Details
- Dimensions
- 17.75ʺW × 2ʺD × 15.75ʺH
- Art Subjects
- Landscape
- Frame Type
- Framed
- Period
- 1930s
- Country of Origin
- United States
- Item Type
- Vintage, Antique or Pre-owned
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- Materials
- Oil Paint
- Condition
- Good Condition, Original Condition Unaltered, Some Imperfections
- Color
- Green
- Condition Notes
- Very good vintage condition Very good vintage condition less
- Description
-
A beautiful original American Impressionist landscape oil painting of Trees by a River by Ernest Fredericks. Oil on canvas signed …
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A beautiful original American Impressionist landscape oil painting of Trees by a River by Ernest Fredericks. Oil on canvas signed lower left canvas size 11" x 14" presented in the original vintage frame overall size 15 3/4" x 17 3/4".
Ernest Fredericks (American, 1877-1959) was born in McPherson, Kansas in 1877 by the name Frederick Ernest Swedlun. He later moved to Chicago to study art. It was during this time he changed his name to Ernest Fredericks. He used this pseudonym because he was of Swedish origin and at the time he was living in Chicago, they were the newest immigrant group being bashed.
Following his studies at the Chicago Academy of Fine Arts, Fredericks exhibited at the Art Institute of Chicago and in the All-Illinois art shows. He also belonged to the Chicago Society of Artists. Fredericks' paintings were often accompanied by either a typed biographical sketch or a reprint of a 1940 edition from the Chicago Daily News pertaining to a Fredericks exhibition. Typically, on these printed sources, Fredericks would add a handwritten title for the painting and a description of where it was painted.
Fredericks was influenced by Western American master painter Birger Sandzen, a Swedish artist and fellow Kansan. Swedlun developed his talent by constant practice, observation, and analysis. But it was nature itself, he said, that inspired him. He studied many different moods, developing through experience a technique entirely his own. His subjects were simple, often a forest path, a stream, a country road, or mountain cabin.
Fredericks married Cordella Florence Cayle on May 26, 1900, in Kane, Illinois. They had two children, a son and daughter. His son, Glenn Swedlun, became a landscape painter of considerable talent himself.
Fredericks found endless inspiration in the beauty of the Ozarks. In Chicago, Fredericks described the Ozarks as an “artist’s gold mine of color and composition.” In 1950, Fredericks and his wife, along with his son and daughter-in-law, moved to Eureka Springs (Carroll County). There, he resumed signing his art with his actual name, Fred Swedlun. Together with his son, Swedlun painted and taught art classes in the Ozarks until his death. in 1959.
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