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The Warehouse @ Collinwood

Fort Worth , TX

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Profile of a Woman by Frank Weston Benson
Profile of a Woman by Frank Weston Benson  Image: Front
Profile of a Woman by Frank Weston Benson  Image: Signature
Profile of a Woman by Frank Weston Benson  Image: Back
  • Frank Weston Benson
  • Profile of a Woman
  • Oil On Board
  • 21 x 16 in (53.34 x 40.64 cm)
  • Framed: 25.5 x 21 x 2 in (64.77 x 53.34 x 5.08 cm)
  • Signature: Bottom Left
  • Inv: PA-BE-009
  • $40,000
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Born in Salem, Massachusetts, Frank Benson was a painter of impressionist* seascapes and landscapes, often with figures posed by his wife and children, and also numerous hunting scenes. He spent most of his life in the seaport town of Salem and loved trekking through the countryside for his subject matter, especially wildlife. He is credited with making the American sporting print a distinct art form and for being one of the outstanding 20th-century wildlife printmakers.

He was a teacher in Portland, Maine at The Society of Art, and in Boston at The Museum of Fine Arts, where he and his good friend Edmund Tarbell established it as a top-notch institution.

He studied art in Boston at the Museum School of Fine Arts, and in 1883 in Paris with Gustave Boulanger and Jules Lefebvre at the Academie Julian* during the French Impressionism movement. By the early 1900s, he had a very successful career and was a member of the Ten American Painters*, a prestigious group of early impressionists.

He was a life-long hunter, and it was said that he knew birds as only a sportsman can. He worked in both etching* and drypoin* and was lauded for his clear design, the naturalness of his birds and hunters, and the mastery of etching techniques.

In 1900, Benson discovered the pleasures of North Haven Island off the coast of Maine, and from that time, he and his family spent much time there, even purchasing a farm where he had a studio. There his style became increasingly impressionistic.

Midway through his career as a recognized oil painter, he began to paint with watercolors, perhaps inspired by Winslow Homer's use of that medium to show hunting scenes in the Adirondacks. In 1921, Benson became a serious watercolorist while on a fishing expedition to the Gaspe Peninsula of Quebec, and from that time until his death in 1951, he created nearly six-hundred watercolors. He also did an occasional still life with Oriental themes such as Confucius circa 1930.

In 2005, The Cahoon Museum of American Art in Cotuit, Massachusetts had an exhibition of work by Benson titled Frank W. Benson---Sportsman/Etcher

  • Collections: Figures

Other Work From The Warehouse @ Collinwood

Leaning to the Left by Werner Drewes
Defiance by Werner Drewes
Portrait of the Woman by William Merritt Chase
Cheyenne Rider by Malcom Furlow
Moses portrait
Portrait of Pope Julius II (religious portrait canvas)
Children at Dining Table by François Bonvin
Mexico Trench Art 1 by Agapito Labios
Texas Hills by Peter Lanz Hohnstedt
Cubic Painting by Anna Keener
See all artwork from The Warehouse @ Collinwood
 

Tanya Meade . General Manager . 214-960-0031

The Warehouse @ Collinwood 682-255-5525

The Shafer Collection / thewarehouseatcollinwood.com