Alfred Ray Burrell (1877-1952)
Oaks
Circa 1930s
California Impressionism
Ink on paper
"A. Ray Burrell" in pencil
Titled "Oaks" in pencil
Bay Area
Overall good; faint toning and discoloration, stray marks in margins. Print is mounted to backboard, unframed.
9 5/8" by 12 3/8" on 13" by 15 3/4" paper
Alfred Ray Burrell was born in Oakland, CA on March 4, 1877. He studied in San Francisco at the Partington Art School and Mark Hopkins Institute (1898), and in NYC with Chase and DuMond. Upon his return he studied engineering at UC Berkeley and worked for ten years with his father in the contracting and heavy construction business. Yielding to the desire to work as an artist, he then returned to NYC where he worked as an illustrator, taught at the ASL, and was head of the art department at A. W. Shaw Publishing Company until 1919.
Burrell then spent four years as a member of the faculty at the Hawaiian School of Design in Honolulu. Returning to San Francisco, he continued teaching at the CCAC and assisted Frank Van Sloun in painting the murals in the Bohemian Club and in the rotunda of the Palace of Fine Arts (1936). He and his wife, Mary Passmore Burrell, lived in San Francisco's Pacific Heights at 2961 Clay Street.
Burrell was prominent in the art world of San Francisco, contributing greatly as a teacher and exhibiting locally until his death on March 9, 1952. Using a low-keyed palette and controlled, short strokes, he painted many landscapes and scenes in and around the San Francisco Bay area. The local atmospheric changes and light variations suited his Impressionist style.
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