Bert Gallery Updates New Inventory

Our Blog works like a community bulletin board for the gallery, where we post the latest Bert Gallery happenings and news. We welcome your questions about our exhibits, programs, events or general art questions at info@bertgallery.com.

Inventory Spotlight: George Whitaker (1840-1916)


George Whitaker (1840-1916)
Visit Bert Gallery and see the new George Whitaker that is now at the gallery. This oil on canvas is 22″ x 28″, is in the Barbizon style and signed in the lower right-hand corner. It appears to be a landscape of New Hampshire. It is in excellent condition. Price is $4,000.

About George Whitaker: Rejecting Paris for the Simple Life and Millet & the Barbizon School
George Whitaker’s excellence in art is equaled by his contribution to the development of a Rhode Island art community. He was instrumental in recognizing the need for an organization to nurture and support the talented artists within the state. The Providence Art Club was formally instituted by Whitaker and his friends E. M. Bannister and Charles Walter Stetson. The club provided not only a formal association with fellow artists but a public forum in which to present his work. It is within this environment that Whitaker developed into a leading figure in the community. His writings for the A.E Club and other journals show a keen sense and aesthetic appreciation. References to this man are invariably prefaced by the respected title, “The Dean of Rhode Island Artists.”

Born in Fall River, Massachusetts, Whitaker spent his student years in New York. While still in his youth, his talent was recognized by the renowned landscape artist George Inness and others associated with the Hudson River School. With this encouragement the young artist went to study in France under DePaal. There his painting became heavily influenced by Barbizon painters of Fontainbleu, especially the talented Francois Millet.

Whitaker’s artistic inquisitiveness prodded him to explore new subjects and styles. At one point he flirted with the impressionistic style by loosening his brush work, but the “pastoral quietude” (Goodyear) created by Barbizon imagery remained his most constant style.

Whitaker’s works range from local landscapes to European scenes such as his Venetian views. His works go beyond the technical to show an original sense of composition. As one critic stated: “to the true art lover his pictures seem like the refreshing oasis in the desert of stereotype nature copies.”

The acclaims in Whitaker’s lifetime are impressive. Besides his involvement with the Providence Art Club, he was the first teacher of oil paintings at Rhode Island School of Design. Many of his paintings can be seen today at C.G. Sloan & Co. in Washington, D.C., Kresge Art Center, Michigan, Raydon Gallery, New York and locally at the Providence Art Club, Rhode Island School of Design Museum and the Rhode Island Historical Society.

Filed under: New Inventory — Bert Gallery @ 5:17 pm

May 22, 2008

Inventory Spotlight: Jeff Margolin


Every week new works of art come to the gallery and are inventoried and photographed. Some pieces go into scheduled theme exhibits while others are installed in the Studio Collection. To give you an insider’s view at some of these pieces here is a Bert Gallery Inventory Spotlight!

Jeff Margolin, Terracotta Covered Pot
18″ x 9″ x 9″, $850.

Jeff Margolin has worked for over twenty-five years to hone his prodigious technique with porcelain and terra cotta. Margolin’s labor intensive process consists of building the forms up with strips of clay and then meticulously carving into the damp clay before the piece is burnished and fired. An evolution of his forms can be seen in Terracotta Covered Pot, in which the carvings have been integrated into the sculpture. Furthermore, Margolin uses the detailed carvings to complement and echo the gentle curves of the flawlessly smooth surface making “a convincing transition between rough and smooth,” (Channing Gray, Providence Journal 2000).

Traditional pots such as this exemplifies Margolin’s technical proficiency, however his talent for combining sculpture and carving is undeniable. “Margolin’s porcelain and terracotta sculptures make for a fascinating show of form and craft,” (Providence Journal Review, May 2000). Margolin’s work embodies the life and energy of nature, melding technical mastery with mature artistic passion. Margolin has taught ceramics at both University of California at Berkeley and at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. His work has been shown at galleries in Rhode Island, California, and New Mexico.

Margolin’s Process
Margolin constructs his pots either on a wheel or by hand, then draws a design on the clay with a needle and continually carves the design as the pieces dry. He then burnished them with a stone and fires them using a variety of methods. Margolin states that he attempts to “create a sense that the surface of the pieces are a thin skin with the cared interior breaking through at critical points. Using a low-fire clay, Margolin places human hair and sawdust into the porcelain, which creates veins in the surface. This gives the porcelain fine surface details that look completely natural within the porcelain. Because his work is low-fired, his pieces can be scratched, which also gives them an extra delicacy, and require the dame care one would afford a painted canvas.

Filed under: New Inventory — Bert Gallery @ 11:14 am

December 20, 2007

Inventory Spotlight: S. R. Burleigh


Every week new works of art come to the gallery, they are inventoried and photographed. Some paintings go into scheduled theme exhibits while others are installed in the Studio Collection. Here is a sneak preview of some of the paintings that are new to inventory.

S.R. Burleigh (1853-1931), Crèche, $2,200.

This nativity scene was produced and hand painted by S.R. Burleigh. An artist of many talents, Burleigh was involved with a small toyshop on Benefit Street. It is unclear if this crèche was produced for the toyshop or as a private gift. There are seven figures and seven animals – all are hand stamped on each piece.

Biography of S. R. Burleigh (1853-1931)
Burleigh spent his boyhood years in Little Compton. He married Sarah Drew Wilkinson in 1875. With her encouragement, he became a full-time artist at age 25. Sarah’s wealth enabled Burleigh to study painting in Paris with Paul Laurens in the first years of their marriage. Upon his return to Providence in the 1880′s, Burleigh became an active member of the Providence Art Club. In addition to being a well-loved Providence artist, he was one of the most prominent civic leaders in the city.

Burleigh’s watercolors can be described as reminiscent of George Inness. Burleigh was known for perfection of line, exquisite balance, delicate and sensitive use of color and the overall poetic feeling of his painting. Mabel Ducasse, art critic for the Providence Journal, wrote of his 1929 Providence Art Club show: “There is a quality in his work which suggests that of the masters of the Renaissance when they chose to employ line and wash. It is character — born of perfect certainty of touch and flowing freedom of line. It is seldom achieved by modern watercolorists, who most often mistake the function of their medium, which is that of drawing rather than painting.”

Burleigh earned national recognition when he won the Bronze medal at the St. Louis Exposition in 1904, and the open prize from the Buffalo Society of Artists in 1913. By 1929 he was considered one of the country’s leading watercolorists. Many prestigious art institutions chose to exhibit his works, solidifying his distinguished reputation. Burleigh was a multifaceted artist, an accomplished builder and furniture designer as well as a painter. Along with fellow artists C. Stetson and J. Aldrich he was responsible for the construction of the Fleur de Lys building on Thomas Street, the first building ever built specifically to house artist studios. The painter H.A. Dyer wrote, “S.R. Burleigh has perhaps done more to make Providence fond of painting than any other source.” (1914). Burleigh’s personal charm attracted many friends and patrons to his art, but, more importantly, he will be best remembered for his keen artistic sense in decorative design, color and composition.

Filed under: New Inventory — Bert Gallery @ 11:29 am

December 6, 2007

Inventory Spotlight: H. A. Dyer


Every week new works of art come to the gallery, they are inventoried and photographed. some paintings go into scheduled theme exhibits while others are installed in the Studio Collection. To give you a sneak preview of some of the paintings that are new to inventory we will send out this e-mail blast to keep you up to date!

H. A. Dyer (1872-1943)
Gouache, 15″ x 11″
Sorrento, Italy
Port Town in Naples, Southern Italy

Few Rhode Island artists enjoyed the popularity and patronage that H. Anthony Dyer has in present day and during his lifetime. A descendant of the art inclined Hoppin family, Dyer graduated from Brown University and Rhode Island School of Design. No one instructor dominated in Dyer’s tutelage, rather it was the school of the “Old-style English method of watercolor painting” which the artist adopted. He was very adept at using both gouache and transparent washes on gray/earth toned watercolor sheets. This technique the artist considered paramount to his successfully rendered watercolors. The artist was quite successful in selling his work at annual Providence Art Club and Tilden and Thurber shows. Yearly sojourns to Italy, France, and England provided him with popular subject matter for Rhode Islanders unable to travel abroad. Dyer exhibited throughout the country during his lifetime, including such locations as Cleveland, Chicago, Denver, Rochester, Syracuse, Fall River, Madison and Providence. Today his works can be found at the Providence Art Club, Rhode Island Historical Society, Rhode Island School of Design and Corcoran Gallery.

Filed under: New Inventory — Bert Gallery @ 11:19 am

November 28, 2007

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