231
231
oil on canvas 20 h × 24 w in (51 × 61 cm)
estimate: $2,000–3,000
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Signed to lower left ‘R. Emmett Owen’.
Robert Emmett Owen 1878–1957
Robert Emmett Owen was a successful artist best known for his Impressionist views of rural landscapes. His color-filled paintings capture the moods and seasonal splendor of the New England countryside.
Owen began his art training at the Drury Academy in his home town of North Adams, Massachusetts. In 1897, he contributed pen and ink drawings to Life Magazine, initiating what would be a long and productive career as an illustrator. He received a scholarship to study at the Eric Pape School of Art in Boston in 1898. Owen achieved further success from his commercial work, selling drawings to the Boston Globe, National Magazine, Brown Brook Magazine, Scribners Magazine, and Harper's Monthly.
In 1901, Owen moved to New York and continued his training at the Art Students League, the Chase School, and the National Academy of Design. Among his instructors were Frederick Mulhaupt and Leonard Ochtman. In New York, Owen became aware of the art of leading American Impressionists and began to create works that reflected the influence of Willard Metcalf, J. Alden Weir, and Childe Hassam.
After nine years in New York, Owen moved to Bagnall, Connecticut in order to paint landscape subjects directly. In the period that followed, he exhibited at the Greenwich Society of Artists, the National Academy of Design, and the Connecticut Academy of Fine Arts.
His work was well liked by critics and the public, and he received a number of important commissions from private clients for both murals and oils. Owen returned to New York in 1920 and opened a gallery on Madison Avenue, called the Robert Emmett Owen New England Landscape Gallery. The gallery was closed at the start of World War II after a successful 21 years. Owen died in 1957.
Auction Results Robert Emmett Owen