Emile A. Gruppé’s Tropical Interlude

Emile A. Gruppe - Flowers in a Courtyard, Florida

Emile A. Gruppé (1896-1978), "Flowers in a Courtyard, Florida," ca. 1968, oil on canvas, 30 x 36 inches

Carol Lowrey

For many American artists who liked to paint outdoors, winter was considered an ideal time to translate the effects of frigid air and cool sunlight into paint.  The Gloucester-based painter Emile A. Gruppé (1896-1978) followed this line of thinking for a good part of his career; indeed, during the 1930s and ‘40s, he typically spent his winters in Vermont, creating vigorously rendered snow scenes featuring mountains roads and covered bridges (see lower right).  However, later on, he decided to change direction, heading south, instead of north, for his annual winter vacation.  His destination was Florida, a seasonal retreat for American artists since the late 1800s, when Martin Johnson Heade, George Inness and Thomas Moran began to frequent its sunny shores.  They were followed in the twentieth century by the likes of John Singer Sargent, Ernest Lawson, Jane Peterson, Milton Avery and many others who were drawn to Florida’s exotic, unspoiled landscape and warm climate.  Gruppé’s connection with the Sunshine State got underway in about 1951, when he began spending his winters in the resort city of Naples, teaching at the gallery-studio of the McNichols family and conducting painting classes on the beach.  He eventually acquired a home in Naples that was (not surprisingly, in view of his love of the maritime environment) close to the water. As well as providing him with a respite from the bitter chill of Massachusetts, Gruppé’s sojourns in Florida gave him the opportunity to engage in his favorite pursuits––fishing, gardening and painting. Read the rest of this entry »

Emile A. Gruppé: “You Paint the Way You’re Made”

Emile A. Gruppe conducting an outdoor painting class in Gloucester, photograph courtesy Emilie Gruppe Alexander.

Emile A. Gruppe conducting an outdoor painting class in Gloucester, photograph courtesy Emilie Gruppe Alexander.

Carol Lowrey

Emile A. Gruppé (1896-1978) painted views of Gloucester’s harbor at all times of day, taking great delight in conveying aspects of light and air, as well as a sense of place.  Art historians (myself included) refer to him as a Regionalist painter whose work was informed by as Realism, Tonalism and Impressionism.  However, from what I know of Mr. Gruppé––through reading his books on color and brushwork and from speaking with his daughter and colleagues such as Charles Movalli––he would quickly have dismissed these art historical labels and our tendency to categorize artists by their style.  This isn’t surprising in view of the fact that Gruppé had a reputation as a boisterous extrovert whose goal, besides creating a beautiful work of art, was to infuse his paintings with aspects of his own character––hence his advice to his students to “have a good time when you paint” (see photo at left).  As he informed his readers in Gruppé on Color, good art wasn’t just a matter of technique and motif; rather it was

personality, too.  You paint the way you’re made.  And the viewer, looking at your pictures, is interested because he senses your mind and emotions at work . . . If you’re bold and outgoing, your work will show it.  If you’re small-minded and grasping, your work will show that too. Read the rest of this entry »

Charles Kaelin and The Aesthetic Appeal of Motif No. 1

By Carol Lowrey
On a recent trip to Boston’s North Shore, I spent some time in Rockport, MA, described by the painter Harrison Cady as “the quaintest port on the entire New England coast.” For art historians––particularly those of us interested in American art colonies of the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries––visits to locales in which our favorite artists painted are essential components of the research process, giving us greater insight into their choice of imagery and the myriad ways in which they responded to their immediate environment. With this in mind, I headed straight to Motif No. 1 (above), a small lobster shack on a stone jetty that juts out into the quiet waters of Rockport’s inner harbor. Located on Bearskin Neck, the structure is painted a deep red; its simple and unassuming but in terms of the artistic tradition of Cape Ann it has iconic significance, for it’s been said (by Cady, among others) to have been the subject of more paintings that any other building in America, attracting the brushes of artists and art students alike.*

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