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Print By Joseph Pennell: Fig Tree House, Lincoln's Inn Fields At Childs GalleryQuick View
834×11IN.
$575
Fig Tree House, Lincoln's Inn Fields
Print By Joseph Pennell: Brasserie, Au Lion Rouge At Childs GalleryQuick View
614×818IN.
$800
Brasserie, Au Lion Rouge
Print By Joseph Pennell: Lions Of The Mosque [spain] At Childs GalleryQuick View
5×7IN.
$625
Lions of the Mosque [Spain]
Print by Joseph Pennell: The Coppersmith [Spain], represented by Childs GalleryQuick View
5×7IN.
$750
The Coppersmith [Spain]
Print By Joseph Pennell: The Gate Of The Temple (london, England) At Childs GalleryQuick View
9×8IN.
$600
The Gate of the Temple (London, England)
Print by Joseph Pennell: Wertheim, Leipziger-Platz, Berlin [Germany], represented by Childs GalleryQuick View
14×19IN.
$600
Wertheim, Leipziger-Platz, Berlin [Germany]
Print by Joseph Pennell: Museum Extension, Berlin [Germany], represented by Childs GalleryQuick View
16×21IN.
$700
Museum Extension, Berlin [Germany]
Print By Joseph Pennell: St. Paul's, New York At Childs GalleryQuick View
10×8IN.
$1,200
St. Paul's, New York
Drawing By Joseph Pennell: Durham Cathedral At Childs GalleryQuick View
23×17IN.
$4,500
Durham Cathedral
Print by Joseph Pennell: Lower Broadway, represented by Childs GalleryQuick View
11×7IN.
$1,800
Lower Broadway
Print By Joseph Pennell: St. Peter's From The Pincian Gardens, Rome At Childs GalleryQuick View
12×9IN.
$1,800
St. Peter's From the Pincian Gardens, Rome
Print By Joseph Pennell: Standard Oil Building At Childs GalleryQuick View
12×9IN.
$1,400
Standard Oil Building
Pastel by Joseph Pennell: The Plaza Hotel [New York], represented by Childs GalleryQuick View
11×8IN.
$7,500
The Plaza Hotel [New York]
Pastel by Joseph Pennell: Riverside Drive Viaduct [New York City], represented by Childs GalleryQuick View
12×9IN.
$7,500
Riverside Drive Viaduct [New York City]
Print By Joseph Pennell: New York From Weehawken At Childs GalleryQuick View
10×8IN.
$1,200
New York from Weehawken
Print by Joseph Pennell: South Portico, St. Paul's [London], represented by Childs GalleryQuick View
10×8IN.
$1,200
South Portico, St. Paul's [London]
Print by Joseph Pennell: The Palace, represented by Childs GalleryQuick View
10×8IN.
$375
The Palace
Print by Joseph Pennell: Towers of the Bishop's Palace, Beauvais [France], represented by Childs GalleryQuick View
10×8IN.
$625
Towers of the Bishop's Palace, Beauvais [France]
Print By Joseph Pennell: Garden Of The Mosque, No. 2 [spain] At Childs GalleryQuick View
4×7IN.
$625
Garden of the Mosque, No. 2 [Spain]
Print By Joseph Pennell: The Court Of Myrtles [spain] At Childs GalleryQuick View
7×4IN.
$625
The Court of Myrtles [Spain]
Print By Joseph Pennell: The Cypress Of Zorayda [spain] At Childs GalleryQuick View
7×4IN.
$625
The Cypress of Zorayda [Spain]
Print by Joseph Pennell: Outside Schiedam [Holland], represented by Childs GalleryQuick View
7×11IN.
$850
Outside Schiedam [Holland]
Print by Joseph Pennell: Zaandam, No.I [Holland], represented by Childs GalleryQuick View
8×10IN.
$950
Zaandam, No.I [Holland]
Print by Joseph Pennell: Zaandam, No.3 (A Flock of Mills) [Holland], represented by Childs GalleryQuick View
7×11IN.
$850
Zaandam, No.3 (A Flock of Mills) [Holland]
Print By Joseph Pennell: Ready To Start At Childs GalleryQuick View
15×20IN.
$1,200
Ready to Start
Print by Joseph Pennell: The Great Incline, represented by Childs GalleryQuick View
7×11IN.
$950
The Great Incline
Print by Joseph Pennell: The Founder's Tomb, Church of St. Bartholomew the Great, represented by Childs GalleryQuick View
8×11IN.
$400
The Founder's Tomb, Church
Print by Joseph Pennell: The Garrick Theatre [London, England], represented by Childs GalleryQuick View
10×8IN.
$1,200
The Garrick Theatre [London, England]
Print by Joseph Pennell: Great Cranes at South Kensington [London, England], represented by Childs GalleryQuick View
8×11IN.
$450
Great Cranes at South Kensington [London, England]
Print by Joseph Pennell: The Great Gate, Lincoln's Inn [London, England], represented by Childs GalleryQuick View
8×10IN.
$750
The Great Gate, Lincoln's Inn [London, England]
Print by Joseph Pennell: Ludgate Hill [London, England], represented by Childs GalleryQuick View
10×8IN.
$275
Ludgate Hill [London, England]
Print by Joseph Pennell: Royal Entrance, Victoria Tower (or) The Great Door of the Vi, represented by Childs GalleryQuick View
10×8IN.
$650
Royal Entrance, Victoria Tower
Print by Joseph Pennell: The Little Fête, Athens [Acropolis in the distance, Greece], represented by Childs GalleryQuick View
16×21IN.
$1,800
The Little Fête, Athens
Print By Joseph Pennell: The Alhambra (from The Fountain Of Avellanos) At Childs GalleryQuick View
5×7IN.
$625
The Alhambra (From the Fountain of Avellanos)
Pastel by Joseph Pennell: Broadway and 29th [Near the Flatiron Building, New York City, represented by Childs GalleryQuick View
13×10IN.
$6,000
Broadway and 29th [Near
Drawing by Joseph Pennell: Yarmouth Beach [Great Yarmouth Beach, Norfolk, England], represented by Childs GalleryQuick View
11×7IN.
$1,500
Yarmouth Beach [Great Yarmouth Beach, Norfolk, England]
Drawing by Joseph Pennell: Chalets on the Outskirts of Zermatt [Switzerland], represented by Childs GalleryQuick View
10×14IN.
$900
Chalets on the Outskirts of Zermatt [Switzerland]
Drawing by Joseph Pennell: Tomb of Michael Croz [ Zermatt, Switzerland ], represented by Childs GalleryQuick View
10×14IN.
$900
Tomb of Michael Croz [ Zermatt, Switzerland ]
Print by Joseph Pennell: Evening in the Munitions Country, represented by Childs GalleryQuick View
16×21IN.
$550
Evening in the Munitions Country
Drawing By Joseph Pennell: Going To The Riffel [switzerland] At Childs GalleryQuick View
10×14IN.
$900
Going to the Riffel [Switzerland]
Drawing by Joseph Pennell: The Art Element, Zermatt [Switzerland], represented by Childs GalleryQuick View
14×10IN.
$1,100
The Art Element, Zermatt [Switzerland]
Print by Joseph Pennell: The Great Chimney, Bradford, represented by Childs GalleryQuick View
9×12IN.
$750
The Great Chimney, Bradford
Print by Joseph Pennell: Hudson Avenue Completed, Brooklyn Edison Co., represented by Childs GalleryQuick View
8×12IN.
$850
Hudson Avenue Completed, Brooklyn Edison Co.
Print by Joseph Pennell: Gas Works, Berlin [Germany], represented by Childs GalleryQuick View
15×21IN.
$650
Gas Works, Berlin [Germany]
Print by Joseph Pennell: The Organ Grinder, N. O. [New Orleans], represented by Childs GalleryQuick View
6×7IN.
$2,750
The Organ Grinder, N. O. [New Orleans]
Print by Joseph Pennell: Rebuilding Broad Street [New York City], represented by Childs GalleryQuick View
22×12IN.
$850
Rebuilding Broad Street [New York City]
Print by Joseph Pennell: The Cathedral, Logan Square [Cathedral of Saints Peter and P, represented by Childs GalleryQuick View
22×16IN.
$1,100
The Cathedral, Logan Square
Print by Joseph Pennell: Cumberland Gate, Regents Park [London], represented by Childs GalleryQuick View
10×8IN.
$325
Cumberland Gate, Regents Park [London]
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Henry Botkin At Childs Gallery

Henry Botkin

American (1896-1983)

Henry Botkin, American (1896-1983)

Henry Albert Botkin was born in Boston, Massachusetts on April 5th, 1896. After his early training at the Massachusetts School of Art, he moved to New York City. Botkin took classes in drawing and illustration at the Art Students League and worked as an illustrator for Harper’s, The Saturday Evening Post, and Century magazines.

Botkin remained in New York City for eight years and then in the early 1920s, he moved to Paris to devote himself exclusively to painting. He made regular trips to the south of France, especially St. Tropez. He held his first European exhibition in Paris at the Billiet Gallery in 1927. In addition to working on his own painting, Botkin acted as agent purchasing works by outstanding artists for prominent collectors, including his cousin George Gershwin.

Botkin returned to New York in 1930 and married Rhoada Lehman and in 1934 joined Gershwin in Folly Island, South Carolina. Botkin and Gershwin worked simultaneously; Gershwin composing the opera, Porgy and Bess and Botkin painting scenes from the life of the American Negro in the South. Botkin also encouraged his cousin to paint and after Gershwin’s death in 1937, he arranged an exhibition of Gershwin’s work at Avery Fisher Hall.

In the late 1930s, Henry Botkin began to develop a new approach to his painting. He moved away from the earlier impressionist influence and turned to abstraction. Botkin took an active role in bringing abstract art into greater public awareness and served as president of four major art organizations including: The Artist’s Equity Association, The American Abstract Artists, Group 256 in Provincetown, and the Federation of Modern Painters and Sculptors. In 1955 Botkin arranged the first exhibition of American abstract art at the Museum of Modern Art in Tokyo, Japan. He also organized the sale of five hundred and forty paintings at the Whitney Museum in New York, 1959. Botkin spoke on the radio, “The Voice of America,” television, lead panel discussions throughout the country, and lectured and taught privately in New York, California, and Provincetown, Massachusetts.

Botkin became interested in working with collage in the early 1950s and collage dominated his work from the 1960s until his death in 1983. Childs Gallery is the sole agent for the estate of Henry Botkin.

Painting by Henry Botkin: Into Black, available at Childs Gallery, BostonQuick View
5×534IN.
$1,200
Into Black
Watercolor by Henry Botkin: Studio Rockport, available at Childs Gallery, BostonQuick View
1612×21IN.
$3,500
Studio Rockport
Watercolor by Henry Botkin: Untitled Country House, available at Childs Gallery, BostonQuick View
1234×1438IN.
$2,000
Untitled Country House
Watercolor by Henry Botkin: Near Los Angeles, available at Childs Gallery, BostonQuick View
1534×19IN.
$2,200
Near Los Angeles
Watercolor by Henry Botkin: Telephone Wires, available at Childs Gallery, BostonQuick View
1134×1412IN.
$2,000
Telephone Wires
Watercolor by Henry Botkin: Jersey Landscape, available at Childs Gallery, BostonQuick View
1112×1114IN.
$1,500
Jersey Landscape
Watercolor by Henry Botkin: Still Life, available at Childs Gallery, BostonQuick View
2112×1612IN.
$1,800
Still Life
Watercolor by Henry Botkin: Rooftops, Provincetown [Massachusetts], available at Childs Gallery, BostonQuick View
1612×22IN.
$3,000
Rooftops, Provincetown [Massachusetts]
Watercolor by Henry Botkin: Harbor Scene with Sailboats, available at Childs Gallery, BostonQuick View
17×1234IN.
$1,800
Harbor Scene with Sailboats
Watercolor by Henry Botkin: Two Cows in Pasture, available at Childs Gallery, BostonQuick View
1314×1412IN.
$2,750
Two Cows in Pasture
Watercolor by Henry Botkin: Houses by the Shore, available at Childs Gallery, BostonQuick View
1638×2112IN.
$2,200
Houses by the Shore
Watercolor by Henry Botkin: [Flowers and Fruit], available at Childs Gallery, BostonQuick View
1338×1434IN.
$2,000
[Flowers and Fruit]
Watercolor by Henry Botkin: The Bridge (St. Louis), available at Childs Gallery, BostonQuick View
1412×2112IN.
$2,750
The Bridge (St. Louis)
Painting by Henry Botkin: Vortex, available at Childs Gallery, BostonQuick View
33×44IN.
$16,000
Vortex
Rocks
Shadows
Red Painting
Blue Spot
Mixed Media by Henry Botkin: A Windy Day, available at Childs Gallery, BostonQuick View
934×7IN.
A Windy Day
Mixed Media by Henry Botkin: The Wind, available at Childs Gallery, BostonQuick View
914×614IN.
$1,250
The Wind
Red Landscape
Painting By Henry Botkin: [untitled] At Childs GalleryQuick View
3334×4234IN.
$16,000
[Untitled]
Painting By Henry Botkin: Portrait Blues At Childs GalleryQuick View
22×34IN.
$9,000
Portrait Blues
Painting By Henry Botkin: Fiddler At Childs GalleryQuick View
2412×30IN.
$8,500
Fiddler
Mixed Media By Henry Botkin: [untitled] At Childs GalleryQuick View
12×9IN.
$2,400
[Untitled]
By Henry Botkin: [untitled Abstract In Yellow And Pink] At Childs GalleryQuick View
8×1034IN.
$2,250
[Untitled Abstract in Yellow and Pink]
Collage By Henry Botkin: Nature Song At Childs GalleryQuick View
9×10IN.
$2,250
Nature Song
Painting By Henry Botkin: Rider In The Park At Childs GalleryQuick View
24×20IN.
$6,500
Rider in the Park
Collage By Henry Botkin: Guro Iii At Childs GalleryQuick View
33×19IN.
$8,500
Guro III
Mixed Media By Henry Botkin: Dancer At Childs GalleryQuick View
17×9IN.
$2,500
Dancer
Painting By Henry Botkin: Surging At Childs GalleryQuick View
14×16IN.
$3,500
Surging
Collage By Henry Botkin: Ritual No. 4 At Childs GalleryQuick View
18×18IN.
$4,500
Ritual No. 4
Watercolor by Henry Botkin: Provincetown [Massachusetts], represented by Childs GalleryQuick View
16×21IN.
$2,200
Provincetown [Massachusetts]
Collage By Henry Botkin: Theatre At Childs GalleryQuick View
9×5IN.
$1,400
Theatre
Watercolor by Henry Botkin: Highland Light [Cape Cod], represented by Childs GalleryQuick View
13×14IN.
$1,600
Highland Light [Cape Cod]
Painting by Henry Botkin: The Meeting, represented by Childs GalleryQuick View
25×19IN.
$4,500
The Meeting
Collage By Henry Botkin: Dominant Green At Childs GalleryQuick View
12×18IN.
$5,000
Dominant Green
Painting By Henry Botkin: Riders By The Sea At Childs GalleryQuick View
17×21IN.
$6,500
Riders by the Sea
Watercolor by Henry Botkin: Still Life with Decanter, represented by Childs GalleryQuick View
18×22IN.
$2,800
Still Life with Decanter
Painting By Henry Botkin: The Concert At Childs GalleryQuick View
18×21IN.
$6,500
The Concert
Collage By Henry Botkin: Etude No. 4 At Childs GalleryQuick View
7×4IN.
$975
Etude No. 4
Painting By Henry Botkin: Giglio Ii At Childs GalleryQuick View
24×29IN.
$5,500
Giglio II
Painting By Henry Botkin: Interplay At Childs GalleryQuick View
43×33IN.
$16,000
Interplay
Painting By Henry Botkin: Self Portrait At Childs GalleryQuick View
29×25IN.
$8,000
Self Portrait
Collage By Henry Botkin: Soft Pink At Childs GalleryQuick View
8×6IN.
$1,500
Soft Pink
Painting By Henry Botkin: The Cove At Childs GalleryQuick View
15×19IN.
$6,000
The Cove
Painting By Henry Botkin: Untitled At Childs GalleryQuick View
30×24IN.
$5,500
Untitled
Painting By Henry Botkin: Untitled At Childs GalleryQuick View
18×13IN.
$2,200
Untitled
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Leo Blake

Leo Blake

American, (1887-1976)

Leo B. Blake received a thorough education in art at the Art Institute of Chicago where he was a student from 1908 to 1912. His instructors at this time included such notables as J.H. Vanderpoel, Alphonse Mucha, Allen Philbrick, W.J. Reynolds, Antonin Sterba, and F. DeForrest Schook. He also received special training under Mathis Alten, Birge Harrison, Conway Peyton and Alfred East. While at the Institute, he was honored with two scholarships in 1910 and 1911.After emerging from the Art Institute of Chicago, Blake began his career in illustration and commercial art and continued his residence in the Mid-West until he decided to break away and work as a free lance painter according to his own ideas and preferences. He set up a permanent studio in the Berkshires in 1933. Blake spent the rest of his career depicting landscape and seasonal changes around New England.

Blake was an active member of the Salmagundi Club, Illinois Academy of Fine Arts, Pittsfield Art League (President 1935), Berkshire Business Men's Art League, North Shore Arts Association, Connecticut Academy of Fine Arts, New Haven Paint and Clay Club, Springfield Art League, and the American Artists Professional League.

Blake exhibited throughout the country at many fine institutions including at the Art Institute of Chicago, Illinois Academy of Fine Arts (award, 1931), Allied Artists of America, Berkshire Museum, Connecticut Academy of Fine Arts (award, 1939), Salmagundi Club (award, 1942), Philadelphia Art Alliance, and Syracuse University.

Blake's work is represented in the permanent collections of the Illinois State Museum, Mechanics Institute of the Rochester Institute of Technology and the Berkshire Museum, Pittsfield, Mass.

Blake taught painting at Williams College from 1937 to 1941 and at the Berkshire Museum from 1943 to 1953. He also taught at the Lenox Art Study Group, Lenox Library, Great Barrington Painting Class, Great Barrington High School, Crestalbal School for Girls, Junior League of Pittsfield, and Blake Studios Summer School.

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W. Lester Stevens

W. Lester Stevens

American (1888-1969)

Born on June 15, 1888 in Rockport, Massachusetts, Stevens showed his artistic talent at an early age, and first studied with Parker Perkins, a well-known Rockport marine painter. In 1906, the National Academy of Design showed a work by Stevens, and three years later he received a scholarship for study at the Museum School in Boston. During his European stay in the Army beginning in 1917, the artist continued painting and sketching. He impressed his commanding officers with his talent and, as a result, an extended stay was arranged for him during which time he could further study the work of the masters in the European museums.

Arriving home after the war, Stevens received an invitation from John Pepper, of the Boston Art Club, to do a one-man show. One of the paintings in the show was chosen for the Corcoran Gallery's annual exhibition of Oil Paintings by Contemporary American Artists. Stevens' works were accepted for a number of years, and it was said that he had earned "more honors for his work than any other living artist in the Northeast".

Stevens returned to Rockport and in 1921, along with fifty other artists including Aldro Hibbard and Anthony Thieme, founded the Rockport Art Association, which brought renown to the Rockport and Cape Ann area. In addition to teaching in Rockport during the summers, he also taught at Boston University and later at Princeton.

Stevens, continually in search of unspoiled nature, moved from Rockport to Springfield, then to Conway, Vinalhaven and finally to Grand Manan, Maine. Steven's love of nature has been aptly described in the records of the Rockport Art Association, "An Appreciation of W. Lester Stevens" (1971): "He painted nature in all her moods from the blistering hot sun to the freezing wet cold. Nature was his guide, intuition his master...Instinct alone beckoned him on. Painting was his ruling passion".

Jean-Louis Forain

Jean-Louis Forain

French (1852-1931)

Jean-Louis Forain, French (1852-1931)

After an extraordinary career from the 1870s to 1894 working in Paris in the Impressionist style and in the subjects of “Gay Paris”, Forain turned his attention to the more serious matters of the French Law courts and biblical and devotional subjects. As Sinclair Hitchings wrote in 1979 in Jean-Louis Forain: Works From New England Collections, “Forain was influenced by Manet at this time [c. 1876] and met with him and Degas and the Impressionist group at the Café de la Nouvelle Athènes at the Place Pigalle. The group included Manet, Degas, Renoir, Pisarro, Sisley, Desboutin, Raffaëlli, and occasionally Monet and Cezanne and the writers Duranty, Silvestre, Burty, Villiers de l’Isle Adam, Ary Renan, and George Moore. Manet’s interest in scenes of contemporary life and his depiction of women influenced Forain’s style in painting and printmaking by reinforcing Forain’s natural interest in representing café life and showing the subject matter of contemporary women in contemporary settings.”

“The most important friendship formed in this Impressionist period in Forain’s career was with Edgar Degas (1834-1917). Forain admired Degas greatly as an artist and also as a person. There is no question that Forain’s life and art were influenced. Degas asknowledged the closeness of the relationship when he presumed that Forain would be asked to be the speaker at his funeral, and told him that if he must give an oration, to say “Degas loved drawing and so do I” and sit down.”

Degas also acknowledged the closeness of their styles when he said “He paints with his hands in my pockets”. But Degas also collected Forain’s drawings (14) and owned one painting, The Tribunal of 1902-3 (in the collection of the Tate Gallery, London since

1918).

Forain’s later paintings develop from several events in his life. In 1891 he married the painter Jeanne Bosc and his son was born in 1895. He became a householder and left behind the Bohemian ways of his earlier years. Nightlife and the demi-monde were no longer subjects in his work, although café scenes and theater pictures still appeared. He made much of his income in the middle 1890s from newspaper and magazine illustration when the second great event occurred that moved him. He became involved in the court drama of the Dreyfus Affair. Although he was on the side of the army in his views, he was passionate in his approach to the artistry of courtroom drama. His interest in the courts piqued, Forain continued to explore the subject of justice in the French courts as his style underwent a change. This resulted in works such as A Plea For Mercy. Certainly he would have known the court paintings of Honoré Daumier, and there is no doubt some influence taken from Daumier in palette, style and composition, but Forain paints on a scale almost unknown in Daumier and gives his tribunal works a larger-than-life force. Hitchings wrote: “although Forain’s subject matter of the courts is similar to Daumier’s, his approach to that subject matter is somewhat different. Forain was not primarily interested in exposing the court for political reasons nor in ridiculing the venality and hypocrisy of the lawyers as Daumier did. Forain’s point of view of the law court was to show ordinary people caught up in a complicated system of justice. He was interested in the human beings subjected to a cumbersome and impersonal legal system. Forain presented the figures in the courts, even the indifferent or scheming lawyers and the bored judges, as human beings. He did not distort features or caricature for heightened effect, as is evident in Daumier’s figures of lawyers and judges. Forain’s indictment of the law system is ultimately as scathing as Daumier’s but it is less obvious. His representation of the law courts is related to his concern for social justice and also to the other major influence in his paintings and prints after 1900, his religious motivation… Forain relished the drama of the courts and the histrionic talents of the lawyers.” Hitchings says of the technique of these works, “In his painting he turned away from the colorful palette and technique of his Impressionist works. The colors in his works became somber, mainly black, gray and brown, dramatically illuminated by a chiaroscuro effect of light and an occasional vivid dash of bright color. Some of these works seem to be grisailles because of the reduced colors Forain allowed himself.”

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Watercolor by F. Luis Mora: La Jota, represented by Childs GalleryQuick View
23×20IN.
$7,500
La Jota
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Print by Ignaz Marcel Gaugengigl: The Stirrup Cup, represented by Childs Gallery

Ignaz Marcel Gaugengigl

Bavarian-American, (1855-1932)

The Stirrup Cup, c. 1887
Etching
6×4IN.CM
Signature: Signed in pencil
$1,100