Other Ipswich Painters of Note
|
Edna
Ellis Baylor (1882-1966) was born in
Hartford, Connecticut. After her parents’ early death
she persuaded her guardian uncle to send her to the School
at the Museum of Fine Arts on the condition that she win
first prize in painting-which she did. She later studied
with Frank Benson and Edmund Tarbell. She moved to Ipswich
in 1930. She chose flowers as her favorite subject throughout
her life. Her grandchildren remember the wonderful smell
of fine oil paints and turpentine in her studio on the north
side of her house. Her painting of peonies was on the cover
of the French magazine Revue du Vrai et du Beau (September
1927). Inside, it was noted that she painted flowers as if
they were portraits, true and beautiful. Her exhibitions
included the North Shore Arts Association, the National Academy
of Design, and the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts. |
|
Henry Rodman
Kenyon (1861-1926) was born in
Centerville, Rhode Island and attended Rhode Island School
of Design. In the 1880s he studied in Paris at the Academie
Julian with both Richardson and Dow, where they developed
friendships that continued throughout their lives. After
returning to the United States, he and his wife Caroline
settled in Ipswich in 1901. He was a prolific painter, concentrating
on small landscapes in oil during his time in Ipswich. He
was a familiar figure tramping through the marshes with paints
and easel. His wife, Caroline, who was also an artist, painted
portraits in pastel. His exhibits included the Paris Salon,
the National Academy of Design, and the Gallery on the Moors. |
|
|
Arthur Smith
Kimball (1856-1937) was a summer
resident of Ipswich. Different from the rest of these painters,
Kimball’s primary career was in music. He was a professor
of singing at the Conservatory of Music at Oberlin College
from 1833-1924 and coauthor of a book of hymns. In the summer
he seemed to devote his leisure time to painting and produced
airy landscapes of Ipswich’ s open spaces. |
|
|
John Worthington
Mansfield (1849-1933) was
born in Norwich, Connecticut, and was the oldest of the group
of artists known as the Ipswich Painters. Interested in painting
from his youth, he sailed to Europe at age 21 to study art
in Germany, Austria, and Italy. He ultimately was drawn to
Paris where he studied at atelier Bonnat. Upon returning
to the United States, he studied at the National Academy
of Design. In 1887 he moved to Ipswich with his wife, Helen.
He was a versatile artist, using oil and watercolors. He
was a skilled etcher and also tried his hand at miniatures.
Travels to New York resulted in many beautiful oils of Niagara
Falls and the woodlands. He taught at the New England Conservatory
of Fine Arts. Mansfield's exhibitions included the National
Academy of Design, the New York Society of Etchers, and the
Boston Art Club. |
|
|
Carl Harold
Nordstrom (1876-1965) was born
in Chelsea, Massachusetts of Swedish ancestry. From 1904-27,
Nordstrom operated a photographic studio in Cambridge. During
this period he studied at the School of the Museum of Fine
Arts. On forays to the country with his art teachers, Eric
Pape and George L. Noyes, Nordstrom came to Ipswich. In 1918,
he and his wife, Agnes, purchased property on Nabby’s
Point along the Ipswich River. In 1921, the construction
of a house was begun. Nordstrom assisted in both design and
construction. Personal touches such as Chinese dragons and
Celtic crosses remain in the garden. He closed his photography
studio and opened the Nordstrom Summer Art School on Rocky
Neck in Gloucester in 1927. He worked in oils, watercolor,
and pencil. He painted in the White Mountains, along the
coast of Rockport and Gloucester, and extensively in Ipswich.
He was a much beloved and familiar figure in Ipswich teaching
its citizens, his students and friends, to respect and appreciate
nature. His exhibitions included Rutgers University, the
Boston Art Club, and the Gloucester Society of Artists. |
|
|
|
Jane Peterson (Jennie Christine Peterson, 1876-1965) was
born in Elgin, Illinois, into humble circumstances. Her
heritage, like Nordstrom’s, was Scandinavian. She
drew from nature in her childhood and was eager to continue
her studies in New York. With $300 borrowed from her mother,
she enrolled at Pratt Institute in 1895, where she studied
with Dow. After graduating in 1901, she held several teaching
positions but ultimately gave up teaching to travel widely
through Europe, as well as Turkey and North Africa. She
was independent and adventurous, and made many important
friends such as Louis Tiffany and Percival Lowell who helped
her financially. During these years of travel, she studied
with Joaquin Sorolla, a Madrid painter, who inspired her
to lighten her palette. She also seems to have been influenced
by her friend Maurice Prendergast by whose side she often
painted. In 1925, the New York Times declared her “one
of the foremost women painters in New York.” Her
paintings are colorful and joyful, featuring street and
harbor scenes and flowers.
Peterson married late in life to a wealthy New York lawyer,
M. Bernard Phillip, who was 25 years her senior. Their
home in Ipswich, “Rocky Hill,” was where they
spent four summers together. After her husband’s
death, she continued to spend her summers here. It was
the period in her life when she most concentrated on her
beloved “flower portraits.” (See Baylor.) She
had more than 80 one-woman shows during her lifetime; her
work is in the permanent collection of the Pennsylvania
Academy of Fine Arts, Wellesley College, and the High Museum.
|
|
|
Francis
Henry Richardson (1859-1934) was born
in Boston and studied draftsmanship and architecture as a
young man. Setting his goals on becoming a serious painter,
he studied with William Morris Hunt in Boston. In 1886 Richardson
sailed to Paris to continue his art education at the Academie
Julian. Like Dow, his goal was to win a price at the Salon.
After receiving that, he returned to the United States permanently
in 1900. In 1901, he and his wife, Frances, built a house
for their family in Ipswich. But he continued to maintain
a studio in Boston. In France, many of Richardson’s
large Salon paintings featured people in a setting, but in
Ipswich he concentrated on landscapes and only a few portraits.
He was equally adept at oil, watercolor, and pastels. His
exhibitions included the National Academy of Design, Pennsylvania
Academy, Detroit Museum of Art, Salamagundi Club and others,
receiving the Philadelphia Art Society medal in 1902 and
the Boston Art Club Purchase Price in 1903. |
|
|
Theodore Wendel (1859-1932) was
born in Midway, Ohio, and studied painting at Cincinnati’s
University School of Design and McMicken School of Art. In
1878, he traveled to Europe and enrolled at the Royal Academy
in Munich winning a medal the following year. In Munich he
met Frank Duveneck who was to have a lasting influence on
Wendel’s painting. By 1885, he was in Paris studying
at the Academie Julian where Dow, Kenyon, and Richardson
would all study. In 1899, he had returned to the United States
and settled in Ipswich with his wife, Philenia Stone. Like
Richardson, he kept a studio in Boston.
He exhibited at the Pennsylvania Academy, the Society of
American Artists, and others, receiving medals at the Pennsylvania
Academy in 1909 and at the San Francisco Panama-Pacific Exposition
in 1915. |
|
|
Upcoming Events
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Museum Hours
|
|
The Museum is open Memorial Day weekend
through Columbus Day Weekend
|
The office is open Monday through Thursday,
9-3. Please call ahead for information
about scheduling group tours.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|