Edward Henry Potthast (1857-1927)
Edward Henry Potthast (1857-1927)

At the Beach

Details
Edward Henry Potthast (1857-1927)
At the Beach
signed 'E Potthast' (lower right)--signed again and inscribed with title (on the reverse prior to lining)
oil on canvas
24 x 30 in. (61 x 76.2 cm.)
Provenance
Sotheby Parke Bernet, Inc., New York, 17 April 1975, lot 92.
Jacqueline Getty Phillips.
Estate of the above.
Christie's, New York, 26 May 1993, lot 127.
Private collection, acquired from the above.
Christie's, New York, 4 December 1997, lot 44.
Acquired by the present owner from the above.

Lot Essay

By the turn of the century, prosperity had enabled Americans to enjoy increased leisure time and extended vacations, even for the middle class. In the early decades of the twentieth century, Edward Henry Potthast embraced American leisure time as a central subject. Among his favorites were outings at the shore. In At the Beach, Potthast captures a carefree summer moment and adeptly renders the color, light, and rhythm of the seaside environment.

Potthast's home on West 59th Street in New York City allowed him to easily travel to the crowded resorts of Brighton Beach and Coney Island. He completed numerous seaside watercolors of these beaches, before eventually moving on to oil, painting his exquisite small panels of crowds at the beach. The vivid color and mastery of composition in his paintings speak to his success as a painter. In one of the most effervescent of these compositions, At the Beach, Potthast is able to incorporate beach goers frolicking in the waves. By choosing a vibrant palette, Potthast imbues this work with a lively and appealing character. The radiant blues and greens of the sea are highlighted by the crisp white caps of the waves. The spray of the surf tosses playfully at the feet of the carefree subjects who are enjoying the pleasures of the seashore. The water extends to all four sides of the canvas which gives the viewer a sense of the expanse of the unlimited shore.

Critics in Potthast's day applauded his considerable skill. A reviewer of an exhibition of the artist's paintings at Milch Galleries in December 1918 wrote: "Mr. Potthast is not to be labeled with any of the popular tags. He is just a good painter, extremely interested in his picture, which is apt to be a picture of light and color and spontaneous movement embodied in children and young people at play in the open air. He is rather impatient of detail. Faces bore him so mostly he leaves them out, or rather he makes them merely a blot of warm color in sunlight or luminous shadow. There is no fine drawing of detail anywhere but his construction is as right as a trivet; his figures stand as they should, and show real power in their loosely articulated forms...What especially differentiates Mr. Potthast's work is the soundness and sweetness of the mental attitude expressed by it...The compositions always are happy, garlands of color with spacious backgrounds, but the sense of arrangement is very successfully avoided. The spectator is left to the simple bliss of knowing what he likes without being challenged to explain to himself why he likes it." ("Exhibition of Paintings in Great Variety," The New York Times, December 1, 1918, p. 77) At the Beach illustrates the brilliance of Potthast's Impressionist technique and extols the beauty and sanctuary of a day at the seashore.

More from Important American Paintings, Drawings And Sculpture

View All
View All