Souther, member of a prominentDorchester, Massachusetts family, in 1888. In 1889, Tarbell assumed the position of his former mentor, Otto Grundmann, at the Museum School, where he was a popular teacher. He gave his pupils a solid academic art training -- before they learned to paint, they had to "render" from plaster casts of classicalstatues . So pervasive was his influence on Boston painting that his followers were dubbed "The Tarbellites." In 1919, Tarbell became principal of the art school at theCorcoran Gallery of Art inWashington, DC .An 1891 painting entitled "In the Orchard" established his reputation as an artist. Many still consider the work his
masterpiece . It depicts his wife with hersiblings at "plein air " leisure. Tarbell became famous for impressionistic, richly-hued images of figures in landscapes. His later work shows theinfluence ofJohannes Vermeer . Here, he typically portrays figures in genteelColonial Revival interiors , executed with restrained brushwork andcolor .Throughout his career, Tarbell's wife and their four children (Josephine, Mercie, Mary and Edmund A.) would be his most convenient models. The resulting paintings
chronicle their lives.He limned portraits of many notables of his day, including
industrialist Henry Clay Frick ,Yale University PresidentTimothy Dwight , and U.S. PresidentsWoodrow Wilson ,Calvin Coolidge andHerbert Hoover .While teaching at the Museum School in Boston, Tarbell lived first in Dorchester, Massachusetts, and later at the former Hotel Somerset in Boston, not far from his
atelier in theFenway Studios on Ipswich Street.Tarbell's paintings hang in numerous American art collections and
museums , including theWhite House ."Paintings:"
*1890 - Three Sisters
*1890 - Woman in White
*1891 - A Girl Sewing in an Orchard
*1891 - In the Orchard
*1892 - Girl With Horse
*1892-3 - The Bath
*1893 - Mother and Child in Pine Woods
*1893 - A Summer Idyll
*1893 - An Amethyst
*1894 - Arrangement in Pink and Gray
*1896 - Girl's Head And Shoulders
*1897 - Girl in Pink and Green
*1898 - Blue Veil
*1899 - My Family at Cotuit
*1899 - Across The Room
*1900 - A Sketch
*1902 - Schooling The Horses
*1904 - Girl Crocheting
*1904 - By the River (Riverbank)
*1904 - Summer Breeze
*1906 - A Girl Mending
*1906-7 Girls Reading
*1907 - Preparing For The Matinee
*1907 - New England Interior
*1907 - Josephine And Mercie
*1909 - Girl Reading
*1909 - Piscataqua River
*1911 - My Children in the Woods
*1911 - Woman With Corsage
*1912 - Mercie Cutting Flowers
*1912 - Dreamer
*1913 - Reverie
*1914 - Young Girl Studying
*1914 - My Family
*1916 - Nell and Elinor
*1919 - Mary and the Venus
*1922 - Mother and Mary
*1926 - Peonies And Iris
*1928 - Marjorie and Little EdmundReferences
* Buckley, Laurene; "Edmund C. Tarbell, Poet of Domesticity" (2001); Hudson Hills Press, 1133 Broadway, Suite 1301, New York, NY 10010-8001
* Strickler, Susan, et al; "Edmund C. Tarbell, Impressionism Transformed" (2001); Currier Gallery of Art, 201 Myrtle Way, Manchester, NH 03104-4393
* "Pursuing His Passion: Edmund C. Tarbell" (2001); video, Currier Gallery of Art, 201 Myrtle Way, Manchester, NH 03104-4393External links
* [http://cafe.naver.com/ArticleRead.nhn?clubid=11027190&page=1&menuid=28&boardtype=L&articleid=5848 Cafe Naver]
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.