Description: 7TH ANNUAL SUMMER SALE NOW *Price Shown is the Sale Price ORIGINAL AND VINTAGE .............EUGENE HIGGINS.............'COUNTRY CHILDREN ON A HILLSIDE', OIL ON CANVAS, 20" x 24"............. This is a 20" x 24" Original and Vintage oil on canvas by the important New York Social Realist painter Eugene Higgins, 1874-1958. This image is of a pair of farm children on a hillside. Signed at lower left 'E Higgins'. Very good condition. In the original frame. The Biography Follows: Eugene Higgins, a painter and etcher, represented with sentimentality the impact of the homeless, depressed and less fortunate people of society. His passionate sympathy for the poor led him to generalize situation and location, painting archetypal situations rather than observed ones. Although a Social Realist in subject matter, his style was European, much influenced by Honore Daumier, and this Old World quality made his work less popular than that of others such as Robert Henri, who had a more unique style. Higgins was born the son of an Irish stonecutter and builder in Kansas City, Missouri, 1874, and after the death of his mother, his father moved him as a youngster to Saint Louis, where he was raised. He briefly attended night classes at the St. Louis School of Fine Arts, and also went to work in an architect's office. In 1897, he went to Paris and studied at the Ecole des Beaux-Arts and the Academie Julian, under Jean Paul Laurens, Benjamin Constant and Jean Leon Gerome. In France, he developed the skill of etching, which became his primary way of earning money. In 1904, he returned to America, spending a year in St. Louis and then settling in New York City. In the early 1920s, he married Anita Rio, and for the remainder of his life, kept a studio on West 22nd Street. Anita and Eugene spent most of their summers at Old Lyme, Connecticut. Recognition came for Higgins, both for his etching and for his painting, which for some viewers carried the suggestion of sculpture because of the vigor and overwhelming qualities of his figure painting. In 1904, the militant Journal of Social Satire in Art, devoted an entire issue to Higgins' s illustration titled Les Paurves. He was acclaimed by the poet Edward Markham as "the one powerful painter of the tragic lacks and losses." In 1921, Higgins was voted to membership in the National Academy of Design, and participated in every exhibition after that to 1950. Higgins credited his father's influence as being very strong on his work because his father was a stonecutter, whom the young Higgins helped and observed the way he handled the materials. His father talked much about the skills of Michelangelo, and about this Higgins said: "As I remember those days it seems to me I knew Michelangeo as well as a I knew my father---we three were pals together. " he other major influence was Jean Millet from whom he "learned also the beauty of simple elemental conditions truthfully portrayed." (271) During the Depression era Higgins created murals including for post offices in Beaver Falls, Pennsylvania; Shawano, Wisconsin; and Mount Pleasant Tennessee. In 1958 Eugene Higgins died in a hospital in New York after a long illness. As ever this is guaranteed 100% money back, to be as represented.
Price: 1800 USD
Location: Santa Fe, New Mexico
End Time: 2024-12-04T02:35:30.000Z
Shipping Cost: 25 USD
Product Images
Item Specifics
Restocking Fee: No
Return shipping will be paid by: Buyer
All returns accepted: Returns Accepted
Item must be returned within: 30 Days
Refund will be given as: Money Back
Artist: Eugene Higgins
Unit of Sale: Single-Piece Work
Size: Medium (up to 36in.)
Item Length: 24 in
Region of Origin: New York
Framing: Framed
Personalize: No
Listed By: Dealer or Reseller
Framed/Unframed: Framed
Original/Licensed Reproduction: Original
Item Height: 20 in
Style: Impressionism
Features: Signed
Culture: American
Handmade: Yes
Time Period Produced: 1900-1924
Signed: Yes
Title: Farm Children on Hillside
Material: Canvas
Certificate of Authenticity (COA): No
Subject: Landscape
Type: Painting
Original/Reproduction: Original
Theme: Nature
Country/Region of Manufacture: United States