|
LeConte Stewart (born 1891 in Glenwood, Utah;
died 1990 in Kaysville, Utah) was a Morman
artist primarily known for his Landscape of rural Utah.
His media included oils, watercolors, pastel and charcoal, as well as etchings, linocuts,
and lithographs. His home/studio in Kaysville is on the National Register of Historic Places.
His art
education began in 1912 at the University of Utah, and included studies at the Art Students League summer school at
Woodstock, New York, and the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts in Chester Springs. Stewart became the head of the Art Department at the University of Utah in 1938, and held that post
until his retirement in 1956.
LeConte
Stewart is best known for his unidealized landscapes of rural Utah, spawning the term
"LeConte Stewart Country." Stewart is quoted as saying in 1935,
"It is not that I love the lyrical in nature the less, but I feel that in
modern life there is no time, no inclination for it. In these pictures I'm
trying to cut a slice of contemporary life as it is in the highways and biways
as I have found it." Some of Stewart's paintings have a photographic
quality from a distance but are actually formed with broad strokes and a thick
palette.
Much of his
work uses direct impressionistic techniques to convey the meaning of what he
saw around him, illustrating things "...that are introspective, that you
peer into, that you understand and feel." LeConte stated:
"Impressionism is the most important painting innovation of all time....I
thought to myself, why not use this technique to express an idea rather than
making it the end goal of a painting? I have tried to think of it as a means of
interpreting landscaping rather than making it merely impressionistic."
Stewart
described himself as having an urgency in his work. A plaque in the Kaysville
Gallery of Art reads: "I had a great urgency to work as rapidly as
possible. Each Saturday I painted one large 24-by-30-inch picture in the
morning and another in the afternoon. Between I painted four smaller studies.
Six was an average Saturday for me."
In addition
to landscapes, Stewart also did portraiture and murals. He painted several
murals for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints buildings, including works found inside the LDS temple in Hawaii, Alberta, and Arizona, as well as murals for the Salt Lake City International Airport and the historic Bigelow-Ben Lomond Hotel. In 1985 The Church
of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints published a collectors item titled LeConte Stewart: The spirit of landscape
by Robert Davis, which documented some of his works.
Biography
from from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
|