Description: Fremont F. Ellis (American, 1897-1985)This excellent untitled oil painting by Santa Fe artist Fremont Ellis features an extraordinarily colorful Southwestern autumn landscape with a creek winding through a meadow and a grove of aspens. Ellis, a member of the famous and influential Santa Fe artist collective called Los Cinco Pintores, is recognized for his realistic landscapes that are often slightly skewed, expanded and/or have an exaggerated color palettes. This painting, by Ellis, measures 8-1/2” x 10-1/2” or in the period frame dimensions of 12-1/2” x 16-1/2” and is signed lower right, Fremont F. Ellis. The painting is in good condition with no defects of anything that distract when viewing. Fremont Ellis, best known for painting in a colorful pallet in a slightly exaggerated realistic style, makes this wonderful Southwest autumn landscape a quintessential example of his work.Kenneth Dean Fine Art Gallery www.facebook.com/kennethdeanfineartBiography:Born in Virginia City, Montana, Fremont Ellis earned a reputation as a New Mexico painter of site-specific landscapes that conveyed his intense feelings for the rich coloration of the Southwest. He was much influenced by American Impressionism and was one of the few newcomer artists of Santa Fe who had been born in the West.His family had gone to Montana during the Gold Rush, and his father, trained as a dentist, went into theatrical work. As a youngster, Ellis played the drums in his father's movie theatre. The family traveled all over the county, and the future artist spent much time in the Metropolitan Museum in New York. He briefly attended the Art Students League, but decided to return back West to the landscape he loved. On his move West, Ellis first moved to El Paso, Texas, where he taught art and then a short time later to Santa Fe where he joined his friends Willard Nash, Jozef Bakos, Will Shuster, and Walter Mruk, together founding a modernist art society called the Los Cinco Pintores (The Five Painters). Though the charter of the organization clearly described their stylistic orientation as thoroughly modern, Ellis was never truly a modern painter, tending towards a more realistic style with his own curiously tinted palette. To achieve the right look, Ellis took photographs of the scenes he wished to paint with a variety of different lenses and techniques, and then recreated the shifted color palette of the photographs on paper. However, the group did not stay together very long, as stylistically they went in different directions. Ellis, considered the "loner" of the group, married and spent a period of time in Espanola, about twenty-five miles north of Santa Fe. Later he settled about ten miles east of Santa Fe in a home that came to be regarded as one of the most beautiful of the haciendas in that area.From the time he was young, he had developed a great love of the Spanish people of New Mexico. His wife was a member of an old, aristocratic New Mexican family that owned property in the Santa Fe area. He exhibited his work actively in Santa Fe and Los Angeles, where he had a dedicated following for his paintings that demonstrated a perspective of a gentle, circumspect individual that recorded a region and a way of life that would soon be permanently altered and potentially lost. His work is in the collection of UCLA, the Museum of New Mexico, the Thomas Gilcrease Institute of American History, the El Paso Museum and the Art Institute, Lubbock, TX.Fremont Ellis dies in Santa Fe in 1985.
Price: 4750 USD
Location: Dubuque, Iowa
End Time: 2024-12-10T18:08:21.000Z
Shipping Cost: 125 USD
Product Images
Item Specifics
All returns accepted: ReturnsNotAccepted
Artist: Fremont Ellis
Unit of Sale: Single Piece
Signed By: Fremont F. Ellis
Size: Medium
Signed: Yes
Material: Oil on Panel
Item Length: 10-1/2 in
Region of Origin: New Mexico, USA
Framing: Framed
Subject: Landscape
Type: Painting
Year of Production: 1897
Original/Licensed Reproduction: Original
Item Height: 2 in
Style: Impressionism, Realism
Theme: Southwest Landscape
Features: One of a Kind (OOAK)
Production Technique: Oil Painting
Country/Region of Manufacture: United States
Item Width: 8-1/2 in
Handmade: Yes
Time Period Produced: 1950s - 1970s