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PAUL SAWYIER
(American, 1865-1917)
Jamaica Bay, circa 1916
Oil on panel
9 x 12”
Gift of Mattie Schmidt Bowyer in memory of her husband, Charles Henry
Bowyer 1946.1.17
Dubbed “The
River Artist” by the Louisville Courier-Journal, Paul Sawyier
spent much of his childhood in Frankfort, Kentucky, and from 1884 to 1889,
he studied art formally with Thomas Noble at the Cincinnati Art School.
In 1889 and 1890, he attended the Art Students League in New York City,
where he was under the tutelage of American Impressionist William Merritt
Chase. The following year, after returning to his native Kentucky, Sawyier
continued his artistic education with Chase’s former student Frank
Duveneck, who had recently opened a teaching studio in the Cincinnati
Art Museum. Known primarily for landscape paintings in watercolor, Sawyier
worked mainly in the vicinity of Frankfort, where he captured river scenes
and images of covered bridges. He aimed to render the effects of light
and atmosphere through a modified impressionistic style. His preliminary
sketches made en plein air, or out-of-doors, were subsequently
finished in the studio, where he often consulted photographs to render
details of these Kentucky scenes that had since changed or disappeared.
Sawyier spent his last four years in New York, living first in Brooklyn
and then in the Catskills, where he died. Jamaica Bay, a waterside
boat scene of Brooklyn, New York, was painted in the artist’s final
years.
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