24055

GEORGE INNESS (American 1824-1894)

Currency:USD Category:Art Start Price:450.00 USD Estimated At:35,000.00 - 50,000.00 USD
GEORGE INNESS (American 1824-1894)
<B>GEORGE INNESS (American 1824-1894)</B></I> <BR>The Faggot Gatherers, c. 1880 <BR>Oil on canvas <BR>19in. x 24in. <BR>Signed lower right: G. Inness <BR>Provenance: private collection, Dallas <BR>George Inness was born in Newburg, New York. As a boy he showed an early aptitude for drawing. He grew up in New York City and in Newark, New Jersey. His father discouraged his artistic pursuit, but in 1839, Inness left home for New York City to work for Sherman and Smith as a map engraver. His nights were spent teaching himself to paint with oils. At the age of 19, Inness made his exhibition debut at the National Academy of Design. In 1843, Inness studied for a short period in Brooklyn with landscape painter Regis Gignoux. He created landscapes in the tradition of the Hudson River School. The American Art Union helped promote Inness as a formidable landscape painter by reproducing and distributing some of his works as engravings. With the sale of some of his paintings, Inness traveled to Europe where he was introduced to the rustic scenes of Jean-Francois Millet. Inness was greatly influenced by Millet's ability to paint melancholic landscapes with peasant laborers that only use essential elements, eliminating any unnecessary details. Inness soon became a follower of Millet and the Barbizon painters, such as Theodore Rousseau and Jean-Baptiste-Camille Corot. <BR><BR>Inness returned to America and lived in Medfield, Massachusetts. He produced intimate landscapes in the Barbizon style. From 1870 to 1874, Inness lived in Italy and painted in the Campagna, Florence, the Alban Hills south of Rome and later in France. He began to mute detail and fill canvases with a pervading tonal light as he sought to capture the spirit of nature with its temporal changes, such as mist and natural light. Inness' paintings are housed in public collections, including the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston; Metropolitan Museum of Art; National Museum of American Art; Art Institute of Chicago, New-York Historical Society, Brooklyn Museum of Art, Cincinnati Art Museum, Dallas Museum of Art, Newark Art Museum, The White House, and the Whitney Museum of American Art. He was the father of George Inness, Jr., who was also an artist. <BR><BR><Condition: canvas relined on original stretchers, some craquelure, some separation of varnish above figures with inpaint, inpaint on left edge, two areas of inpaint mid and lower left, yellowed varnish. Unframed.> <BR><BR><B>Important notice:</B> Heritage usually auctions material at the rate of 200-250 lots per hour. On some occasions eBay Live bid software or the Internet may not be able to keep up with the pace of the auction. We recommend placing a realistic absentee bid now as insurance to avoid disappointment. Occasionally the auctioneer may eliminate or reject an eBay Live bid, and the auctioneer may also reopen a lot after the close of the eBay live bidding (usually because we missed an audience bid), and may reject your bid even if it shows you as the winning bidder. By bidding via eBay Live, you agree that Heritage may award the lot to another bidder at its sole discretion under the circumstances described above or any other reasonable circumstances. Since eBay bids are not shown to us until we open the lot on the floor, we treat those bids just like floor bids. In most cases the floor responds before the eBay bid is presented to us, due to Internet lag time, so for consistency we have made it a policy that floor bids are always considered first over tie eBay live bids. Also please note that all Heritage lots purchased through eBay Live carry a 24.5% Buyer's Premium. Please make sure you read the Terms and Conditions before you bid.