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.
May 22, 2008




