Details
- Dimensions
- 46.75ʺW × 2.5ʺD × 39.5ʺH
- Frame Type
- Framed
- Period
- 1900 - 1909
- Country of Origin
- United States
- Item Type
- Vintage, Antique or Pre-owned
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- Materials
- Oil Pastel
- Pastel
- Condition
- Good Condition, Original Condition Unaltered, Some Imperfections
- Color
- Burnt Orange
- Condition Notes
- Very good antique condition, wear commensurate with age. Very good antique condition, wear commensurate with age. less
- Description
-
Large American Impressionist Pastel Painting of a woman reading a book with a young girl under the autumn folliage of …
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Large American Impressionist Pastel Painting of a woman reading a book with a young girl under the autumn folliage of the trees by Louise Kamp. Pastel on Paper affixed to canvas, presented under glazing in a gilt wood frame with leaf and acorn motif. Previously auctioned at Shannon's fine art in 2007 for an estimate of $12,000-18,000.
Louise Mary Kamp, née Wahl ((1867-1959), was an artist, a mother and wife. She painted domestic settings, children, gardens, still lifes, the river, and her own backyard. Her genre paintings, depictions of everyday scenes, and her early portraits embrace feminine warmth- a feeling of light and gentleness towards her subjects. A perennial observer, Kamp studied trees and flowers, the human figure and landscape in thousands of oil paintings and sketches throughout her 92 years.
Kamp has been called an American Impressionist. "I dashed the paint on thickly" she wrote in her diary of 1937. Her oil sketches completed outdoors, en plein aire, show loose, bold strokes and the sure suggestion of a leaf or limb. Americans embraced Impressionism in the late 19th century after the French, when the relaxed flowing strokes were no longer considered a revolutionary style of painting.
Kamp preferred the thick, loose style of her quick oil sketches. They captured the essence of a scene in high color and visible brushstrokes which fused to portray beauty and luminosity. The artist's larger works on canvas are polished and smooth with specific attention to realistic detail.
Louise Kamp relied on light as the catalyst for her paintings. It fueled her mood and productivity. Large paintings were done from the multiple quick oil sketches completed during her outings. She would study these compositions to enlarge into "good canvases". On certain days it was" too dark and dreary so I couldn't paint."
On those days, she varnished her canvases, cleaned her studio or washed paintings with half a potato dipped in water. She painted frames or changed the sky in one painting, added color to another. Louise would rework canvases to improve landscapes she had done years before. She would change a scene to make it better somehow, more interesting, relying on her memory and feeling of a scene. Kamp often worked on several canvases at once. She would stop working on one painting to do another still life when she saw the blooms of flowers were beginning to fade.
Louise was a quiet, unassuming woman. As a new doctor in Saugerties, New York, Dr. Herman Ash, was befriended by Dr. and Mrs. Kamp. "She didn't talk about her work…she just painted, all the time." according to Ash. The titles of some of her paintings offered a glimpse into the artists feelings about her subjects: Shine and Shadow, Glorious Autumn, The Dream Pool, After Glow.
As the wife of Dr. John C. Kamp, Louise was able to afford help in the house and garden. Mrs. Kamp was still responsible for running the house and office while her physician husband worked long days helping patients who weren't always able to pay. Still she would get discouraged that certain days she couldn't paint, "too much time getting dinner" or "days like this…too much housework." Yet despite these restrictions she produced an astonishing body of work in her lifetime.
In addition to the paintings sold during her career, she left nearly 3000 paintings upon her death ranging in size from as small as 2 by 3 inches to more than 2 by 3 feet. Her rapid oil sketches were done primarily on board. Kamp would work quickly, realizing, "I may never get this mood again." Her aim was to capture momentary light with bright color and quick strokes of the brush. Occasionally she would take photos for reference, but preferred the real thing.
"I am proud of myself" she admitted after spending an afternoon freezing while painting a snow scene at the Rondout Creek. "I am happiest when I am doing woods in winter," she wrote.
Kamp studied at the New York Art Students League in Buffalo and in 1905-06, received a scholarship award for composition in color. Her work was singled out for reviews in the Buffalo Evening News. Louise M. Kamp also won accolades at the Art Students League in 1906 for her portrait paintings.
Louise exhibited 91 paintings in the Society of Artists Rooms at the Albright Art Gallery, Buffalo, NY in 1910. Two years later, she displayed 73 works in the Historical Room of the Carnegie Library in Bradford, Pennsylvania. This prolific artist was elected a member of the Buffalo Fine Art Academy whose home was in the Albright Art Gallery, today known as the Albright-Knox Gallery.
In 1927 and 1937 she exhibited at the Society of Independent Artists Exhibition at Grand Central Palace in New York City. She was in good company with artists such as Milton Avery and Robert Henri. The Society of Independent Artists was modeled after the French, Société des Artistes Indépendants. The Society, incorporated in 1916, offered individual artists the opportunity to exhibit regardless of their style and was a response to the status quo of academic art institutions.
In June of 1933, Louise described the riot of intense colors in her garden: "A lovely confusion…but in harmony." So many colors and shapes filled her view. If she couldn't get outside because of illness or the weather, she would look out the window and study values.
For years she kept her studio on Finger Hill near her home in the village of Saugerties. Louise, with her paintbox, could be seen walking the mile and a half west toward the Esopus Creek. She took advantage of the light and peace in this rustic bungalow and the surrounding woods. Eventually she built a summer studio behind her home and added windows to her winter studio on the third floor of the house–all to take advantage of light.
The later work of Kamp's career was concentrated primarily on landscape and still life. Louise Kamp's subjects were the Catskill Mountains and Hudson River; waterways and winding roads around the countryside of Saugerties, Woodstock, Kingston and Palenville. "I am happy when I paint clouds." she wrote. From the Rondout Creek or Glasco on the Hudson River, to Saugerties Esopus Creek - "I love to paint water".
She remarked how fine it was to sketch at Malden and described scenes after a day of sketching: "The Hudson River was a misty and beautiful faded-blue gray. The sky was a deep purple and yellow trees made contrast. The roof of the farm was a wet black." Her painting continued as she traveled and was drawn to waterfronts from Noank, Connecticut to Gloucester and Rockport, Massachusetts.
In 1939, Louise Kamp was 72 years old and exhibited 72 paintings at the Carnegie Public Library in Saugerties, NY. At the time, she was studying with John F. Carlson, also an alumnus of the Buffalo Fine Arts Academy. She continued her education in Woodstock, NY with Carlson, a founder of the Woodstock Artist Association and considered the finest landscape teacher in the United States during the 1930s.
Kamp remarked that one of her woodland scenes was something she could not have duly accomplished 30 years before. This was the statement of a woman who was driven and always striving to become a better painter.
In her diaries she described many of her days as wonderful, beautiful and lovely. These words were also used to describe the personality of artist Louise M. Kamp in social clippings about her exhibitions. She was quite generous in her lifetime, often giving away paintings to people who admired their beauty and to local organizations such as the Kingston Hospital, in Kingston, NY.
Louise M. Kamp left a legacy of paintings which document the prominent countryside and unique radiance of the Catskills. She captured, in her quick oil sketches, fleeting moments of local atmosphere. Kamp's marine paintings record the importance of bygone waterfront commerce and activity in the Hudson Valley and northeast United States. She was an artist, a wife and mother. Louise M. Kamp had a calling, a need to paint—to put to board or canvas—beauty and light from her life. The Woodstock School of Art Exhibition acknowledges the talent, energy and perseverance of this remarkable woman. less
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