Hartley Marsden
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| Hartley Marsden |
| 1877-1943 |
| American Artist |
| Hartley was educated in Cleveland, but early in his career (1899) went to New York City, where he studied under William Chase and at the National Academy of Design. In 1909 his landscapes were shown at the Stieglitz gallery. During the next 12 years he made three trips to Europe and one to the Southwest. His work showed the influence successively of the French and German moderns. In Berlin (1913–15), he painted strong works that combined Cubist composition with Expressionist handling, and he exhibited with Klee and Kandinsky in Munich. Hartley's reputation was established by about 1921. Although his early works were often almost entirely abstract, Hartley later depicted nature with a forceful simplicity. He is known for his still lifes and, most of all, for his paintings of the people and landscapes of Maine, the latter his first and last great subjects. Hartley is represented in many leading American museums.He executed a series of precise drawings of moths, butterflies, and flowers for a professional naturalist. |
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Paintings by Hartley Marsden
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