Amazing Howard Wilber Thomas Oil Canvas
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Description
Attributed to Howard Wilber Thomas, it does not have a COA. Medium: oil canvas. 32.5 x 24.5 inches. Provenance: private owner.
Biography: 1899 - 1971. Howard Wilber Thomas, painter, printmaker, and educator, began studying art in 1919 at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago. In 1930, after several years of teaching high school, he began teaching at Milwaukee State Teachers College. He also directed the Milwaukee Handicraft Program sponsored by the Works Progress Administration in the 1930s.Thomas made his first visit to the South in 1941 and never left. In 1942 he became chair of the art department of the College for Women, University of North Carolina, Greensboro. Soon after, he relocated to Decatur, Georgia, to teach at Agnes Scott College. In 1945 he joined the faculty of the art department of the University of Georgia, where he remained until retiring in 1965.Thomas kept detailed sketchbooks that date from his earliest student years until his death. Like many painters who travel, he used these sketchbooks as diaries in which he described the scenes of the city and countryside he visited. All entries were dated and enlivened by his comments. When he arrived in the South, Thomas concentrated mostly on the everyday life of African Americans, filling sketchbooks with drawings and descriptions of rural areas around Greensboro and elsewhere.After a trip to Selma, Alabama, his notes include "cotton fields in bloom" and "tobacco stripped up until only the top leaves were left to ripen." Sketches from a trip to Athens, Georgia, include street scenes and mill houses in black communities. Thomas became very absorbed in these working-class American environments, noting shapes and color combinations: "red turban," "pink dress," and "gray coat."Thomas exhibited extensively throughout his career and won many honors and prizes, including invitations to exhibit at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in 1950 and the Annual Exhibition of Contemporary Art at the Whitney Museum in 1958. His later painting technique, which involved the use of natural earth pigments, was documented in a film, Earth Red, Howard Thomas Paints a Gouache, produced in 1964 with his wife, artist Anne Wall Thomas, and his colleague, James Herbert.
All authorship of items in this catalog are described according to the following terms:
Signed [Artist Name] : In cases in which the signature is legible in the lot, this work is described as-is with no attributions given.
By [Artist Name] : The work is by the artist.
Attributed to [Artist Name] : The work may be ascribed to the artist on the basis of style, but there may be some question as to actual authorship.
In the manner of [Artist Name] : The work was executed by an unknown hand, but was designed deliberately to emulate the style of the artist.
After [Artist Name] : The work was executed by an unknown hand, but is a deliberate copy of a known work by the artist.
Circle of [Artist Name] : A work of the period of the artist showing his influence, closely associated with the artist but not necessarily his pupil.
Follower of [Artist Name]: A work by a pupil or a follower of the artist (not necessarily a pupil).
American, 19th century: This work was executed by an unknown hand, and can only be identified by origin (i.e., region, period).
Biography: 1899 - 1971. Howard Wilber Thomas, painter, printmaker, and educator, began studying art in 1919 at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago. In 1930, after several years of teaching high school, he began teaching at Milwaukee State Teachers College. He also directed the Milwaukee Handicraft Program sponsored by the Works Progress Administration in the 1930s.Thomas made his first visit to the South in 1941 and never left. In 1942 he became chair of the art department of the College for Women, University of North Carolina, Greensboro. Soon after, he relocated to Decatur, Georgia, to teach at Agnes Scott College. In 1945 he joined the faculty of the art department of the University of Georgia, where he remained until retiring in 1965.Thomas kept detailed sketchbooks that date from his earliest student years until his death. Like many painters who travel, he used these sketchbooks as diaries in which he described the scenes of the city and countryside he visited. All entries were dated and enlivened by his comments. When he arrived in the South, Thomas concentrated mostly on the everyday life of African Americans, filling sketchbooks with drawings and descriptions of rural areas around Greensboro and elsewhere.After a trip to Selma, Alabama, his notes include "cotton fields in bloom" and "tobacco stripped up until only the top leaves were left to ripen." Sketches from a trip to Athens, Georgia, include street scenes and mill houses in black communities. Thomas became very absorbed in these working-class American environments, noting shapes and color combinations: "red turban," "pink dress," and "gray coat."Thomas exhibited extensively throughout his career and won many honors and prizes, including invitations to exhibit at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in 1950 and the Annual Exhibition of Contemporary Art at the Whitney Museum in 1958. His later painting technique, which involved the use of natural earth pigments, was documented in a film, Earth Red, Howard Thomas Paints a Gouache, produced in 1964 with his wife, artist Anne Wall Thomas, and his colleague, James Herbert.
All authorship of items in this catalog are described according to the following terms:
Signed [Artist Name] : In cases in which the signature is legible in the lot, this work is described as-is with no attributions given.
By [Artist Name] : The work is by the artist.
Attributed to [Artist Name] : The work may be ascribed to the artist on the basis of style, but there may be some question as to actual authorship.
In the manner of [Artist Name] : The work was executed by an unknown hand, but was designed deliberately to emulate the style of the artist.
After [Artist Name] : The work was executed by an unknown hand, but is a deliberate copy of a known work by the artist.
Circle of [Artist Name] : A work of the period of the artist showing his influence, closely associated with the artist but not necessarily his pupil.
Follower of [Artist Name]: A work by a pupil or a follower of the artist (not necessarily a pupil).
American, 19th century: This work was executed by an unknown hand, and can only be identified by origin (i.e., region, period).
Condition
Mint, based on the description
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Amazing Howard Wilber Thomas Oil Canvas
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