Blue Afternoon

Listing No: 11716

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  • ECHAF-09036 FPS-front.jpg
  • ECHAF-09036 sig.jpg
  • ECHAF-09036 FPS-verso.jpg

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Please have the item listing number on hand when you call. This artwork's listing number is: 11716

Artwork Info

FAE Listing No:
11716
Artist:
Francis Chapin (1899-1965)
Title:
Blue Afternoon
Date of Work:
circa late 1940s
Signature:
Francis Chapin
Signature Notes:
at lower right
Where Produced:
Martha's Vineyard, Massachusetts, MA, USA
Presentation:
Unmatted

Artwork Medium

Type:
Painting
Sub Type:
Plein Air
Medium:
Watercolor
Support:
on Paper

Artwork Size & Weight

Primary:
15.25 x 23.25 in (Paper Size)

Artwork Surface

Texture:
Light
Surface Reflectivity:
Uneven - Matte

Artwork Condition

Condition:
Good. Tape around perimeter, recto, where Chapin attached the paper sheet to a support. Tack holes in corners. Old hinges on verso at upper right and upper left.

Artwork Provenance

Provenance:
Directly from the Francis Chapin estate.

About this Piece

We think this watercolor was most likely painted at Martha’s Vineyard where Chapin frequently summered. He often taught at the Old Sculpin Gallery in Edgartown, MA during his summer respites.

About the Artist

FRANCIS CHAPIN (American, 1899 – 1965)

Francis Chapin, affectionately called the “Dean of Chicago Painters” by his colleagues, was one of the city’s most popular and celebrated painters in his day. Born at the dawn of the 20th Century in Bristolville, Ohio, Chapin graduated from Washington & Jefferson College near Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania before enrolling at the Art Institute of Chicago in 1922. He would set down deep roots at the Art Institute of Chicago, exhibiting there over 31 times between 1926 and 1951.

In 1927 Chapin won the prestigious Bryan Lathrop Fellowship from the Art Institute – a prize that funded the artist’s yearlong study trip to Europe. Upon his return to the United States, Chapin decided to remain in Chicago, noting the freedom Chicago artists had in developing independently of the pressure to conform to pre-existing molds (as was experienced by artists in New York, for example).

Chapin became a popular instructor at the Art Institute, teaching there from 1929 to 1947, and at the Art Institute’s summer art school in Saugatuck, Michigan (now called Oxbow) between 1934 – 1938 (he was the director of the school from 1941-1945).

Chapin’s contemporaries among Chicago’s artists included such luminaries as Ivan Le Lorraine Albright, Edgar Miller, William S. Schwartz and Aaron Bohrod among others.

A prolific painter, Chapin produced numerous works while traveling in Mexico, France, Spain, Saugatuck, and Martha’s Vineyard, where he frequently spent summers and taught at the Old Sculpin Gallery there.

Chapin was best recognized for his dynamic and vibrant images of Chicago during the 1930s and 40s. Chapin was a resident of the Old Town neighborhood where he lived and kept his studio on Menomonee Street for many years. Described as a “colorful figure, nearly 6 feet 6 inches tall, and thin, and usually wearing tweeds”, it is easy to imagine Chapin at work observing the busy street life of the city.

In addition to his many exhibitions at the Art Institute of Chicago, Chapin’s work was shown during his lifetime at such institutions as the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts, Philadelphia; the Corcoran Gallery, Washington, D.C.; the National Academy of Design, New York; the Museum of Modern Art, New York; the Whitney Museum of American Art, New York and the Carnegie Institute, Pittsburgh, among others.

Francis Chapin’s paintings are represented in the collections the Art Institute of Chicago; the Friedman Collection, Chicago; the Butler Institute of American Art, Youngstown; the Denver Art Museum; the Everson Museum of Art, Syracuse; the North Museum of Art, West Palm Beach; the Telfair Museum of Art, Savannah and the Brooklyn Museum of Art, among others.

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