Robert Frederick Blum
Robert Frederick Blum | |
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Robert Frederick Blum in 1875 | |
Birth name | Robert Frederick Blum |
Born |
Cincinnati, Ohio United States of America | 9 July 1857
Died |
8 June 1903 45) 90 Grove Street, New York City New York, United States of America | (aged
Nationality | American |
Field | Painting, Drawing, Printmaking |
Works | The Ameya (The Metropolitan Museum of Art) |
Patrons | Alfred Corning Clark |
Robert Frederick Blum (9 July 1857 – 8 June 1903) was an American artist born in Cincinnati, Ohio. He was one of the youngest members of the National Academy of Design, was President of the Painters in Pastel, a member of the Society of American Artists, and the American Watercolor Society.
He was employed for a time in a lithographic shop, and studied at the McMicken Art School of Design in Cincinnati, and at the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts in Philadelphia, but he was practically self-taught, and early showed great and original talent.
He settled in New York City in 1879, doing his first work there for Charles Scribner's Sons, and the next year travelled to Venice, where he executed pen drawings and water-colours. After 1880, he made many annual trips to Europe. He returned to Venice in 1881 and, in 1882, he visited Toledo and Madrid. In 1884 he visited the Netherlands.[1] He visited Japan in 1890 and spent three years there;[2] he had been interested in that country and its art for many years.
His first published sketches of Japanese jugglers appeared in the St. Nicholas Magazine. His most important work is a large frieze in the Mendelssohn Music Hall, New York, Music and the Dance (1895). His pen-and-ink work for the Century Magazine attracted wide attention, as did his illustrations for Sir Edwin Arnold's Japonica.
A Daughter of Japan, drawn by Blum and William Jacob Baer, was the cover of Scribner's Magazine for May 1893, and was one of the earliest pieces of color printing for an American magazine. In Scribner's for 1893 appeared also his Artist's Letters from Japan. He was an admirer of Mariano Fortuny, whose methods somewhat influenced his work.
Blum's Venetian pictures, such as A Bright Day at Venice (1882), had lively charm and beauty. His oil painting The Venetian Beadstringers (1889) was a popular work, which, when shown at the National Academy of Design, resulted in him being elected an Associate.[2] In 1893 he exhibited The Ameya at the Academy and was elected a full member based on that canvas.
Blum's chief patron, Alfred Corning Clark, heir to the Singer Sewing Machine fortune, commissioned twin canvasses, 50 feet long and 12 feet high, for the proscenium of Mendelssohn Hall in downtown New York, which he had constructed to house the famous Mendelssohn Glee Club. The first of these, finished in 1895, was entitled Music and the Dance (originally Moods of Music) and is considered Blum’s most important work. The other, The Feast of Bacchus, was modeled on a painting of the same title that Blum had sent to Clark as a gift in 1888, but was not completed until after Clark's death in 1896. These grand works went missing when the Hall was demolished in 1912, but were later found in the vaults of the Brooklyn Museum, which graciously put them on temporary display for the 100th anniversary of the Glee Club in 1966.
Robert Frederick Blum died of pneumonia at his home at 90 Grove Street, New York City on 8 June 1903.[1]
Notes
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 Obituary (9 June 1903). "Robert Frederick Bloom Dead". New York Times. Retrieved 29 March 2012.
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 Rines, George Edwin, ed. (1920). "Blum, Robert Frederick". Encyclopedia Americana.
References
- Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Blum, Robert Frederick". Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Robert Frederick Blum. |
Wikisource has the text of the 1905 New International Encyclopedia article Blum, Robert Frederick. |
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