Mar 13, 2018 - Sale 2469

Sale 2469 - Lot 161

Price Realized: $ 3,380
?Final Price Realized includes Buyer’s Premium added to Hammer Price
Estimate: $ 3,000 - $ 5,000
ARTHUR WESLEY DOW
Nabby's Point (Ipswich).

Color woodcut, circa 1913. 55x103 mm; 2 3/8x4 inches, wide margins. Signed in pencil, lower left. A superb impression of this scarce woodcut with vibrant colors.

Born in Ipswich, Massachussetts, Dow (1857-1922) was initially influenced by the French Barbizon School of painters and the American realist William Morris Hunt (1824-1879). However, the course of his career was permanently altered in 1891, when he met Ernest Fenallosa, the curator of Japanese art at the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston. Fenallosa introduced Dow to the work of Utagawa Hiroshige and Katsushika Hokusai, the masters of Ukiyo-e woodblock prints.

Dow adopted the aesthetic principle that art should not imitate nature, but should develop from the abstract relationships between line, color and tone. He went on to to teach these ideas at the Pratt Institute, the Art Students League, and Columbia University Teachers College, all in New York, as well as at the summer arts colony he established in Ipswich. The traditional Japanese motifs that went on to dominate Dow's printmaking greatly influenced the early generation of American modernists, including Max Weber (see lot 159) and Georgia O'Keeffe.