拍品专文
In 1919 Edward Redfield moved with his family to Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania for several years as the artist was a juror for the 1919 Carnegie International Exhibition and his son, Laurent, was enrolled at the Carnegie Technical School. Dr. Thomas Folk writes of the artist's paintings from this period, "Redfield's Pittsburgh scenes center on squalor, focusing on man's impact on the environment. They stand apart from the rest of his oeuvre, in which the artist was conscientiously striving to paint the beautiful. Redfield's Pittsburgh views call to mind the work of certain members of The Eight or the Aschcan School, as well as that of fellow Pennsylvania Impressionist Robert Spencer, who specialized in scenes of Bucks County factories and tenements." (Edward Redfield: First Master of the Twentieth Century Landscape, exhibition catalogue, Allentown, Pennsylvania, 1987, pp. 48-49)
Panther Hollow, Pittsburgh, an arresting and expansive aerial view of the town with a striking, mountainous vista beyond, is exemplary of Redfield's Pittsburgh paintings and demonstrates the artist's mastery of light, color and composition. The brushwork is characteristically varied as the painterly surface alternates between thick impasto and thin, broad swaths of color. A train steams through the left portion of the work, towards a bridge in the distance, both symbols of industrialization.
Dr. Thomas Folk wrote of the importance of the present work, "Panther Hollow, Pittsburgh, Redfield's finest Pittsburgh scene, is a graphic interpretation of a ramshackle industrial town carved into a hillside." (Edward Redfield: First Master of the Twentieth Century Landscape, p. 48)
This painting will be included in the forthcoming catalogue raisonné of Edward Redfield's work being compiled by Dr. Thomas Folk.
Panther Hollow, Pittsburgh, an arresting and expansive aerial view of the town with a striking, mountainous vista beyond, is exemplary of Redfield's Pittsburgh paintings and demonstrates the artist's mastery of light, color and composition. The brushwork is characteristically varied as the painterly surface alternates between thick impasto and thin, broad swaths of color. A train steams through the left portion of the work, towards a bridge in the distance, both symbols of industrialization.
Dr. Thomas Folk wrote of the importance of the present work, "Panther Hollow, Pittsburgh, Redfield's finest Pittsburgh scene, is a graphic interpretation of a ramshackle industrial town carved into a hillside." (Edward Redfield: First Master of the Twentieth Century Landscape, p. 48)
This painting will be included in the forthcoming catalogue raisonné of Edward Redfield's work being compiled by Dr. Thomas Folk.