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Douglas Volk

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
American painter (1856–1935)

Douglas Volk
Volk in 1917
Born
Stephen Arnold Douglas Volk

(1856-02-23)February 23, 1856
DiedFebruary 7, 1935(1935-02-07) (aged 78)
Alma materÉcole des Beaux-Arts
Occupation(s)Painter, muralist, educator
Spouse
Marion Larrabee
(m. 1881; died 1925)
Children4
Parent(s)Emily Clarissa King (Barlow) Volk
Leonard Wells Volk
AwardsBeck Gold Medal
Signature

Stephen Arnold Douglas Volk (February 23, 1856 – February 7, 1935)[1] was an American portrait and figure painter, muralist, and educator. He taught at theCooper Union, theArt Students League of New York, and was one of the founders of theMinneapolis School of Fine Arts. He and his wife Marion established a summer artist colony in western Maine.

Early life and education

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He was born inPittsfield, Massachusetts,[2] to Emily Clarissa King (Barlow) Volk and the sculptorLeonard Wells Volk. He was named for his mother's maternal cousin,Stephen A. Douglas, theDemocratic Party presidential nominee in 1860, who lost toRepublican presidential nomineeAbraham Lincoln. Congressman Lincoln posed for a bust by Leonard Volk in early 1860, and the sculptor made plaster casts of his face and hands. Four-year-old Douglas entertained the future president.[3]

Volk spent his childhood in Chicago, but his family moved to Europe when he was fourteen. He began studying art in Rome, and attended theÉcole des Beaux-Arts inParis (1873 to 1879), where he was a pupil ofJean-Léon Gérôme.[4] At age nineteen, he exhibited at theParis Salon of 1875.[5]

Career

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The Second Minnesota Regiment at Missionary Ridge, c. 1906, Governor's Reception Room at theMinnesota State Capitol
Ye Maiden's Reverie (1898),Berkshire Museum

He returned to the United States, and was hired as an instructor at theCooper Union in New York City, where he taught from 1879 to 1884 and from 1906 to 1912.[4] He helped to found theMinneapolis School of Fine Arts in 1886, and served as its director until 1893. He taught at theArt Students League of New York (1893 to 1898), theNational Academy of Design (1910 to 1917), and intermittently at theSociety for Ethical Culture.[4]

He was also a working artist, noted for his figure and portrait paintings. He exhibited three works at the 1893World's Columbian Exposition in Chicago, where the group won a medal, his first major award. One of the three, a "story picture" titledThe Puritan Maiden, featured a young woman huddled against a tree in a bleak winter landscape. The footprints in the snow of her (unseen) lover lead away into the distance – "The snows must melt, the trees bud and roses bloom, ere he will come again."[6] It had been painted twelve years earlier, but became enormously popular at the Exposition and later through engraved copies.

Family members posed as models for a number of his most famous paintings.Puritan Mother and Child (1897), featured his wife in historical costume embracing their youngest son, and was part of the group that won a gold medal at the 1915Panama-Pacific Exposition in San Francisco. It is now in the collection of theCarnegie Museum of Art in Pittsburgh.The Young Pioneer (1899), a full-length portrait of his son Gerome in rustic costume holding a canoe paddle, won first prize at the 1899 Colonial Exhibition in Boston. It was bought for theMetropolitan Museum of Art in 1906,[7] but later deaccessioned.The Boy with the Arrow (1903), which featured his son seated on a rock with Kezar Lake in the distance, won the 1903 Carnegie Prize from the Society of American Artists, a silver medal at the 1904Louisiana Purchase Exposition in St. Louis, and the 1907 gold medal at the Carolina Art Association. It is now in the collection of theSmithsonian American Art Museum.

Critic Charles H. Caffin found Volk's historicist work formulaic but sincere:

Generally, he paints a bit of the pine forest, rude and solemn, and places in it a girl or boy; with such differences of motive as are suggested by the titles "Song of the Pines," "Thoughts of Youth," "The Woodland Maid." The figures are types of healthful beauty, with earnest faces and large eyes peering into the beyond. The spirit of the nation's past and of its best hopes for the future seem to be figured in these types. The sober dignity of the color schemes, warm browns, rich woodland greens and glimpses of brilliant blue, enforce the serene impressiveness of these pictures. One realizes that they are the outcome of a sincere and purposeful mind.[8]

He was one of eight American artists commissioned by the National Art Committee to depict major figures from the Great War (World War I).[9] His three portraits –King Albert I of Belgium (1919), standing in uniform on a battlefield;British Prime Minister David Lloyd George (1919–20), seated at his desk;General John J. Pershing (1920–21), standing in uniform with his horse's reins in his hand – were donated to theNational Portrait Gallery. The first two were later transferred to theSmithsonian American Art Museum. An abandoned version of Volk's Pershing portrait showed the general standing beside the grave of an unknown soldier.[10]

Personal life

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Marion, Portrait of the Artist's Daughter (1914),University of Rochester
The Boy with the Arrow (Portrait of the Artist's Son) (1903),Smithsonian American Art Museum

In 1881 Volk married artist Marion Larrabee (1859–1925). She became the first instructor at theMinneapolis School of Fine Arts.[citation needed] Together, they had four children:

Volk retired to Maine following his wife's 1925 death. He died atFryeburg, Maine on February 7, 1935.[4]

Hewnoaks and Sabatos

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The Volks began spending their summers inCenter Lovell, Maine in the 1890s, and in 1904 bought a farmhouse on 25 acres along the shore of Kezar Lake. They renovated the house and added to it, naming it "Hewnoaks," and eventually building four additional cottages and an artist's studio for Volk.[13] Numerous artists and craftspeople came to study with them over the years. Many of their friends in theArts and Crafts Movement were houseguests, including artistsJ. Alden Weir,Frank Benson,Childe Hassam, andWilliam Merritt Chase; architectJohn Calvin Stevens, interior designer John Scott Bradstreet, and Swedish-born woodcarver Karl A. von Rydingsvärd.[14] Von Rydingsärd carved frames for a number of Volk's paintings, and taught woodcarving to Wendell Volk.[15]

By the turn of the century, Marion Larrabee Volk had begun using traditionalarea looms to weave textiles and rugs. Rather than cotton, she became known for handwovenwoolen work. Her designs were based on motifs from Native American art, and she made her own dyes out of natural materials –apple, yellowoak andmaple tree bark;goldenrod,barberry,St. John's wort andmadder root. In a communal effort with her children and local residents, she produced "Sabatos" rugs and textiles, named for a nearby mountain.[16] Wendell Volk created silkscreen prints for the wool designs, and printed a treatise on the Sabatos work on his hand presses. Sabatos textiles are visible in the background of Douglas Volk's 1914 portrait of his daughter Marion.

The Volk family held the large property for 100 years. Jessie McCoig Volk, Wendell's widow, was the last to live there. Following her death in 2004, the property was bequeathed to theUniversity of Maine, and a portion of the family records went to theSmithsonian Institution. University officials arranged for an auction of much of the property's contents and family papers, including art and craftwork by the Volks, and art they had collected. In October 2006, the contents grossed more than $700,000 at auction, drawing especially high prices for two paintings by the illustratorHoward Pyle and photographs of Native Americans by theNorwegianFrederick Monsen [no] (1865–1929).[13] One item sold at the 2006 auction was Marion Larrabee Volk's first Sabatos rug.[17] It is now in the collection of theMetropolitan Museum of Art.[18]

Legacy

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Life-mask of Abraham Lincoln (1860), cast by Leonard Volk
1954 U.S. postage stamp, based on a portrait by Douglas Volk

His students included artistsRussell Cowles, Benjamin Orso Eggleston, Susan Ricker Knox, Ada Murphy, Ella Bennett Sherman, Adele Rogers Shrenk, and Helen Maria Turner.

He painted at least nine posthumous portraits of Lincoln, basing them on theplasterlife-mask that his father had made in 1860.[4] One of them hangs in theLincoln Bedroom atThe White House. Another appeared on a U.S. postage stamp issued in the 1950s, and is now at theNational Gallery of Art.

His intimate portraits of friends and acquaintances were among his most effective works.[4] These included educatorFelix Adler (1914, Metropolitan Museum of Art), art dealerWilliam Macbeth (1917, Brooklyn Museum), and New York governorAlfred E. Smith (1921, New York State Capitol). He was an advocate for teaching drawing and art to children, and published a monograph,Art Instruction in the Public Schools (1894).[19]

In addition to the museums listed below, Volk's work can be found in the collections of theAlbright–Knox Art Gallery, theMontclair Art Museum, theMuskegon Museum of Art, thePortland Museum of Art, and elsewhere.[5] The Hermitage Museum and Gardens in Norfolk, Virginia owns several of his paintings,[20] and its Tudor Revival building features extensive carving by his friend von Rydingsvärd.[21]

"Hewnoaks," Volk's property in Maine, has been preserved and operates as a summer artist colony.[22]

Honors

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Dr. Felix Adler (1914), Metropolitan Museum of Art

Volk was elected to the Society of American Artists in 1880. He was elected an associate of the National Academy of Design in 1898, and became a full academician in 1899. The two organizations merged in 1906, and he served on the academy's council from 1916 to 1919, and as its recording secretary from 1920 to 1926.[23] He was a member of the Architectural League of New York, the National Society of Portrait Painters, and the Society of Mural Painters.[4]

  • 1875 – Exhibited at Paris Salon –In Brittany.
  • 1876 – Exhibited atCentennial Exposition, Philadelphia –In Brittany,Vanity.
  • 1878 – Exhibited at Paris Salon –Portrait of Miss T.
  • 1889 – Exhibited atExposition Universelle, Paris –The Puritan Captives,After the Reception.
  • 1893 – Medal,World's Columbian Exposition, Chicago – Group:Mending the Canoe,[24]The Puritan Maiden,Portrait of Mrs. Lowry.
  • 1899 – Shaw Prize, Society of American Artists, New York City –The Woodland Maid.
  • 1899 – 1st prize, Colonial Exhibition, Boston –A Colonial Youth (The Young Pioneer).
  • 1901 – Silver medal,Pan-American Exposition, Buffalo – Group:The Woodland Maid,Song of the Pines,The Maiden's Reverie,Thoughts of Youth.[25]
  • 1903 – Carnegie Prize, Society of American Artists, New York City –The Boy with the Arrow.
  • 1904 – Silver medal,Louisiana Purchase Exposition, St. Louis –The Leetle Canadienne (The Boy with the Arrow).
  • 1907 – Gold medal,Carolina Art Association, Charleston –The Boy with the Arrow.
  • 1910 – Proctor Portrait Prize, National Academy of Design, New York City –Marion of Hewnoaks.
  • 1910 – Saltus Gold Medal, National Academy of Design, New York City –The Little Sister (Little Marion).
  • 1915 – Isaac N. Maynard Prize, National Academy of Design, New York City –Dr. Felix Adler.
  • 1915 – Gold medal,Panama-Pacific Exposition, San Francisco – Group:Marion of Hewnoaks,Maid of the Manor,Mother and Child.
  • 1915 – Gold medal, National Arts Club, New York City –Among the Lilies.
  • 1916 –Beck Gold Medal,Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, Philadelphia –Dr. Felix Adler.
  • 1921 – Cross of theOrder of Leopold II. Presented by KingAlbert I of Belgium.

Selected works

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Paintings

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Great War portraits

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Murals

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Gallery

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References

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  1. ^"Stephen A. Douglas Volk and Leonard Wells Volk", Archives of American Art, Smithsonian Institution, accessed 4 April 2011
  2. ^abGilman, D. C.; Peck, H. T.; Colby, F. M., eds. (1905)."Volk, Douglas" .New International Encyclopedia (1st ed.). New York: Dodd, Mead.
  3. ^"The Boy who painted Lincoln,"Schenectady Gazette, March 3, 1913.
  4. ^abcdefgBurke, Doreen Bolger (1980).American Paintings in the Metropolitan Museum of Art: A Catalogue of Works. New York City: Press of the Metropolitan Museum of Art. p. 287.ISBN 9780870992445.
  5. ^abRines, George Edwin, ed. (1920)."Volk, Douglas" .Encyclopedia Americana.
  6. ^A Puritan Maid,National Academy Notes, vol. 1, p. 21.
  7. ^Metropolitan Museum of Art,Report of the Trustees, (New York: Smith, Elder & Company, 1907), p. 54.
  8. ^"Pictures by Douglas Volk",The Artist, vol. 30, no. 1 (January 1901), p. xx.
  9. ^"Exhibition of war portraits : signing of the Peace treaty, 1919, and portraits of distinguished leaders of America and of the allied nations painted by eminent American artists for presentation to the National portrait gallery". New York : National Art Committee. July 6, 1921. RetrievedJuly 6, 2023 – via Internet Archive.
  10. ^General Pershing (abandoned version), From Live Auctioneers. The subject is sometimes misidentified as General Patton.
  11. ^Ezra R. Bridge, from FamilySearch.
  12. ^Marriage record of Gerome D. Volk and Alice I. Masterson, from Maine Genealogy.
  13. ^abMark Sisco, "Treasures from Hewnoaks"Archived July 26, 2011, at theWayback Machine,Maine Antiques Digest, October 2006, accessed 4 April 2011
  14. ^"Rydingsvard Divorce Case",The New York Times, p. 3, September 30, 1897, accessed June 1, 2022.
  15. ^"Karl von Rydingsgard",Art & Decoration, Vol. 5, Artspur Publications, 1914, p. 199.
  16. ^"Art Notes",The New York Times, p. 9, March 7, 1902, accessed June 1, 2022.
  17. ^Robert Edwards,"Sabatos rugs and printed textiles," from American Decorative Art.
  18. ^Sabatos Rug, from Metropolitan Museum of Art.
  19. ^Douglas Volk,"Art Instruction in the Public Schools" (part 2),The Art Interchange vol. 35, no. 1 (July 1895), pp. 4-5.
  20. ^"SIRIS - Smithsonian Institution Research Information System".siris-artinventories.si.edu. RetrievedJuly 6, 2023.
  21. ^"Hermitage Museum, box window carved by von Rydingsvärd". Archived fromthe original on April 2, 2015. RetrievedJuly 6, 2023.
  22. ^"Hewnoaks".hewnoaks.org. RetrievedJuly 6, 2023.
  23. ^Stephen Arnold Douglas VolkArchived April 2, 2015, at theWayback Machine, from National Academy of Design.
  24. ^"Mending the Canoe". Archived fromthe original on April 2, 2015. RetrievedMarch 18, 2015.
  25. ^"Brush and Pencil: An Illustrated Magazine of the Arts of Today". Phillips. July 6, 1902. RetrievedJuly 6, 2023 – via Google Books.
  26. ^"Portrait of Miss H." RetrievedJuly 6, 2023.
  27. ^A Puritan Maid, from LiveAuctioneers.
  28. ^"Accused of Witchcraft, (painting)".siris-artinventories.si.edu. RetrievedJuly 6, 2023.
  29. ^After the Reception, from Minneapolis Institute of Arts.
  30. ^Portrait of John Scott Bradstreet, from Minneapolis Institute of Arts.
  31. ^Little MarionArchived April 2, 2015, at theWayback Machine, from National Academy Museum.
  32. ^"Little Marion, (painting)".siris-artinventories.si.edu. RetrievedJuly 6, 2023.
  33. ^"The Burr McIntosh Monthly". Burr McIntosh Publishing Company. July 6, 1908. RetrievedJuly 6, 2023 – via Google Books.
  34. ^"Puritan Mother and Child, (painting)".siris-artinventories.si.edu. RetrievedJuly 6, 2023.
  35. ^Young Pioneer, fromSchool Arts Magazine, vol. 13 (May 1914), pp. 668-71.
  36. ^Academy, Buffalo Fine Arts (July 6, 1907)."Academy Notes". Buffalo fine arts academy, Albright art gallery. RetrievedJuly 6, 2023 – via Google Books.
  37. ^Boston, Curtis & Cameron (July 6, 1907)."The Copley Prints: Reproductions of Notable Paintings Publicly & Privately Owned in America; Also of the Mural Decorations in the New Library of Congress, the Boston Public Library & Other Public Buildings". Curtis & Cameron. RetrievedJuly 6, 2023 – via Google Books.
  38. ^"Woodland Nymph, (painting)".siris-artinventories.si.edu. RetrievedJuly 6, 2023.
  39. ^"The Boy with the Arrow, (painting)".siris-artinventories.si.edu. RetrievedJuly 6, 2023.
  40. ^"Colonial Belle, (painting)".siris-artinventories.si.edu. RetrievedJuly 6, 2023.
  41. ^"Ave Maria". RetrievedJuly 6, 2023.
  42. ^Abraham Lincoln, from National Gallery of Art.
  43. ^"The Artist's Daughter, (painting)".siris-artinventories.si.edu. RetrievedJuly 6, 2023.
  44. ^Felix Adler, from Metropolitan Museum of Art.
  45. ^"John Cotton Dana (1856-1929), (painting)".siris-artinventories.si.edu. RetrievedJuly 6, 2023.
  46. ^"Self-Portrait". RetrievedJuly 6, 2023.
  47. ^"Stephen Arnold Douglas Volk (a Self-Portrait), (painting)".siris-artinventories.si.edu. RetrievedJuly 6, 2023.
  48. ^"Frank L. Babbott, (painting)".siris-artinventories.si.edu. RetrievedJuly 6, 2023.
  49. ^"Maj. Gen. John G. Foster (1823-1874), (painting)".siris-artinventories.si.edu. RetrievedJuly 6, 2023.
  50. ^"Maj. Gen. Gordon Granger (1822-1876), (painting)".siris-artinventories.si.edu. RetrievedJuly 6, 2023.
  51. ^"Albert, King of the Belgians, (painting)".siris-artinventories.si.edu. RetrievedJuly 6, 2023.
  52. ^"Lloyd George, (painting)".siris-artinventories.si.edu. RetrievedJuly 6, 2023.
  53. ^"John Joseph Pershing (1860-1948), (painting)".siris-artinventories.si.edu. RetrievedJuly 6, 2023.
  54. ^"Father Hennepin Discovering the Falls of St. Anthony, (painting)".siris-artinventories.si.edu. RetrievedJuly 6, 2023.
  55. ^Second Minnesota Regiment at the Battle of Mission Ridge.
  56. ^"Second Minnesota Regiment at the Battle of Mission Ridge, (painting)".siris-artinventories.si.edu. RetrievedJuly 6, 2023.
  57. ^The Fur-Trading Period of Des Moines,Yearbook of the Architectural League of New York (1914).

External links

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Media related toDouglas Volk at Wikimedia Commons

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