SOLD! for $635.00.
(Note: Prices realized include a buyer's premium.)
If you have items like this you wish to consign, click here for more information:
Selling with Case- Low Estimate: $1,000.00
- High Estimate: $1,200.00
- Realized: $635.00
- Share this:
Carl Gutherz or Guthers (Tennessee/Missouri, 1844-1907), “Cactus,” oil on canvas genre scene painting depicting two girls in Victorian clothing staring with curiosity at a large and prickly cactus, as if deciding whether or not to touch it. Signed lower left “Carl Gutherz / Paris” and dated 1887. Titled to sticker affixed to verso. Unframed. 38 1/2″ H x 30 1/2″ W. Literature: CARL GUTHERZ: POETIC VISION AND ACADEMIC IDEALS, eds. Marilyn Masler and Marina Pacini (Memphis, TN: Memphis Brooks Museum of Art, 2009), no, 25. Artist Biography: Guthers, who was born in Switzerland, emigrated as a child to the U.S. in 1851. He lived with his family in Memphis, Tennessee, through the Civil War and then studied at the Ecole des Beaux Arts in Paris and the Academie Julian, as well as in Munich, Brussels, and Rome. In 1875 he moved to St. Louis, Missouri, where he taught at Washington University and helped establish the St. Louis School and Museum of Fine Arts. Guthers continued to take portrait commissions from Memphis, however, and even designed costumes and floats for the annual Memphis Mardi Gras. In 1884 he returned to Paris, where he studied with Gustave Boulanger and Joseph LeFevre. Here, he became associated with the Symbolist movement and produced his most successful paintings including large allegorical works, often featuring Christian imagery. Back in the U.S. he was hired to create murals for institutions including the Library of Congress, the People’s Church of St. Paul Minnesota, and the Allen County (Indiana) Courthouse. A year before his death, he produced a design for an arts and sciences pavilion which was the basis for the development of the Brooks Memorial Art Gallery, later the Memphis Brooks Museum of Art. (Source: The Tennessee Encyclopedia)
PROVENANCE: Deaccessioned by the Memphis Brooks Museum of Art to benefit the acquisitions fund.
CONDITION: Poorly repaired 3/4″ tear about 2″ above the smaller girl’s head. Uneven varnish. Light grime and some scattered inclusions.