1944 Ben Norris Watercolor - Mauna Loa Mountains - Apr 12, 2024 | Artemis Gallery In Co
LiveAuctioneers Logo

lots of lots

1944 Ben Norris Watercolor - Mauna Loa Mountains

Related Militaria & War Memorabilia

More Items in Militaria & War Memorabilia

View More

Recommended Collectibles

View More
item-175164010=1
item-175164010=2
1944 Ben Norris Watercolor - Mauna Loa Mountains
1944 Ben Norris Watercolor - Mauna Loa Mountains
Item Details
Description
**Originally Listed At $800**

Ben Norris (American, 1910-2006). "Mauna Loa Mountains" watercolor, 1944. Signed and dated at lower right. A beautiful watercolor painting of the Mauna Loa Mountains by Ben Norris that exemplifies the artist's Zen/spiritual interpretations of natural landscapes. Truly mesmerizing, Norris' masterful rendering of Mauna Loa's lofty peaks inspires awe with transcendent beauty that prompts the viewer to experience a meditative state. In Norris' words, "The act of painting is a combination of apprehension of the environment in which we live with the affirmation and the consolidation of the self within this setting." A very special and impressively large watercolor of the Mauna Loa Mountains by Ben Norris. Size: 23" L x 31" W (58.4 cm x 78.7 cm)

About the artist: "Robert Benjamin Norris was born in 1910 in southern California, where he completed his undergraduate education, executed his first professional paintings, and first exhibited to critical acclaim. Although he continued to paint for 20 years after retiring to New York City and Philadelphia, he may be best known in Hawaii, where he spent the highly prolific middle part of his professional career.

Norris has long been identified with the Southern California Watercolor School, which includes his colleagues, Phil Dike, Thomas Craig, Millard Sheets, Milford Zornes and Hardie Gramatky. Although he moved to Hawaii in 1936, he often returned to paint in southern California through the late 1940s and his style remained essentially that of the Southern California Watercolor School through that time.

Norris studied at Pomona College, Harvard, and the Sorbonne, but supplemented his schooling by working directly with Stanton Macdonald-Wright, Jean Charlot, Josef Albers and Max Ernst. When the University of Hawaii resumed classes after World War II, Norris became Chairman of the Art Department and seized the opportunity to invite distinguished artists as visiting professors or artists-in-residence. Ernst exerted an especially potent influence, about which Norris later wrote: 'I had invited him to the University. He was both charming and accessible to us, giving me a chance to hear and to understand some authentic 'info' about Surrealism. I eventually merged some of the conventional Surrealist forms of automatic painting with Far Eastern paper handling techniques.' Ben Norris' abstract interpretations of the Hawaiian landscape Wind from the Sea I and The Pali, exhibited at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in 1950, were painted during this decade of artistic exploration.

As a teacher, academic, and artist, Norris had an unquenchable thirst for knowledge and continued to master new stylistic methods throughout his career. While well known for his bold watercolors, Norris also became an accomplished printmaker, and experienced much success with his oil and acrylic paintings, as well as his collages. His varied work always seems to imbue a mystical or spiritual aspect, which Norris spoke of in a 1965 interview for Art in America:

'The act of painting is a combination of apprehension of the environment in which we live with the affirmation and the consolidation of the self within this setting. My home-grown Zen is hybridized from Max Ernst?s surrealism, a number of contacts with psychiatry (the healing priesthood of our time), and the Religious Society of Friends, called Quakers.'

Norris exhibited steadily from 1933 through 2001 in solo and group exhibitions, and garnered many awards including a Fulbright Professorship and a Yaddo Fellowship. He is represented in many permanent collections including the Honolulu Academy of Arts, the Honolulu Museum of Art, the Hawaii State Art Museum, The Smithsonian American Art Museum (Washington, D.C), the McNay Art Museum (San Antonio, Texas), the Oregon State University Memorial Union (Corvallis, Oregon), and the National Museum of American Art. His work has been exhibited nationally at museums across the country including the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the Whitney Museum of American Art, the New York Public Library, the Art Institute of Chicago, the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts, the deYoung Museum in San Francisco, and the Los Angeles Museum. Childs Gallery is proud to have represented this prolific and talented artist since 1998." (Source: website of Childs Gallery on Newbury Street in Boston, MA)

Painting is accompanied by an old label inscribed with the title of the painting.

Provenance: private Santa Fe, New Mexico, USA collection

All items legal to buy/sell under U.S. Statute covering cultural patrimony Code 2600, CHAPTER 14, and are guaranteed to be as described or your money back.

A Certificate of Authenticity will accompany all winning bids.

We ship worldwide to most countries and handle all shipping in-house for your convenience.

#181998
Condition
Signed and dated at lower right. Arches paper blind stamp at lower right. Painting is in overall very nice condition - strong imagery and hues. A few small scuffs to the composition. Painting is accompanied by an old label inscribed with the title of the painting.
Buyer's Premium
  • 27.5%

1944 Ben Norris Watercolor - Mauna Loa Mountains

Estimate $1,300 - $1,950
See Sold Price
Starting Price $650
2 bidders are watching this item.
Get approved to bid.

Shipping & Pickup Options
Item located in Louisville, CO, us
Offers In-House Shipping
Local Pickup Available

Payment
Accepts seamless payments through LiveAuctioneers

Artemis Gallery

Artemis Gallery

badge TOP RATED
Louisville, CO, United States7,941 Followers
Auction Curated By
Bob Dodge
Owner/Executive Director, Antiquities & Pre-Columbian Art
Sydelle Dienstfrey
PhD. Art History, Director, Fine & Visual Arts
TOP