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Dudley Vaill Talcott At Childs Gallery

Dudley Vaill Talcott

American (1899-1986)

Dudley Vaill Talcott was born in Hartford, Connecticut and attended one year at Yale University's Art Department. In 1920, Talcott went to Academié de la Grande Chaumière in Paris, France. There, he studied drawing and sculpture in open classes without seeking a degree.

In 1925, Talcott traveled to Norway for six years while still working on sculpture in the United States during the off-season. Two books: Noravind (published in 1929) and Report of the Company (published in 1936) came from these six years. The first of these is about his Talcott's canoe trips on the Norwegian fjords; the latter documents his experience on a North Sea fishing boat. By 1927, Talcott was exhibiting in New York City; first at Valentine Dudensing Galleries in February 1927 followed by the National Academy of Design in March-April, then at The Museum of Modern Art in 1930, The Art Institute of Chicago in 1938, The Whitney Museum in 1938-40 and the New York World's Fair of 1939.

Of the Dudensing show The New Yorker said in February 1927: "We heard recently that if America ever produced a sculptor it was in the person of Dudley Talcott… There seems to be considerable justification for the claim. To us the usual classic copy is just so much Rogers Group; the departures, rather efforts to dissent than any conscious attempts at creative conception. But Talcott has departed and has still clung to the thing that gives power and beauty. Don't ask us to explain. For we for we have no chart for this branch of art. We only know that Talcott's things gave us a feeling akin to the one we had when we first stood before Maillol."

From this point, Talcott worked on private large-scale commissions such as fountains, but still continued making smaller pieces of a more personal nature. Talcott died in 1986 in Farmington, Connecticut, his home since 1935.

Sculpture by Dudley Vaill Talcott: Boatmen, available at Childs Gallery, BostonQuick View
712×11IN.
Boatmen
Painting by Dudley Vaill Talcott: All Day Long The Ships Came Down From Russland, available at Childs Gallery, BostonQuick View
20×25IN.
All Day Long The
Sculpture by Dudley Vaill Talcott: Plaque with Men in Boat, available at Childs Gallery, BostonQuick View
14×2112IN.
$2,500
Plaque with Men in Boat
Drawing by Dudley Vaill Talcott: [Sailor and Woman Embracing], available at Childs Gallery, BostonQuick View
412×2IN.
$1,600
[Sailor and Woman Embracing]
Sculpture by Dudley Vaill Talcott: The Nordic Bowl: Stories of the Norkap II, available at Childs Gallery, BostonQuick View
1334×1858IN.
The Nordic Bowl: Stories
Sculpture by Dudley Vaill Talcott: [Standing Cat], available at Childs Gallery, BostonQuick View
4×4IN.
$750
[Standing Cat]
Sculpture By Dudley Vaill Talcott: [cat In A Crouch] At Childs GalleryQuick View
218×4IN.
$750
[Cat in a Crouch]
Sculpture By Dudley Vaill Talcott: [standing Cat] At Childs GalleryQuick View
4×4IN.
[Standing Cat]
Sculpture By Dudley Vaill Talcott: [cat Curled Up] At Childs GalleryQuick View
212×4IN.
$750
[Cat Curled Up]
Painting By Dudley Vaill Talcott: Triptych Sea Scene At Childs GalleryQuick View
1214×41IN.
$9,500
Triptych Sea Scene
Sculpture By Dudley Vaill Talcott: Couple With Harvest Basket At Childs GalleryQuick View
1134×5IN.
Couple with Harvest Basket
Sculpture By Dudley Vaill Talcott: Free Form Abstract Sculpture [ii] At Childs GalleryQuick View
12×1212IN.
$5,000
Free Form Abstract Sculpture [II]
Sculpture By Dudley Vaill Talcott: Girl On A Springboard Ashtray At Childs GalleryQuick View
9×618IN.
$2,500
Girl on a Springboard Ashtray
Sculpture By Dudley Vaill Talcott: Head Of Norwegian Girl At Childs GalleryQuick View
11×6IN.
$5,000
Head of Norwegian Girl
Sculpture By Dudley Vaill Talcott: The Loafer At Childs GalleryQuick View
20×9IN.
$18,000
The Loafer
Sculpture By Dudley Vaill Talcott: Plaque Of Woman With Wineglass (larger) At Childs GalleryQuick View
20×12IN.
$2,000
Plaque of Woman with Wineglass (larger)
Sculpture By Dudley Vaill Talcott: Leda And The Swan At Childs GalleryQuick View
18×18IN.
$4,000
Leda and the Swan
Sculpture By Dudley Vaill Talcott: Plaque With Man Carrying Woman With Basket At Childs GalleryQuick View
21×11IN.
$2,500
Plaque with Man Carrying Woman with Basket
Sculpture By Dudley Vaill Talcott: Fishermen In Dory, From The Gathering Of Various Types Of Food At Childs GalleryQuick View
17×36IN.
$5,000
Fishermen in Dory, from
Sculpture By Dudley Vaill Talcott: Cow Barn (side A) And Fishermen In Dory (side B), From The Gathering Of Various Types Of Food At Childs GalleryQuick View
17×36IN.
$9,500
Cow Barn (side A)
Sculpture By Dudley Vaill Talcott: Mirror At Childs GalleryQuick View
8×11IN.
$3,500
Mirror
Sculpture By Dudley Vaill Talcott: Ashtray With Girl Sitting On Heels At Childs GalleryQuick View
7×7IN.
$2,500
Ashtray with Girl Sitting on Heels
Sculpture by Dudley Vaill Talcott: Trefoil Trivet, represented by Childs GalleryQuick View
5×5IN.
$350
Trefoil Trivet
Sculpture By Dudley Vaill Talcott: Man With Dog At Childs GalleryQuick View
12×7IN.
$18,000
Man with Dog
Sculpture By Dudley Vaill Talcott: [kneeling Woman] At Childs GalleryQuick View
4×2IN.
$1,500
[Kneeling Woman]
Sculpture By Dudley Vaill Talcott: Cat Drinking At Childs GalleryQuick View
4×8IN.
Cat Drinking
Sculpture By Dudley Vaill Talcott: Resting Between Poses At Childs GalleryQuick View
6×7IN.
$5,000
Resting Between Poses
Sculpture by Dudley Vaill Talcott: Girl's Head, represented by Childs GalleryQuick View
10×11IN.
$2,800
Girl's Head
Sculpture by Dudley Vaill Talcott: Man at Tiller, represented by Childs GalleryQuick View
11×25IN.
Man at Tiller
Sculpture By Dudley Vaill Talcott: Woman Reclining Over Fountain At Childs GalleryQuick View
4×10IN.
$3,500
Woman Reclining over Fountain
Sculpture By Dudley Vaill Talcott: The Fishermen Taking In Sail, From The Gathering Of Various Types Of Food At Childs GalleryQuick View
17×36IN.
$5,000
The Fishermen Taking in
Sculpture By Dudley Vaill Talcott: Horse And Plough (side A) And Fishermen Taking In Sail (side B), From The Gathering Of Various Types Of Food At Childs GalleryQuick View
17×36IN.
$9,500
Horse and Plough (side
Sculpture By Dudley Vaill Talcott: Bust Of Woman At Childs GalleryQuick View
5×4IN.
$2,800
Bust of Woman
Sculpture By Dudley Vaill Talcott: Relief Of Standing Woman With Drape At Childs GalleryQuick View
29×17IN.
$4,000
Relief of Standing Woman with Drape
Sculpture By Dudley Vaill Talcott: Woman In Shower At Childs GalleryQuick View
21×9IN.
$9,500
Woman in Shower
Sculpture By Dudley Vaill Talcott: Double Sided Relief Of Cat At Childs GalleryQuick View
3×4IN.
$1,500
Double-Sided Relief of Cat
Sculpture By Dudley Vaill Talcott: Reclining Boy At Childs GalleryQuick View
7×8IN.
$5,000
Reclining Boy
Sculpture By Dudley Vaill Talcott: Girl Sitting On Base At Childs GalleryQuick View
6×3IN.
$1,800
Girl Sitting on Base
Sculpture By Dudley Vaill Talcott: Goats Nursing At Childs GalleryQuick View
5×5IN.
$4,500
Goats Nursing
Drawing By Dudley Vaill Talcott: Blarney At Childs GalleryQuick View
10×6IN.
$1,800
Blarney
Sculpture By Dudley Vaill Talcott: Waitress At Childs GalleryQuick View
25×5IN.
$15,000
Waitress
Sculpture By Dudley Vaill Talcott: Cow Barn, From The Gathering Of Various Types Of Food At Childs GalleryQuick View
17×36IN.
$5,000
Cow Barn, from The
Sculpture By Dudley Vaill Talcott: Free Form Abstract Sculpture [iii] At Childs GalleryQuick View
7×13IN.
$3,800
Free Form Abstract Sculpture [III]
Sculpture By Dudley Vaill Talcott: Horse And Plough, From The Gathering Of Various Types Of Food At Childs GalleryQuick View
17×36IN.
$5,000
Horse and Plough, from
Sculpture By Dudley Vaill Talcott: Woman In The Rock With Fern At Childs GalleryQuick View
8×7IN.
$5,000
Woman in the Rock with Fern
Sculpture By Dudley Vaill Talcott: Man With Grappling Hook At Childs GalleryQuick View
16×7IN.
$8,500
Man with Grappling Hook
Sculpture By Dudley Vaill Talcott: Large Cat Curled Up At Childs GalleryQuick View
10×17IN.
$5,000
Large Cat Curled Up
Sculpture By Dudley Vaill Talcott: Hip Lock At Childs GalleryQuick View
7×5IN.
$6,500
Hip Lock
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Dodge Macknight

Dodge Macknight

American (1860-1950)

Dodge Macknight was regarded by many of his contemporaries as America's first modernist. He based his work upon "the solid and eternal base of continual communion with nature." In January 1902, a critic for The New Bedford Standard said, "In contemplating an exhibit of Macknight's work, one should bear in mind that he is an extremist in an extreme school. His work should not be judged merely in the light of one's own taste, but as an exposition of the artist's conceptions. Some people call his paintings mere daubs of color, others designate them as recorded thoughts transmitted through the eyes."

Born in Providence, Rhode Island, Macknight began his career in the art world as an apprentice to a theatrical scene designer and then in 1878, he entered the firm of Taber Art Company in New Bedford, Massachusetts, a company that made reproductions of paintings and photographs. In 1883, the artist migrated to Paris and entered the studio of Fernand Cormon. He spent the next three years drawing, painting and exhibiting at the Salon. Soon he set off traveling around Europe with much time in southern France, Spain and Algeria. About this time in 1886, Macknight became friends with Vincent Van Gogh in Paris, and he often visited him in Arles. Although he did not return to the United States until 1897, he continually exhibited his work at Doll & Richards in Boston from 1888 onwards. He also had a show of his watercolors at John Singer Sargent's studio in London in1890.

Upon his return to the United States, Macknight and his family settled in East Sandwich on Cape Cod where he painted winter landscapes as well as in New Hampshire. Every summer he traveled to exotic lands where he could find beautiful scenery, which he could combine with his spectacular color effects. In the beginning, the critics found his works "shocking and distasteful," although many of his peers admired them. In 1901, Isabella Stewart Gardner bought ten Macknight watercolors and hung them in a "Macknight Room" at her home on The Fenway, now the Gardner Museum. In 1907, the Boston Museum of Fine Arts purchased a watercolor, five years before they acquired the first Sargent watercolor. Macknight’s significance in the late 1910s and early 1920s was great. In the 1910s Macknight added the American West to his many subjects from across the world. Crater Lake, the canyons of the south west, Grand Canyon, Brice, Zion and other spectacular scenery of the western American landscape became images for his brush.

The Boston architect, Frank A. Bourne recorded his impressions of the famous three American watercolorists show in Paris (Homer, Sargent and Macknight). After noting of the Salon of 1923, that he had had the opportunity (not good fortune) to see it, he wrote: “Just before I had seen the remarkable exhibition in Paris of the work of four Americans: Sargent, Dodge Macknight, Winslow Homer and Paul Manship. There were fresh and interesting motives in the American work that seemed wholly lacking in the long corridors of the Salon.” This exhibition of three American watercolor painters, (plus the young American sculptor, Paul Manship) formed an exhibition that is mentioned and its significance weighed in every history of American watercolor. Dodge Macknight remained active until about 1930 and was so popular that his shows continually sold out within an hour or so and netted him in the region of $10,000 per exhibit. Albert Gallatin, the great collector of modern art, placed him in the ranks of Whistler, Homer, Sargent, Marin, and Demuth as one of the great American masters of watercolor. Macknight was represented in the exhibition "The Bostonians: Painters of an Elegant Age" which traveled from the Boston Museum of Fine Arts to the Denver Art Museum and the Terra Museum of American Art. Childs Gallery has several other examples of Macknight's watercolors in stock.

Print by Charles Jac Young: Surf-Pounded Coast, represented by Childs Gallery

Charles Jac Young

American (1880-1940)

Surf-Pounded Coast, 1929
Etching
10×13IN.CM
Signature: Signed in pencil
$150