William Glackens
(1870-1938) was a member of the artists group, The Eight, who favored cheerful
subjects of leisure activities over the dark manner and social realism of
others in that circle. Born in Philadelphia, Glackens attended Central High
School along with John Sloan and the collector Albert C. Barnes. In 1891
he began a career as an artist-reporter for various Philadelphia newspapers and
in the evenings, attended classes at the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts.
That same year Sloan introduced him to Robert Henri, with whom Glackens shared
a studio for a year and a half. After traveling to France and The Netherlands
in 1895, Glackens moved to New York, where he continued working as an
artist-reporter, magazine illustrator, and painter. In 1898 he accompanied the
U.S. Army to Cuba to record the Spanish-American War for McClure’s magazine.
Glackens gave up
illustration in order to devote himself to painting in 1904. He made a second
trip to Europe in 1906, returning to New York to prepare for an exhibition of
paintings by The Eight held in 1908. In the same year, one of Glackens’s
paintings was shown at the National Academy of Design, where the New York
public was surprised at the change in the artist’s palette. After nearly a
decade and a half of producing paintings that reflected the influence of Robert
Henri in their muted colors and gestural brushstrokes, Glackens, inspired by
his visits to France and the Netherlands, had turned to depicting outdoor
scenes, using bright, lively colors. His change in style was reinforced by frequent
trips to France, including a 1912 journey sponsored by his friend Albert
Barnes, who sent Glackens to France as his agent to purchase contemporary
French paintings, including works by Cézanne, Matisse, and Renoir. Glackens
served as chairman of the committee that selected American art for the Armory
Show in 1913, and later, in 1917, was first president of the Society of
Independent Artists.
Glackens’s mature style
suggests Monet’s paintings of the 1860s in the broad and direct treatment of
color, quick touch, and jewel-like dashes of color that denote foliage and the
sun’s shimmering reflections on the water. Glackens distinguished himself from
impressionism, however, by not allowing light to dissolve the contour of his
forms. From about 1925 to 1932 he divided his time between New York and France,
but he continued his involvement in the New York art world and his friendship
with other artists associated with The Eight until his death in 1938.
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