Description: George Laurence Nelson (American, 1887 - 1978), watercolor on paper, depicts still life with sunflowers, apples and dark glass bottle on oblong wooden table, signed LR, map burn, foxing and waving of paper, slipped in frame, not examined out of frame, surface damages to frame, frame size: 28" x 36". [Provenance: deaccessioned from the Wadsworth Atheneum, sold to benefit acquisition funds.] George Lawrence Nelson was born in New Rochelle, New York in 1887. He started his long art career by working diligently. He studied in New York City at the National Academy of Design School and the Art Student League. Then he went to Paris and studied at the Academy Julian and in 1911 worked in the studios of Jean Paul Laurens and Benjamin Constant. The training was rigorous and typically academic. The instructors at the academies believed that spending long hours drawing and rendering the effects of light best honed the powers of observation. Every studio was furnished with plaster anatomical casts. It was expected that the acolyte be disciplined to render charcoal images in precise detail. At a later time the student was expected to work from life models. When Nelson returned to the United States, he became an active exhibitor and excelled as a painter of portraits, receiving many prestigious portrait commissions. He also did and still lifes, excelling at floral pieces, and was commissioned to paint various murals. He was noted for his use of color and did not use the somber pallets of his previous instructors. There is no doubt that the impressionists influenced his colors, but he still retained the dependency on outlined forms, a method learned at the Academy. After much experimentation Nelson was successful at combining the two elements of line and color that would result in forming a creative personal style. He exhibited at The Pennsylvania Academy (1921) and was the recipient of major awards medals and citations. He also became a popular teacher. He was elected Associate of the National Academy of Design in 1929, and a full member in 1942. From 1941-1943 Nelson served as president of the Allied Artists of America, and from 1954 to 1968, he was president of the Kent Art Association. Nelson lived a good part of his life in Kent, Connecticut, maintaining a studio there throughout his career. He loved the unspoiled beauty of North West Connecticut's Litchfield Hills. After his death in 1978 the popularity of his work declined, but has recently gained in notice. He is featured in the current publication, "Artists of the Litchfield Hills" written by Connecticut author Robert Austin. He left his studio land and works to the Kent Art Association, and much of the Nelson's artwork is undergoing conservation. Some will be delegated to various institutions. **FREE PICKUP AVAILABLE IN NEW YORK CITY (New Britain DISTRICT MANHATTAN)** CONTACT ME FOR DETAILS IF INTERESTED IN PICKING UP THIS ITEM.
Price: 395 USD
Location: New Britain, Connecticut
End Time: 2024-11-21T18:48:44.000Z
Shipping Cost: 50 USD
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Item Specifics
Restocking Fee: 10%
Return shipping will be paid by: Buyer
All returns accepted: Returns Accepted
Item must be returned within: 30 Days
Refund will be given as: Money Back
Original/Reproduction: Original
Signed?: Signed
Material: Oil
Type: Painting