American Impressionist Edward Henry Potthast is best known
for sunny beach scenes, filled with sparkling surf and high-keyed
details such as balloons, hats and umbrellas. He was born
to a family of artisans in Cincinnati, Ohio, on June 10,
1857. At age twelve he became a charter student at
Cincinnati’s new McMicken School of Design. He
studied at McMicken, off and on, for over a decade. From
1879 to 1881, his teacher was Thomas Satterwhite Noble. Noble,
a portrait and figure painter, employed a dark palette and
a rich, painterly technique derived from his instruction
under French artist Thomas Couture.
Potthast made his first trip to Europe in 1881. After
a visit to Antwerp, where he studied with Polydore Beaufaux
and Charles Verlat, Potthast proceeded to Munich perhaps
on a visit that had been prearranged with Noble, who was
also in Munich in the early 1880s. Munich and its Royal
Academy strongly had long been a destination for Cincinnati
artists. Potthast and Noble had been preceded by fellow
Cincinnatians John Henry Twachtman, Robert Blum, Joseph De
Camp, and Frank Duveneck, who alternately taught in Munich
and Cincinnati. At the Royal Academy, Potthast studied
with the American-born instructor Carl Marr (von Marr, after
1909), who was known for his adroit handling of light and
shadow in realistically rendered works. Potthast completed
his European tour with a visit to Paris, where he studied
for about a month and a half at the Académie Julian.
Returning to Cincinnati in 1885, Potthast resumed his studies
with Noble, while earning his living as a lithographer. At
this time, his painting style was much influenced by the
Munich School, which was, in turn, influenced by the Dutch
painting tradition. Potthast’s paintings, which included
both interiors and landscapes, displayed sound draftsmanship
and dark tones applied with solid unbroken strokes. At
the end of 1886, he again departed for Paris, where he studied
with Fernand Cormon and, possibly, with Jules-Joseph Lefebvre. In
1889 he met American Robert Vonnoh and Irishman Roderic O’ Conor,
landscape painters who were working at Grèz. The
cool-toned, Impressionist paintings with scumbled surfaces
these painters and others at the Grèz colony were
making had a profound impact on Potthast’s palette. His
conversion to Impressionism was immediate and irrevocable. When
he returned to Cincinnati, he carried back light-filled canvases,
paintings such as Sunshine, 1889 (Cincinnati Art
Museum), a painting of a girl in an outdoor setting, which
had been exhibited in the Paris Salon of 1889. When
the exhibition entitled “Light Pictures” opened
in 1894 at the Cincinnati Art Museum, Potthast was the only
American artist included in the show.
Even though he enjoyed modest success in his hometown, Potthast
made the decision to leave Cincinnati in 1895 and establish
himself in New York City. While he went about setting up
a painting studio, he fulfilled illustration commissions
for the publications Scribner’s, Century, and Harper’s. He
exhibited watercolors and oil paintings in exhibitions at
the Art Institute of Chicago beginning in 1896, and at the
National Academy of Design from 1897. He won the academy’s
Thomas B. Clarke prize for best figure painting in 1899,
the same year was he was elected an associate of the academy. Potthast
was made a full academician in 1906.
After his move to New York, Potthast made scenes of people
enjoying leisurely holidays at the beach and rocky harbor
views his specialty. He spent summer months in any
one of a number of seaside art colonies, including Gloucester,
Rockport and Cape Cod in Massachusetts, and Ogunquit and
Monhegan Island, Maine. Such was his love of the beach
that, when he resided in New York, he would journey out on
fair days to Coney Island or Far Rockaway with his easel,
paintbox, and a few panels.
Potthast never married. He was an extremely private
person, though he was close to his nephew and namesake, Edward
Henry Potthast II (1880-1941), who also was an artist. Potthast
died alone in his New York studio on March 9, 1927.
The paintings of Edward Henry Potthast are represented in
public collections across the United States, including the
Museum of Fine Arts, Boston; Brooklyn Museum of Art, New
York; Butler Institute of American Art, Youngstown, Ohio;
Art Institute of Chicago; Cincinnati Art Museum; Georgia
Museum of Art, Athens; Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York;
and Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, Philadelphia.
© Copyright 2007 Hollis Taggart Galleries