Up for your consideration original watercolor paper still
life painting by Emil (Soren Emil) Carlsen (1853 - 1932), painter of still
lives as well as landscapes, Emil Carlsen was especially noted for his still
lives of humble everyday objects in the tradition of 17th-century Dutch
painters. His methods were precise and labor intensive with much scraping,
painting, and then scraping again with a build up of impastos. He perceived art
as pure aesthetics with its only language being color, masses, and rhythms of
line. Emil Carlsen was born in Copenhagen, Denmark on Oct. 19, 1853. Carlsen studied architecture at the Danish
Royal Academy. After immigrating to
Chicago in 1872, he worked as an architectural draftsman and as an assistant to
painter Laurits B. Holst. During the
1870s he spent six months in Paris as a pupil of Vallon. Returning to Chicago, he taught at the newly
formed school which is now the AIC.
Carlsen returned to Paris during 1884-86 and began specializing in still
lifes. Due to the French influence, he
painted brighter florals during this period.
He had studios in Boston and NYC during 1886. The following year, at the
request of Mary Curtis Richardson, he moved to San Francisco to succeed the
late Virgil Williams as director of the School of Design. He shared a studio on Montgomery Street with
Arthur Mathews, a close friend whom he had met in Paris, and taught at the
local ASL. He was an active member of
the Bohemian Club during his four years in San Francisco; however, his time in
California was not successful due to limited sales and exhibition
opportunities. Returning to New York in
1891 penniless, he taught regularly at the NAD and by 1896 had gained financial
success and recognition. About 1905 he
built a home and studio in Falls Village, CT, while maintaining a residence in
NYC, and in 1906 was elected a member of the Nat'l Academy. He was for the most part self-taught, but his
greatest influence came in Paris from studying the works of the 18th-century
still-life specialist Chardin. He also
painted vaporous, delicate marines, but it was his still lifes which made him
one of America's most famous painters of copper kettles, gleaming bottles,
fish, game, etc. The largest and most
important exhibition of his work during his lifetime was held at the CGA in
1923. Carlsen died in NYC on Jan. 2,
1932.
Signed and dated (1902) on the lower left. Framed, in excellent
condition. Please, look at the pictures as they are part of the description.
Image measuring 8.5” x 12 3/4”; Frame 17
¼” x 21.5”
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