Childe Hassam, a pioneer of the American Impressionist
style, had a long and very prolific career. By the time
of his death in 1935, many critics and artists considered
him one of the most significant and influential American
painters. His friend and colleague, Boston artist Edmund
Charles Tarbell (1862-1938), claimed that Hassam was “one
of the great painters of America.”(1) Born
Frederick Childe Hassam (he later stopped using his first
name) on October 17, 1859, he grew up in Dorchester, Massachusetts,
then a suburb of Boston. He had a notable artistic and
literary lineage and counted both William Morris Hunt (1824-1879)
and Nathaniel Hawthorne (1804-1864) among his relatives.
At an early age, he developed an interest in drawing and
took his first drawing classes in grade school.
Hassam began his artistic career as a commercial illustrator
and a watercolorist in Boston, but soon thereafter he enrolled
in drawing and painting classes at the Lowell Institute,
a school of practical design, and life classes at the Boston
Art Club. In 1883 Hassam, accompanied by the illustrator
Edmund H. Garrett (1853-1929), traveled to Europe for the
first time. During this trip, he studied art in galleries
and museums in Great Britain, Holland, Spain, and Italy,
and painted numerous watercolors that he exhibited upon
his return at the Williams & Everett Gallery in Boston.
After some early success as an artist and his marriage
to [Kathleen] Maud Doane in 1884, Hassam decided to go
to Paris to finish his artistic training. In the fall of
1886, he enrolled at the Académie Julian where,
like many other American artists of this period, he pursued
the study of figure drawing and exhibited at the Salon.
Complaining that the Académie Julian’s routine
did not permit originality, he left in the spring of 1888.
His departure from formal training resulted in a dramatic
increase in his output. Hassam remained in Paris until
late October of 1889 when he returned to Boston for a brief
period before moving to Manhattan.
Hassam quickly became active in the flourishing art world
in New York. In 1890, he helped found the New York Water
Color Club, joined the American Water Color Society, and
was elected to two social and exhibiting organizations
for progressive artists, the Players Club and the Society
of American Artists. In 1897, he participated in the establishment
of the Ten American Painters, an exhibiting society that
included William Merritt Chase (1849-1916), Edmund Charles
Tarbell, John Twachtman (1853-1902), and Julian Alden Weir
(1852-1919). As H. Barbara Weinberg, the Alice Pratt Brown
Curator of American Paintings and Sculpture at the Metropolitan
Museum of Art, explains, “his involvement in these
and other groups was crucial, as they abetted his lifelong
campaign to show and sell his works through regular exhibitions” in
New York and throughout the United States.(2)
From 1890 to 1919, Hassam and his wife spent almost every
winter in Manhattan and nearly every summer in New England.
Prior to 1914, they went to Appledore Island in the Isles
of Shoals, off the coast of New Hampshire, and often combined
their visit there with a brief stay in Gloucester, Massachusetts.
After the turn of the century, they began to visit picturesque,
historically significant towns with artist colonies in
Connecticut, including Cos Cob, Greenwich, and Old Lyme.
In 1919, they purchased a house in East Hampton, Long Island,
and settled there in the summer months. During these summers,
Hassam was very productive, and he returned to New York
with a large group of pictures ready for sale. In addition
to these excursions, he made five extended visits to Europe.
Throughout his career, his travels provided opportunities
for him to exchange ideas with other painters and to familiarize
himself with the latest trends in art.
Since Hassam rarely worked on commission, he ostensibly
had the freedom to paint what he wished. He created intimate
interior and exterior images of people laboring or engaging
in a leisure activity, and he represented panoramic city
or country views in which figures appear small in scale
or not at all. In addition to these landscapes, cityscapes,
and interior scenes, he produced still lifes and nudes.
Experimenting with a variety of media, he worked in watercolor,
oil, and pastel, and toward the end of his career he took
up etching (1915) and lithography (1917). Rather than permanently
adopting one artistic style, Hassam altered his approach
according to the progressive aesthetics of the period.
His early pictures of Boston streets and rural New England
landscapes with their subdued, tonalist palette, smooth
application of paint, and clear linear perspective suggest
the influence of the French Barbizon School painters, whose
work was popular among American artists and collectors.
After studying in Paris, he changed his style and expanded
his repertoire of subjects.
His depictions of New York and Appledore with their bright
tones, quick, short brushwork, and less exacting recession
into space recall the French Impressionist pictures of
Gustave Caillebotte (1848-1894), Edgar Degas (1834-1917)
and Claude Monet (1840-1926). In the second decade of the
twentieth century, he transformed his style once again.
Compared with his Impressionist pictures, these late works,
usually on larger canvases, display a greater intensity
of color, a more rhythmic brushwork, a rigid, geometric
representation of space and a “classical” or
highly symbolic subject matter. These images allude to
the impact of Post-Impressionism, the modern mural aesthetic,
Symbolism, and the large scale works of the French artist
Puvis de Chavannes (1824-1898). Hassam’s shifts in
style, his use of a variety of media, and his diverse subject
matter not surprisingly led one early twentieth-century
critic to call him “the ambidextrous Childe Hassam.” (3)
Hassam received many awards and accolades both in the
United States and in Europe. His patrons included the well-known
American art collectors George A. Hearn, Charles Freer,
and John Gellatly. Throughout his career, he promoted American
art in numerous published interviews and writings, expressing
great faith in its future. Although he became increasingly
concerned with the direction of American art in the early
decades of the twentieth century, just before his death
in August 1935, he bequeathed all the paintings remaining
in his studio to the American Academy of Arts and Letters
in New York. Respecting his wish, this organization sold
many of his pictures to establish a fund for the purchase
of American art, which, in turn, was presented to museums.
1) Edmund Charles Tarbell to Maud Doane Hassam, n.d.,
Childe Hassam Papers, American Academy of Arts and Letters
records, Archives of American Art, Washington, D.C.
2) H. Barbara Weinberg, “Hassam in New York, 1899-1896” in
H. Barbara Weinberg and Elizabeth E. Barker, Childe
Hassam: American Impressionist (New York: Metropolitan
Museum of Art; New Haven: Yale University Press, 2004),
87.
3) Charles L. Buchanan, “The Ambidextrous Childe
Hassam,” International Studio 67 (January
1916): 83.
© Copyright 2007 Hollis Taggart Galleries