R. H. Ives Gammell

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

R. H. Ives Gammell (1893-1981)
R. H. Ives Gammell (1893-1981)

Robert Hale Ives Gammell (1893-1981), American muralist, portrait painter, art teacher, and writer on art, was born in Providence, Rhode Island in 1893. In 1911, he enrolled in the School of the Boston Museum of Fine Arts. It was here that he made contact with painters who had been trained in Europe, and in particular with William Paxton, who had himself been a student of Jean Leon Gerome's at The Ecole des Beaux-Arts in Paris. Among his other teachers were Edmund Tarbell, Joseph DeCamp, Philip Hale. Later, he studied at the Academie Julian and the Atelier Baschet in Paris.

After serving in the U.S. Army during World War I, he returned to Boston and began his painting career in earnest in 1920, executing commissions for decorations and portraits and pursuing his passion for travel in Europe and North Africa. Upon returning to the United States after his last trip to Europe in 1930, he began painting large canvasses on mythological and Biblical themes. However, he soon realized that he was completely out of step with the times and under the stress of this oppressive realization as well as the stress of the impending war in Europe, he suffered a nervous breakdown in 1939. He made a slow recovery, and was aided in this process by the writings of Swiss psychologists, C. G. Jung.

Hound of Heaven, Panel XIV
Hound of Heaven, Panel XIV

During the War years, he began work on his book, The Twilight of Painting, and also started making plans for what would become his magnum opus, a series of paintings based on Francis Thompson's poem "The Hound of Heaven." This work was completed in 1956 and is know under the title, A Pictorial Sequence by R. H. Ives Gammell Based on The Hound of Heaven. In 1950, he founded the Gammell Studios to ensure that the traditions of painting as he knew them would be preserved and perpetuated. For the next two and a half decades, he continued to devote his life to teaching and painting. He died in 1981.

Gammell was one of the last American artists to receive a classical training in art. He has a place in the history of American Realism not only because of this, but also because as a writer and teacher he embodied the values and teachings of the previous centuries as he had received them and passed them on to his students. Many of his students became fine painters and, teachers who have continued his work of passing the tradition on to future generations.

Besides The Twilight of Painting, he is author of The Shoptalk of Edgar Degas and The Boston Painters 1900-1930. He was a past president of the Guild of Boston Artists and a member of the American Society of Mural Painters.

Contents

[edit] Selected Panels from the Hound of Heaven Sequence

  • Panel I: I
  • Panel II: I Fled Him, Down The Nights and Down The Days
  • Panel VI: And Under Running Laughter
  • Panel VII: Adown Titanic Glooms of Chasmed Fears
  • Panel X: The Gust of His Approach
  • Panel XI: Would Clash It To
  • Panel XII: Drew The Bolt of Nature's Secrecies
  • Panel XIV: Laughed In The Morning's Eyes
  • Panel XIX: Yet Ever and Anon a Trumpet Sounds
Panel I
Panel II
Panel VI
Panel VII:
Panel X
Panel XI
Panel XII
Panel XIV
Panel XIX

.

[edit] Books and Articles about R. H. Ives Gammell

Ackerman, Gerald M. and Elizabeth Ives Hunter. Transcending Vision: R. H. Ives Gammell 1893-1981. Portland, OR: Powells Books, 2001.

Ackerman, Gerald M. and Peter Bougie. ”The Gammell-Ackerman letters: A Correspondence of 1967-1969.” Classical Realism Journal, Vol. I, No. 1, pp. 18-33.

.

[edit] External links

[edit] Miscellaneous Writings by R. H. Ives Gammell

[edit] Articles About R. H. Ives Gammell