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Mountfort
Coolidge was born in Brooklyn, New York in 1888 and was a pupil
of Robert Henri's. In the early teens he travelled with his family
to Ogunquit, Maine, then already a thriving artist's community,
and became a student of Hamilton Faster Field's. He continued
to summer in Ogunquit for over 40 years, and was associated with
such artists as Yasuo Kuniyoshi, Niles Spencer, Marsden Hartley,
LIoyd Goodrich, Bernard Karfiol, and was often associated with
the flamboyant society painter Channing Hare, with whom he operated
a small antiques business. Because of his association with some
of the most progressive modern painters of his day, the paintings
of Mountfort Coolidge are more than just representative paintings
chronicling the landscape around him, they are expressions of
the landscape as he experienced it, as a series of geometric
and organic shapes and forms, patterns of color, and of images
of the time in which he lived. Although man is seldom depicted
in the landscape, he has in many instances left his mark upon
it in the form of a dwelling, road, stonewall, or sailboat on
the horizon. In these paintings we find strong European as well
as American influences. 'I'he houses that are simplified forms
set in the landscape owe a debt to Cezanne, and the coloring
not onlv that of' the French impressionists but often that of
the Fauves. Mountfort Coolidge painted plein air (outdoor) small canvas boards as studies for his larger paintings and pastels. Working outdoors, in winter as well as summer, sometimes in uncomfortable conditions, was an American as well as French tradition. All Mountford Coolidge paintings & pastels are from the estate of Steven Hensel.
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