Emmet Edwards, c. 1940-50 abstract oil painting on canvas, presented in a silver gilt gallery frame to period. Provenance on verso Slight sagging in upper corner of painting which should tighten by inserting keys into stretcher bar. Painting can be hung in portrait or landscape orientation.
Dimensions, 36.5"W x 3"D x 27.5"H
EMMET EDWARDS (1906-1981)As a self-proclaimed "outdoor artist," Emmet Edwards created most of his paintings to reflect his vision of the natural world, based on his immediate geography. Whether painting in watercolor, his medium of choice, or oil, Edwards paintings are dramatically free flowing, almost calligraphic, with curved, spiralling strokes energetically reflective of the landscape he loved.As a painter of place and moment, he only painted outdoors. In fact, many of his works bear specific inscriptions of location and date. In 1979 Edwards said, "I have no connection with painting unless Im outside among the trees and shrubs [Nature is] like a partner. Its right there with me and it's helping me directly as though it's helping me lift a timber. I think it smiles favourably upon me and what Im doing when Im sitting out there with it."Edwards was born in Iowa in 1906 and educated at The Art Institute of Chicago, where he had his first exhibition of paintings in 1928. In the 1930s he was employed in the W.P.A. art program, at which time he endured an anguishing and well publicised court trial, which required him to "prove" he was an artist and was therefore eligible to receive federal compensation. He eventually won, but the accusations haunted him the rest of his life. While he remained confident of his artistic vision and talent, he became cautious about his ability to navigate that talent in the world of public events. His future exhibitions were therefore rare and carefully selected.In 1933, Edwards traveled to Woodstock, New York, in search of a suitable location to produce landscape paintings eventually settling there permanently with his wife. Woodstock provided the solitude and lush environment he needed to flourish, both personally and artistically. In his work he steadfastly captured the verdant undergrowth and trees, the reservoirs and stonewalls and abandoned quarries that compose the landscape of upstate New York. In his energetic abstraction of nature, Edwards created work that is evocative, not of a particular scene, but of an entire experience conveyed with sweeping brush strokes that fills out the paper to its margins and swirl with a kind of primeval zest.