Frank Weston Benson

This article is about Frank W. Benson, American impressionist painter. For the politician of the same name, see Frank W. Benson (Oregon governor). For more information about Frank Weston Benson's works, see List of works by Frank Weston Benson.
Frank Weston Benson

circa 1895
Born March 24, 1862
Salem, Massachusetts
Died November 15, 1951 (aged 89)
Salem, Massachusetts
Nationality American
Education School of the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, Académie Julian Paris.
Known for Impressionist painting

Frank Weston Benson, frequently referred to as Frank W. Benson, (March 24, 1862 – November 15, 1951) was an American artist from Salem, Massachusetts known for his Realistic portraits, American Impressionist paintings, watercolors and etchings. He began his career painting portraits of distinguished families and murals for the Library of Congress. Some of his best known paintings (Eleanor, Museum of Fine Arts, Boston; Summer, Rhode Island School of Design Museum) depict his daughters outdoors at Benson's summer home, Wooster Farm, on the island of North Haven, Maine. He also produced numerous oil, wash and watercolor paintings and etchings of wildfowl and landscapes.

In 1880, Benson began to study at the School of the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston under Otto Grundmann, and in 1883 at the Académie Julien in Paris. He enjoyed a distinguished career as an instructor and department head at the School of the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston. He was a founding member of the Ten American Painters, American Academy of Arts and Letters and The Guild of Boston Artists.

Biography

Early years

Frank Weston Benson was born to George Wiggin Benson, a successful cotton broker, and Elisabeth Poole, [1][2] from families who founded Salem, Massachusetts. Benson obtained his appreciation of the sea from his grandfather, Captain Samuel Benson. When he was 12, he was given a sailboat[1] in which he explored the waterways and marshes and raced against his siblings. To encourage educational activity, Benson's parents gave their children a weekly allowance to foster independent study and hobbies, such as Salem's Hamilton Hall dance classes, Lyceum lectures[3] or equipment for photography. The children kept active roller-skating, tennis, ice-skating, boxing, fishing and hunting.[4]

Benson's father gave him a shotgun and taught him how to hunt shore birds along the North Shore and wildfowl in the local fields and marshes.[1] He spent nearly all of his weekends hunting or fishing in the fields, marshes and streams.[4] To his good friend Dan Henderson, he wrote of their childhood adventures:

"We used to spend our Saturdays chasing coot and old squaws in Salem Harbor. Then, after working hard all day to get one bird, in we would assemble at Sam Shrum’s or mine and chew the rag until we were so sleepy we could not hold up our heads. What a minute account each had to give of each movement of every bird seen and every shot missed. It was almost criminal to miss an easy shot in those days, so many excuses had to be invented. One word would have served for all in my case if it had been invented then, I was generally 'rattled,' I think, when you and I went ducking."[4]

His brother, John Prentiss Benson, was an architect and painter in his own right. Both sons may have been influenced by their mother, Elisabeth Poole Benson, who Frank once remarked, had "a little room" on the top floor of their house where she would go to paint and "forget about the rest of the world".[2]

Artistic studies

An avid birdwatcher and wildfowl hunter, Benson wanted to be an ornithological illustrator.[5] At the age of 16, he painted Rail,[6] one of his first oil paintings, after a hunting trip.[5] He began his studies at the School of the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston in 1880,[7] and there befriended Joseph Lindon Smith,[8] Robert Reid and Edmund Charles Tarbell.[9] Capitalizing on what he learned, Benson held drawing classes in Salem and painted landscapes during the summer of 1882. [7]

On Benson's 21st birthday his parents gave him a gift of $2,000 to study in Europe.[10] He traveled to Paris and studied at the Académie Julien from 1883 to 1884 with Edmund Tarbell and Joseph Lindon Smith; Joseph Lindon Smith and Benson shared an apartment.[7][9] At the Academy, Benson studied under Jules-Joseph Lefebvre, William Turner Dannat, and Gustave Boulanger.[9] Gustave Boulanger, one of Benson's teachers at Académie Julien, said to him: "Young man, your career is in your hands... you will do very well."[10] After his study at Académie Julien, Benson traveled to England's Royal Academy to see his painting "After the Storm" on exhibit. [10]

Influences

Benson was "deeply influenced" by Johannes Vermeer and Diego Velázquez, masters from the seventeenth-century.[11] Vermeer painted few works during his lifetime, about 35-36 [universally accepted] paintings, but nearly each of them has become a masterpiece. The Dutch artist from Delft was astute in his depiction of light and "poetic quality" of his subjects.[12][13]

Impressionism, particularly the work of Claude Monet, played a role in the development of Benson's own American Impressionistic style. He capitalized on Monet's color palette and brush strokes and keenly depicted "reflected light", yet maintained some detail in the composition. Per Chambers, Benson represented American people with an "ideal of grace, of dignity, of elegance."[14]

Benson's watercolors reminded some critics of Winslow Homer's works.[15]

Works of his friends:

Benson was not one to experiment with emerging art forms, like Cubism, Expressionism and Fauvism. As American Impressionism extended to Post-Impressionism about 1913, Benson stayed with traditional genres and his American Impressionist style. As a result, "The pretty, genteel life that Benson had depicted was criticized. Benson's reaction was to turn to nature, and birds replaced the women and children as his objects of interest." said Dean Lahikainen, curator of the Peabody Essex Museum.[11]

Marriage and children

In the summer of 1884 Benson painted at Concarneau, along with Willard Metcalf and Edward Simmons.[16] While there, Benson became engaged to the daughter of friends from Salem, Massachusetts, Ellen Perry Peirson. They married in 1888 when Benson had established himself in his career[6] and raised four children: Eleanor (born 1890), George (born 1891), Elisabeth (born 1892) and Sylvia (born 1898).[7]

Instructor

Benson became a Portland, Maine School of Art instructor in 1886.[6][7] The spring of 1889 he began teaching antique drawing at the School of the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston and in 1890 became head of the Painting department.[7][10] The school's reputation grew and its enrollment tripled under the leadership of Philip Hale, Benson and Edmund C. Tarbell. Students were assessed on the basis of their skill and placed at the appropriate level (from low to high): Hale had a class for beginners, Benson concentrated on how to depict figures while Tarbell covered still lifes.[17] Benson, a favored instructor called "Cher Maitre" ("Dear Master") by his students,[10][18] taught until 1913.[16]

Works

Moonlight on the Waters oil 1981

William H. Gerdts, art historian, wrote of Benson's work: "Frank Benson painted some of the most beautiful pictures ever executed by an American artist. They are images alive with reflections of youth and optimism, projecting a way of life at once innocent and idealized and yet resonant with a sense of certain, selective realities of contemporary times."[11]

Realism

Benson opened his first studio in Salem in 1886 with his friend, Phillip Little, and began painting portraits,[6][7] an occupation in which Benson took seriously. He once said: "The more a painter knows about his subject, the more he studies and understands it, the more the true nature of it is perceived by whoever looks at it, even though it is extremely subtle and not easy to see or understand. A painter must search deeply into the aspects of a subject, must know and understand it thoroughly before he can represent it well."[10]

Benson took a Boston studio in 1888[7] with Edmund C. Tarbell.[14] He gained favorable attention in his first showing at the Society of American Artists in New York, with a piece that suggested the influence of academic Realism.[16]

At the suggestion of his friend, Joseph Lindon Smith, Benson spent several summers in Dublin from 1889–1893,[19] where he painted with and was influenced by Abbott Thayer. By the early 1890s he began using his family as subjects. Benson later recalled it was then that he realized design was the most important component of painting. Consequently, works of the period evidence a greater interest in and command of pattern, silhouette, and abstract design.[16]

Impressionism

Portrait of Mary Sullivan oil 1902

It was only after joining the "Ten American Painters" in 1898 that Benson shifted from the decorative painting of murals (for the Library of Congress) and allegories, to a genuine interest in plein-air Impressionism.[16]

Continuing a pattern that the Bensons would follow for years, the family left Boston during the summers. The family spent summers in New Castle, New Hampshire from 1893 to 1900,[7] where Benson made some of his first Impressionist paintings, such as Children in the Woods and The Sisters.[10] The popularity of The Sisters, a painting of daughters Elizabeth and Sylvia, won medals in expositions throughout the United States and in Paris, was a prelude to the successes of the next 20 years, when Benson became famous for a series of paintings of his family.[10][16] After New Castle, the Bensons spent their summers on North Haven Island in Penobscot Bay in Maine at Wooster Farm.[7] Benson made Impressionist works of his family in earnest at Wooster Farm en plein air.[20] The summer home afforded a great view of the bay and surrounding area. Near the house was an old orchard, large fields provided plenty of space for the children to play and for a garden, and the property stood beside a wooded area.[21]

Like the French Impressionists, Benson focused on capturing light. To his daughter Eleanor he said, "I follow the light, where it comes from, where it goes."[10] A critic said of Benson's work: "It is impossible to believe that mere paint, however clearly laid on, can glow and shimmer and sparkle as does that golden light on his canvas."[11]

Through his role as a teacher, work as an artist and affiliation with professional organizations for artists, Benson was a leader in American Impressionism.[14] In 1898 Benson and nine other artists including William Merritt Chase, Thomas Dewing, Childe Hassam, and J. Alden Weir formed "Ten American Painters". They conducted annual exhibitions of their works in New York City and often showed in other cities, such as Boston, and became known as the American Impressionists.[10] The Traditional Fine Arts Organization claimed he was "one of the last great American Impressionists."[11]

Wildlife

Before Benson began his Impressionist paintings of his family, he made many seascape and landscape paintings.[10] He used several mediums or techniques to capture his love of wildlife, including wash, watercolor, oil, lithography and etching.[22] Regarding his artistic mastery, Peabody Essex Museum curator Dean Lahikainen commented: "Benson was a unique artist, in that he had mastered so many different mediums and subjects. And from his early works right until the very end, light is what he was interested in."[11]

Reminiscent of Benson's original goal as an artist to become an ornithological illustrator,[5] birds were the subjects of most of his washes, etchings, and watercolors.[3]

Wash paintings

At the Cape Cod hunting cabin that he purchased with his brothers-in-law, Benson began working with black-and-white wash in the 1890s. The works were a commercial success, so much so that Benson was not able to keep up with the demand.[22]

Etching

In 1914, Benson began etching as an interesting pastime, one that along with his eye for aesthetics, required him to master the complex technique for the desired effect.[23] In 1915 he first exhibited etchings of wild fowl, to popular acclaim.[24] Benson turned increasingly to the depiction of landscapes featuring wildlife, an outgrowth of his interest in hunting and fishing. He went on to produce a steady and profitable output of etchings. Once most recognized for his Impressionist paintings, he became equally popular with his etchings. Arthur Philpott, a critic for the Boston Globe, claimed Benson was the "best known and most popular etcher in the world."[25] To one of his daughters he said, "The whole process from the bare plate to the finished print is full of fascinating possibilities and possible failures."[23] Benson, one of the best printmakers of the 20th century, is credited with making wildlife prints a distinct genre.[26]

Watercolors

Camp, 1921
Benson's watercolor paintings began on a Canadian fishing trip in 1921.[22] and were often the products of bird-hunting sojourns in Cape Cod and salmon fishing expeditions in Canada. were favorably compared to similar works by .[27] A critic wrote of his watercolors, "The love of the almost primitive wilderness which appears in many of (Winslow) Homer's landscapes and the swift, sure touch with which he suggests rather than describes--these also characterize Benson's work. The solitude of the northern woods is very much like Homer's." Benson made more than 500 watercolors in his lifetime.[22]


Oil paintings

Hunter in a Boat (1915) and Twilight (1930) are a few examples of Benson's oil paintings of wildlife settings.[22]

Benson was elected in 1919 as the first president of the Essex County Ornithological Society.[28]

At the request of fellow artist and conservationist Jay Norwood "Ding" Darling, Benson designed the second Federal Duck Stamp in 1935.[29]

Gallery

Death and posthumous sales

He is buried in Salem's Harmony Grove Cemetery.[30]

To date the highest price brought at auction for an oil painting by Benson is $4.1 million, realized at Sotheby's in 1995.[31]

On October 19, 2006, a watercolor painting by Benson was sold at auction for $165,002. The painting was anonymously donated to an Oregon Goodwill Industries site, most likely without the owner knowing of its value. Bidding on the shopgoodwill.com website started at $10, and increased after the work was authenticated.[32]

"Figure in a Room" Controversy

Figure in a Room by Frank Weston Benson, 1912, oil on canvas - New Britain Museum of American Art
Interior, oil 1912, copy

Benson's "Figure in a Room", a 1912 realistic oil painting of a woman standing behind a small table in a room, was involved in a controversy that surfaced long after the death of the artist.[33] The Detroit Club apparently purchased the painting in 1914, following an exhibit held there by Benson. At some time during the next several decades, the painting was replaced on the Club's premises by an excellent fake or forgery, which was inserted into the painting's original frame. The original Benson was eventually obtained by a collector named Donald Purdy, and later by the New Britain Museum of American Art. The fake Benson painting remaining with the Detroit Club was finally sold for $38,500 to an attorney and his wife, at an auction held by Christie's in 1986. When the new owners began their own research of the painting many years later, they learned that the New Britain Museum had a strikingly similar painting from Benson in their collection; the couple's subsequent attempt to sell the painting ended when Sotheby's (who also learned of the New Britain painting) pronounced it to be a probable fake. A lawsuit was filed against Christie's, alleging negligence and/or fraud;[34] but a Delaware Court ruled in favor of the defendants,[35] opining that the auctioneer's fiduciary responsibility was with the seller rather than with the purchaser. The court also noted that Christie's six-year warranty of authenticity, clearly communicated, had long since expired. Today, the two "Figure in a Room" paintings involved in this controversy hang side by side at the New Britain (CT) Museum; visitors are invited to decide for themselves which is real and which is fake.

Exhibitions and shows

Retroactive exhibitions of his work occurred in 1921 at the Guild of Boston Artists in 1917,.[37] Corcoran Gallery of Art, in 1924 at the Carnegie Institute and the Akron Art Museum, in 1936 at Guy E. Mayer Gallery in New York and in 1938 in the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston.[36] Such was its popularity that the exhibition broke the museum's attendance records.[37]

Awards and acclaim

Emily Vanderbilt Binney oil 1894

In the 1890s he began receiving his first awards, after the turn of the century he won awards for his Impressionist paintings, and his wildlife watercolors and etchings won awards in the 1920s and 1930s and up to age 86.[22] In 1914 the Boston Transcript called Benson "America's Most Medalled Painter."[3]

Here are a few awards that Benson won:

He received an honorary Master of Fine Arts degree from Tufts University in 1930 and was selected into the National Institute of Letters and Arts in 1945.[28]

Organizations

See also

Notes

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 Bedford (2000), p. 13.
  2. 2.0 2.1 About John Benson.
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 McAllister, Salem Tales: Frank Weston Benson.
  4. 4.0 4.1 4.2 Bedford (2000), pp. 16-17.
  5. 5.0 5.1 5.2 Bedford (2000), p. 8.
  6. 6.0 6.1 6.2 6.3 Peabody Essex Museum, Interactive Presentation, Benson Timeline.
  7. 7.0 7.1 7.2 7.3 7.4 7.5 7.6 7.7 7.8 7.9 Bedford (2000), p. 263.
  8. Bedford (2000), p. 20.
  9. 9.0 9.1 9.2 9.3 9.4 9.5 Dearinger, p. 40.
  10. 10.0 10.1 10.2 10.3 10.4 10.5 10.6 10.7 10.8 10.9 10.10 10.11 Bedford, Frank Weston Benson Biography, p. 1.
  11. 11.0 11.1 11.2 11.3 11.4 11.5 Traditional Fine Arts Organization, Light Shines on Frank W. Benson: American Impressionist.
  12. "Johannes Vermeer (1632-1675)". Mauritshuis, The Hague. Retrieved 2011-07-05.
  13. Pioch, Nicolas (2002-10-14). "Vermeer, Jan". The WebMuseum. Retrieved 2011-07-05.
  14. 14.0 14.1 14.2 Chambers, Red and Gold.
  15. Bedford, p. 144.
  16. 16.0 16.1 16.2 16.3 16.4 16.5 Hiesinger, p. 233.
  17. Bedford (2000), p. 24.
  18. "Cher Maitre". Cher Maitre. 2011. Retrieved 2011-07-05.
  19. Bedford (2000), p. 26.
  20. Bedford, Frank Weston Benson Biography, p. 1-2.
  21. Bedford (2000), p. 71.
  22. 22.0 22.1 22.2 22.3 22.4 22.5 22.6 Bedford Biography, p. 2.
  23. 23.0 23.1 23.2 23.3 Bedford (2000), p. 112.
  24. Bedford (2000), pp. 116-117.
  25. Bedford (2000), pp. 117-118.
  26. Frank W. Benson, AskArt.
  27. Bedford (2000), pp. 134, 144.
  28. 28.0 28.1 Bedford (2000), p. 264.
  29. Bedford (2000), p. 235.
  30. Spencer, Thomas E. (2001). Where they're buried: a directory containing more than twenty thousand names. Baltimore: Clearfield Company, printed by Genealogical Publishing. p. 326.
  31. Forbes.com, Beguiling Gulls.
  32. Painting Sold at Goodwill for $165,002
  33. "Museum Ethics: Fakes on Display". New Britain Museum of American Art (blog). 2010.
  34. Pileggi, Francis G.X. (2006). "Chancery Court Bars Claim for Fake Artwork".
  35. "Johannes R. Krahmer and Betty P. Krahmer v. Christie's Incorporated". Delaware Chancery Court. 2006.
  36. 36.0 36.1 36.2 36.3 36.4 36.5 36.6 36.7 36.8 36.9 Bedford (2000), pp. 263-264.
  37. 37.0 37.1 Bedford (2000), p. 241.
  38. "Eighth Annual Exhibition of Paintings at Pittsburgh". Jstor. Retrieved 25 January 2015.
  39. 39.0 39.1 "FRANK WESTON BENSON (1862-1951)PAPERS, 1864-1976" (PDF). Peabody Essex Museum. Retrieved 3 February 2015.
  40. "Book of Members, 1780–2010: Chapter B" (PDF). American Academy of Arts and Sciences. p. 17. Retrieved June 15, 2011.

References

Further reading

External links

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