Artist Search
   
a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z 

 Alson Skinner Clark  (1876 - 1949)

Research : Alson Skinner Clark
 

Summary

Examples of his work

 
 

Quick facts

Exhibits - current  
 

Biography*

Museums

 
 

Book references

Magazine references pre-2007

 
 

Discussion board

Signature Examples

 
 
Marketplace : Alson Skinner Clark
 

For sale ads

Auction results*

 
 

Wanted ads

Auctions upcoming for him*  
 

Dealers

Auction sales graphs*

 
 

What's my art worth?

Magazine ads pre-1998*

 
 

Market Alert - Free

 
Lived/Active: California      Known for: landscape and figure painting, illustration, mural
Back to Previous Page

Login for full access
 
View AskART Services










*may require subscription

Available for Alson Skinner Clark:

Quick facts (Styles, locations, mediums, teachers, subjects, geography, etc.) (Alson Clark)

yes

Biographical information (Alson Clark)

yes

Book references (Alson Clark)

61

Magazine references (Alson Clark)

21

Museum references (Alson Clark)

11

Artwork for sale (Alson Clark)

7

Artwork Wanted (Alson Clark)

12

Dealers (Alson Clark)

28

Auction records - upcoming / past (Alson Clark)

230
new entry!

Auction high record price (Alson Clark)

8/7/2007

Signature Examples (Alson Clark)

6

Analysis of auction sales (Alson Clark)

yes

Discussion board entries (Alson Clark)

1

Image examples of works (Alson Clark)

207

Magazine ads pre-1998 (Alson Clark)

41

Please send me Alert Updates for Alson Skinner Clark (free)
What is an alert list?

Ad Code: 2
Alson Skinner Clark
from Auction House Records.
Bridge Builders
Artwork images are copyright of the artist or assignee
This biography from the Archives of AskART:
A landscape painter strongly influenced by the French Impressionists, Alson Skinner Clark spent much of his career traveling and living in foreign countries and then settled in Southern California where he became a plein-air painter, art educator and muralist.  From there, he also traveled extensively in Mexico and the Southwest.

Alson Clark was born in Chicago to a prosperous family comfortably supported by the father's commodities business.  He showed early art talent, which his family encouraged by enrolling him in evening classes at the Art Institute.  They also took him on a two-year trip around the world where he gained much exposure to European art.

Graduating from high school, he again enrolled at the Art Institute but unhappy with his teacher, he left after six months, and in 1896, went to New York to study with William Merritt Chase at the Art Students League.  He also followed Chase to his own school, which opened shortly after, and enrolled in the Chase summer school of plein-air painting at Shinnecock.

In 1898, Alson Clark went to Paris where he was a student for several months at the Academie Carmen, whose director was James McNeill Whistler.  Although Whistler was a difficult, demanding personality, Clark respected his teaching, stayed at the school until it closed, and ever acknowledged Whistler's influence on his Impressionist style.

In 1901, Clark returned to America and married Atta Medora McMullin, whom he met when she modelled for him at Comfort Island, near Watertown, New York, his family's vacation spot.  From 1902 to 1914, they lived in Paris until the war broke out, and during that time, he took up plein-air painting.  The couple also spent time at Giverny in 1910, and Clark painted with his friends Lawton Parker, Guy Rose, and Frederick Frieseke.

Traveling extensively throughout Europe, the Clarks were supported by successful sales from galleries representing his work in New York and Chicago.  Exhibition venues included the National Academy of Design, Pennsylvania Academy, Paris Salon and Art Institute of Chicago.  His work included many landscapes, cityscapes, interiors, and figure studies especially of his wife, who continued to serve as his model.

Although his work ever showed the influence of Whistler, on a summer trip to France in 1907 and two years later to Spain, Clark adopted a much stronger Impressionist style with lighter palette.

In the spring of 1913 the building of the Panama Canal inspired the Clarks to go to the Canal Zone, where construction was nearly complete.  Clark decided he wanted to be a part of the history-making venture, and made connections so that he had nearly open access to the construction site, labor trains and workers.  He painted furiously in horrendous heat to capture on canvas the final construction phase of the Canal and its railroad.  By June, he had many works completed and contacted John Trask, Director of the Fine Arts section of the forthcoming Panama-Pacific International Exposition in San Francisco.  Trask was impressed enough that he gave Clark a room for solo exhibition of eighteen paintings, which put him in the rank of only a few other American artists afforded such status: Frank Duveneck, James Whistler, William Merritt Chase, Childe Hassam and John Singer Sargent. The display of his Panama Canal paintings earned Alson Clark a Bronze Medal at the Panama-Pacific International Exposition in 1915.  Some of the paintings, which were huge, he and his wife had hand-carried out of Europe because of being stranded at the outbreak of World War I.

The Clarks lived with friends in New England and visited Charleston, South Carolina in the winter of 1917, just before the declaration of war by America, and, much impressed by the charm, culture and history of that area did atmospheric paintings including Saint Michael's Cathedral.  Shortly after, at age forty one, Alson Clark enlisted in the Navy and, with language ability, was sent to France as a military photographer.  Doing aerial photography, he dangled from airplanes, an experience that caused him deafness in one ear.

Told that condition could be solved by living in a warm climate, he and his wife, in 1919, went to California for the first time.  Settling in Pasadena and renewing his friendship with Guy Rose, who had returned there in 1914, Alson Clark regained his hearing and was re-invigorated for painting.  Favorite subjects were the Mission San Gabriel and Mission San Juan Capistrano, and he traveled the desert and mountain landscapes in California, the Southwest and Mexico in a rebuilt Dodge truck.  In Mexico, he was especially taken with Cuernavaca and Taxco, doing scenes of the big Taxco Cathedral.

Clark joined Rose as a teacher at Rose's newly formed Stickney Memorial School of Art, and in 1921, when Rose had a stroke, Clark became Director of the School. That same year, in addition to having a son, Alson Jr., Alson Sr. had his first California solo exhibition, which was hosted by Earl Stendahl, then regarded as the most influential dealer in southern California.

In 1925, Alson Clark took up mural painting, which began with a commission from the Pasadena Playhouse to paint the stage curtain, 20 feet by 32 feet.  This job was followed by a series of murals on the history of California for the Carthay Circle Theater in Los Angeles, murals at the Pasadena First Trust and Savings Bank and eight mural-size paintings for a men's club in Los Angeles.  In addition, he accepted decorative commissions for private homes, designing wall paper and painting screens and wall murals.  He also pursued his own painting interests, much of it plein air that combined tight drawing with impressionist strokes.  He was untouched by the debate between modernism and impressionism and stayed with his own approach.

The Clarks continued with their travels, taking a one-year trip across America in 1933 and a final trip to Europe in 1935.  In 1940, the Los Angeles County Museum hosted a self-curated retrospective of his twenty of his paintings.  During World War II, he organized craftsmen to produce military instruments.  Following the War, his health deteriorated, and in March 1949, he had a paralyzing stroke and died a week later.

Source:
Deborah Epstein Solon, 'The Art & Life of Alson Skinner Clark', American Art Review, March 2005
Michael David Zellman, 300 Years of American Art
Edan Hughes, Artists in California, 1786-1940
Martha Severens, The Charleston Renaissance

This biography from the Archives of AskART:
Born in Chicago, Illinois on March 25, 1876, Alson Clark, at age 11 enrolled at the Art Institute of Chicago, continued in New York City at the Art Students League, and with William Merritt Chase and Frank Duveneck.

Late in 1898 he went to Paris for further study at Académie Carmen under James Whistler.  Returning to the U.S. in 1901, he established a studio in Watertown, New York, and then returned to Chicago where in 1903 sales in a successful exhibition allowed for travel in Canada and Europe.

After serving as an aerial photographer in WWI, he settled in southern California where in 1922 he and Guy Rose formed the teaching faculty of Pasadena's Stickney Art School.  During this period he also had a studio in Palm Springs.  He taught landscape classes at Occidental College in Eagle Rock in the late 1930s.

Clark died of a heart attack in Pasadena on March 22, 1949.  One of southern California's most renowned painters, his early portraits and figure studies evince the somber tonalities of Whistler. After painting in Giverny with Guy Rose and other impressionists, by 1910 his palette had begun to brighten considerably.

MEMBER
American AA of Paris; Chicago Society of Artists; LA AA; Salmagundi Club; SWA; Calif PM. Exh: Paris Salon, 1901; Louisiana Purchase Expo (St Louis), 1904 (bronze medal); AIC, 1906 (solo); PPIE, 1915 (bronze medal); Calif. Art Club, 1920-30; LACMA, 1922, 1924 (prizes), 1929; Southwest Museum (LA), 1923 (grand prize); Stendahl Gallery (LA), 1923; San Diego FA Gallery, 1923, 1937 (solo); Painters of the West (LA), 1924; Pasadena Art Inst., 1925, 1931 (2nd prize), 1933 (1st prize); Pasadena Society of Artists, 1927; Pasadena Public Library, 1928; LA AA, 1937; GGIE, 1939; Calif. WC Society, 1940.

COLLECTIONS
Victoria & Albert Museum (London); AIC; LACMA; Muskegon (MI) Art Gallery; San Diego Museum; Watertown (NY) Public Library; Gardena High School; CSL; Pasadena Community Theatre; First Nat'l Bank of Pasadena (mural); Univ. Club (Pasadena); Irvine (CA) Museum; Women's Athletic Club (LA); Fleischer Museum (Scottsdale); Orange Co. (CA) Museum; Cathay Circle Theatre, LA (murals).
Source:
Edan Hughes, "Artists in California, 1786-1940"
Who's Who in America 1918; Who's Who in California 1928; California Impressionism (Wm. Gerdts & Will South); American Art Annual 1933; Who's Who in American Art 1936-47; Artists of the American West (Samuels); Dictionnaire des Peintres, Sculpteurs, Dessinateurs, et Graveurs (Bénézit, E); Dictionary of American Painters, Sculptors & Engravers (Fielding, Mantle); Southern California Artists (Nancy Moure); Plein Air Painters (Ruth Westphal); NY Times, 3-24-1949 (obituary).
Nearly 20,000 biographies can be found in Artists in California 1786-1940 by Edan Hughes and is available for sale ($150). For a full book description and order information please click here.

Biography from William A. Karges Fine Art - Carmel:
Born in Chicago, Alson Clark enrolled at the Art Students League at an early age, following with further study at the Art Students League in New York, and in Paris. With his success in Chicago, Clark was afforded many years of European travel and study.

Returning to the U.S. in 1919, Clark settled in Pasadena where he, along with Guy Rose, taught at the Stickney School in Pasadena. Clark died in 1949, and is remembered as one of southern California’s finest early Impressionists.

** If you discover credit omissions or have additional information to add, please let us know at registrar@AskART.com.


Alson Clark is also mentioned in these AskART essays:
The California Art Club
Impressionists Pre 1940
San Francisco Panama-Pacific Exhibition 1915
California Painters



Explore Other Interesting Artists:
Edgar Payne
Maurice Braun
Franz Bischoff
William Wendt
Granville Redmond
Hanson Puthuff
Anna Hills
Benjamin Brown
Percy Gray
Selden Gile
Paul Lauritz
Carl Sammons
Guy Rose
George Gardner Symons
Marion Wachtel
Maynard Dixon
Armin Hansen
Joseph Kleitsch
Elmer Wachtel
William Ritschel
Joseph Raphael
Alfred Mitchell
John Gamble
Paul Grimm
Birger Sandzen
Emile Gruppe
Theodore Wores
Dana Bartlett
Millard Sheets
Charles Reiffel
Jean Mannheim
William Posey Silva
Guy Carleton Wiggins
Carl Oscar Borg
Emil Kosa
Charles Fries
Hayley Lever
Albert Bierstadt
William Keith
Joseph Henry Sharp
Anthony Thieme
Clarence Hinkle
Phil Dike
Orrin White
Emil Carlsen
Thomas Hill
Conrad Buff
Jules Pages
George Brandriff
Chauncey Foster Ryder



See Artists Appearing in the Same Auctions:
Edgar Payne
Maurice Braun
Granville Redmond
Franz Bischoff
Paul Lauritz
Marion Wachtel
Robert Wood
William Wendt
William Keith
Emil Kosa
Paul Grimm
Alfred Mitchell
Millard Sheets
George Gardner Symons
Hanson Puthuff
Percy Gray
Jean Mannheim
John Gamble
Angel Espoy
Carl Sammons
Carl Oscar Borg
Dedrick Stuber
Elmer Wachtel
Thomas Hill
Orrin White
Paul Dougherty
Anna Hills
Emile Gruppe
Maynard Dixon
Charles Reiffel
Dana Bartlett
Ralph Holmes
William Ritschel
Benjamin Brown
Milford Zornes
Maurice Logan
Gunnar Widforss
Conrad Buff
Donna Schuster
Selden Gile
Charles Fries
Joseph Kleitsch
Armin Hansen
Gordon Coutts
William Posey Silva
William Clapp
Christian Von Schneidau
Mischa Askenazy
Fremont Ellis
Fred Grayson Sayre

  go to top home | site map | site terms | AskART services & subscriptions | contact | about us
  copyright © 2000-2012 AskART all rights reserved ® AskART and Artists' Bluebook are registered trademarks

  A |  B |  C |  D-E |  F-G |  H |  I-K |  L |  M |  N-P |  Q-R |  S |  T-V |  W-Z  
  frequently searched artists 1, 2, more...  
  art appraisals, art for sale, auction records, misc artists