William Samuel Horton (1865-1936)
Artist Name | William Samuel Horton (1865-1936) |
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Title | Wintery Town Landscape |
Description | This stunning Impressionist winter landscape oil painting is by one of the leading American Impressionism artists, William Samuel Horton. Horton moved to England in 1918 and travelled extensively in Europe and later Asia. His paintings show the influences of the French Impressionists as whilst studying in Paris Horton befriended and worked closely alongside some of the leading Impressionist artists including Whistler, Pissarro, Degas and Monet. Painted in 1931, possibly in Norway, the composition is the view looking down at a snow covered town, with firs and other trees in the foreground and a couple of roads intersecting the soft forms of the houses. The snow is depicted in a pallet of pinks and purples and the trees in the foreground have fantastic brushwork in pinks and also vivid shades of green. Yellow and orange light glows in some of the windows. This is a fantastic Impressionist wintery, snowy townscape, with the brushwork and pallet stealing the show rather than the composition itself. Signed and dated 1931 lower right |
Provenance | London estate. |
Medium | Oil on Canvas |
Size | 30 x 25 inches |
Frame | Housed in a complementary frame, 36 inches by 31 inches, in good condition. |
Condition | Good condition. |
Biography | William Samuel Horton (1865-1936) is considered by critics to be one of the leading members of American Impressionism, best-known for his Monetesque sunsets and sunrises, Swiss Alpine landscapes, New York skylines and Norwegian fjord scenes. W.S. Horton grew up in a wealthy family and left home in 1883 to study at the Art Institute of Chicago and the Art Students League of New York. In 1892, Horton married the New York debutante Carlotta Lorrie Gray and in 1893 they moved to Holland, later settling in Paris where Horton joined the Académie Julian art school. It was Paris that perhaps had the greatest influence on the artist’s stylistic development, as whilst studying in the French capital he befriended and worked closely alongside some of the leading Impressionist artists including Whistler, Pissarro, Degas and Monet. In 1918 Horton moved to England, continuing to travel often to Europe, painting and sketching scenes in Switzerland, France and Italy. During his travels the artist developed his own Impressionist style, and like Monet focussed on the effects of light on colour, atmosphere, form, shadow and shapes. Like the founding Impressionist, Horton painted the same motif or scene at different times of the day, studying the effect of the light. Examples include his 1934 dramatic sunsets and sunrises over the coastal fjords, planes and mountains of Norway, his recognisable cityscapes of the New York skyline, most notably of the Ritz and Heckscher towers (1924-1930) and his snowy landscapes of the Swiss Alps. In 1935 the artist travelled to Asia (China, Singapore, India and Indonesia), continuing to paint and sketch, including on board ships. W.S. Horton and his wife were relatively wealthy during their lifetime, selling few of his artworks. When Horton died in 1936 he left over 1000 oils, pastels and drawings to their son William Gray, who organised a retrospective exhibition of his father’s work at the Galerie Charpentier, Paris in 1939, which included an appreciation text by the famous art critic Louis Vauxcelles. Horton’s works can be found in the permanent collections of the Musée d'Orsay, Paris, the Musée National d'Art Moderne, Paris and the National Museum, Stockholm. |
Price | £8500 |