Spencer Baird Nichols

Spencer Baird Nichols

The painter Spencer Baird Nichols photographed at age 24 by his brother Hobart in 1899.
Born (1875-02-13)February 13, 1875
Washington, DC
Died August 28, 1950(1950-08-28) (aged 75)
Kent, Connecticut
Cause of death long illness
Nationality American
Other names Spencer Nichols
Education Corcoran School of Art and Design (1895)
Occupation painter
Known for portrait paintings, landscapes, illustrations, murals
Spouse(s) Helen Agnes Mather

Spencer Baird Nichols (1875–1950) was an American portrait painter, illustrator and muralist.[1] Nichols was born to Henry Hobart and Indiana Jay Nichols on February 13, 1875 in Washington, D.C., and attended the Corcoran School of Art. He died August 28, 1950 in Kent, Connecticut.[2] While he received much recognition and was quite prolific in his time, much of his creative work was ultimately destroyed, lost or unattributed to him. What survives are a handful of easel paintings and some commercial work, particularly book illustrations and murals. More of his earliest works, signed with just the initials, SBN, may gradually come to public recognition with the help of publications such as this.

Grandmother's Garden: an early oil on canvas by Spencer Baird Nichols.

Early life and education

Nichols' father, Hobart Nichols, was a noted wood engraver who engraved the sketches in The History of North American Birds by Baird, Brewer and Ridgway.[3] He named his son Spencer Baird Nichols [4] after Spencer Fullerton Baird, a naturalist, prolific writer, and first curator of the National Museum at the Smithsonian.[5] Spencer's brother, Henry Hobart Nichols Jr., was a landscape painter. The brothers both married artists and their descendants include painters.[6]

Nichols' childhood was spent in Washington, D.C., and although he dropped out of school at age 11 in order to concentrate on his art, he went on to study under Howard Helmick and to attend the Corcoran School of Art and Design. He also took classes at the Art Students’ League. He met his wife, Helen Agnes Mather, while serving as an instructor there.[4]

In 1911 Nichols contracted to provide illustrations to the publishing house Frederick A. Stokes & Co. He also took a position designing stained glass windows and murals for Louis Comfort Tiffany Studios.[7] With these steady incomes, he was able to marry Helen that year.

After marriage, Nichols and his wife moved to an artists' colony in Bronxville, New York.[8] They had four children, Spencer Mather born 1912, Hobarth born 1915, Margaret in 1921 and Helen in 1924.

Gouache on black paper painting by Spencer Baird Nichols depicting the water garden in the Bronxville home the family had from 1915 to 1922.

The Nichols' son Mather died in 1922 of typhoid, which led them to move to Kent, Connecticut, where they were among the founding members of another artist colony.[4] According to the Kent Historical Society “The Kent Art Association was founded in 1923 by nine well established artists who knew each other when they lived in New York before moving to Kent: Rex Brasher, Elliot Clark, Floyd Clymer, F. Luis Mora, George Laurence Nelson, Spencer Nichols, Robert Nisbet, Williard Dryden Paddock and Frederick Waugh. Six were National Academicians.”[9]

The 1932 fire that destroyed the Nichols' uninsured home and studio in Kent consumed all of Nichols' paintings that were there at the time, which were many due to the Depression. The artist colony rallied to support the Nichols family and a new cottage was constructed for them.[8]

Andrew Stevenson by Spencer Baird Nichols.

Career

According to Nichols, he was devoted to art from "as far back as I can remember." [10] At the age of 11 he left school to concentrate on painting and portraiture.[4]

Nichols' works include a portrait of Speaker Andrew Stephenson which was completed in 1911[11] and hangs in the House of Representatives.[12]

Asia held a significant interest to Nichols and he spent several years studying in Japan, China and a bit of Persia prior to a 1920 exhibit in the Madison Gallery.[13] This exhibit has the only mention of a sculpture by Nichols "A carved plaster panel is finely coloured and has much the same decorative quality as his paintings" according to American Art News. That article describes some of the paintings, saying of Nichols “He is especially happy in his rendition of limpid and luminous blues. The Dance, showing two girls in rhythmic motion is Oriental in design, line. and composition, and a rich colorful canvas. The Hall, which portrays a figure of a graceful woman an opalescent night light, is notable for the original motif and personal expression. The Pearl is imaginative, veiled in atmospheric, mysterious charm; The Mystery of India shows knowledge of the subject; Autumn Gold, presents a sweet-f aced girl, surrounded by rich Autumn foliage, a canvas handled with a reserve of color that blends harmoniously with the delicate beauty of the flesh. Throughout all the artist’s work there is a decorative tendency…”

In 1923 Nichols was elected as a member of the National Academy of Design in New York and in 1933 Nichols was honored as an academician.[1]

Much of his early work was destroyed in a fire in 1932 which Nichols documented through a painting "Rising Star" depicting himself and his wife amidst the ashes of their home. In addition to the enormous personal and financial loss all of the paintings, artworks and his home and studio in the fire, documentation of his early works and patrons was also lost. Within the "Spencer Baird Nichols and Nichols Family Papers, 1870-1994" records at the Archives of American Art, Smithsonian Institution, there are lists of artworks that went to galleries for exhibit and sale after 1932 but no records of to whom his paintings were sold or gifted.

Out of financial necessity, in 1934, he became Director of Art at Marot Junior College in Thompson, Connecticut, a position he held until the school closed in1941.

Connecticut Works Progress Administration (WPA) records state that Nichols "began working for the Connecticut WPA in 1936 and completed murals in Kent, Litchfield, and New Milford Schools. For the WPA, he completed 33 works that were allocated to Litchfield High School, Laurel Heights Sanatorium, Hartford Board of Park Commissioners, Long Lane Farm, New Haven Community Center, and the Connecticut State Farm for Women."[14]

According to the New Milford Board of Education, Nichols completed two beautiful murals at the Lillis Administration building on the second and third floors.[15]

Nichols died on August 28, 1950, in Kent, Connecticut following "a long illness" according to his obituary in the New York Times.[16]

Cover illustration by Spencer Baird Nichols for The Happy Prince by Oscar Wilde 1913.
Illustration by Spencer Baird Nichols for The Spirit of Christmas by Arthur Gleason in 1912.

Illustrations

Spencer Baird Nichols illustrated several books published by the Frederick A. Stokes Company:[17]

Cover illustration by Spencer Baird Nichols for The Lord of Misrule and Other Poems by Alfred Noyes in 1915

Awards

References

  1. 1 2 Artists and Architects, National Academy Museum 1083 Fifth Avenue New York, New York 10128 accessed June 4, 2015 http://www.nationalacademy.org/collections/artists/detail/833/
  2. Smithsonian Institution -Archives of American Art Spencer Baird Nichols and Nichols family papers, 1870-1994. Accessed 6/27/2015 at http://www.aaa.si.edu/collections/spencer-baird-nichols-and-nichols-family-papers-9577
  3. Baird, S. F., T. M. Brewer, and R. Ridgway. A History of North American Birds. Boston: Little, Brown, 1874.
  4. 1 2 3 4 5 Underhill, Sarah Mollman and Sussman, Barbara J. (2010) The Nichols Brothers: A Dialogue in Art and Life The Bronxville Historical Conservancy, Inc.
  5. Smithsonian Institution Archives Spencer Fullerton Baird, 1823-1887 accessed 7/2/2015 from http://siarchives.si.edu/history/spencer-fullerton-baird.
  6. Fog Hill & Co., Inc. Barbara J. Sussman Biography Accessed 6/9/2015 from http://www.sussmanart.com/pages/BJS/bjbio.html
  7. Bronxville Historical Conservancy. Spencer Baird Nichols (No. 1). Accessed June 4, 2015.
  8. 1 2 Buff, Barbara Ball (1989) "Bronxville: The Planned Community as Art Colony" in The Artists of Bronxville 1890-1930, catalogue for Hudson River Museum exhibit October 14, 1989 through January 14, 1990.
  9. Kent Art Association Founders accessed 6/29/2015 from http://www.kentart.org/founders.html#nichols.
  10. Undated letter from Spencer Nichols to Mary Garvie at Who's Who, Kent, Conn.
  11. American Art News, August 19, 1911 Vol. IX, no. 34 New York.
  12. Image of Andrew Stevenson taken from the United States Congress Biographical Directory (http://bioguide.congress.gov/scripts/biodisplay.pl?index=S000891). Painting by Spencer Baird Nichols in 1911 accessed June 18, 2015 at https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:AndrewStevenson.jpg
  13. Spencer B. Nichols at Madison Gallery, American Art News (March 13, 1920) New York, Vol. XVII No. 21.
  14. Connecticut State Archives WPA Art Inventory Project WPA Artists & Artwork from Connecticut Nichols, Spencer Baird Accessed 6/28/15 http://wpa.cslib.org/?s=Nichols
  15. New Milford Board of Education accessed 6/28/2015 from http://wpa.cslib.org/index.php/533/nichols-spencer/
  16. New York Times (August 29, 1950) Spencer Nichols, Artist, 75, Dead.
  17. LIBRARY OF CONGRESS ONLINE CATALOG Library of Congress 101 Independence Ave., SE Washington, DC 20540 Accessed 6/28/2015 http://www.loc.gov/rr/askalib/ask-digital.html
  18. LIBRARY OF CONGRESS Christmas stories, http://lccn.loc.gov/13021062 PZ3.D55 Chs 7 PR4557
  19. LIBRARY OF CONGRESS The lord of misrule, and other poems. http://lccn.loc.gov/15023327 PR6027.O8 L6 1915
  20. LIBRARY OF CONGRESS The happy prince, and other stories, http://lccn.loc.gov/13021799 PR5818 .H2 1913
  21. LIBRARY OF CONGRESS At my window; hours with my pigeons, http://lccn.loc.gov/11023829 SF465 .J7
  22. LIBRARY OF CONGRESS Grenstone poems, a sequence, http://lccn.loc.gov/17025234 PS3503.Y45 G8 1917
  23. LIBRARY OF CONGRESS The spirit of Christmas, http://lccn.loc.gov/12021284 PS3513.L53 S6 1912

Further reading

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