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Warren Newcombe's "New England Meeting House" is an original lithograph printed in four colors upon wove paper and with full margins as published in an edition of one hundred impressions in New York by th American Artists in 1937. This impression is signed and by Warren Newcombe in pencil along the lower margin. "New England Meeting House" is a fine, original example of the lithographic landscape art created by the American artist, Warren Newcombe. |
Title: | New England Meeting House |
Artist: | Newcombe, Warren (Waltham, MA., 1894 - Los Angeles, 1960) |
Date: | 1937 |
Medium: | Original Lithograph (Four Colour Printing) |
Publisher: | American Artists Group, New York |
Note: | Warren Newcombe is possibly one of the most 'seen' artists of all time. During his prolific career as a special and visual effects designer and painter in Hollywood he created the sets for a staggering 175 films between 1925 and 1957. These include such great classics as 'Doctor Jekyll and Mr. Hyde' (1941), 'Tortilla Flat' (1942), 'Easter Parade' (1948), 'Annie Get your Gun' (1950), 'Showboat', 'An American in Paris' (1951) and 'Singin' in the Rain' (1952). He also acted as the Director of Set Painting for 'The Wizard of Oz'. Warren Newcombe received Academy Awards for Special Effects in both 1945 and 1948. |
During this time Warren Newcombe also produced a number of outstanding paintings and original lithographs. He had studied art in Boston at the Normal Art School under Joseph De Camp and graduated in 1914. He moved to New York City shortly thereafter and made his living as a commercial artist. Newcombe first appeared in Los Angeles in 1918 and in 1924 he became associated with D. W. Griffith and his Mamaroneck studio. He began his long association with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Studios the following year. | |
Newcombe's paintings and lithographs cover a wide range of themes from landscapes to still lifes and figure studies. His original lithographs today are in many public collections including the Frederick R. Weisman Art Museum, Minneapolis, and the Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art, Kansas City. | |
In 1937 the artist was commissioned by the American Artists Group of New York to contribute two original lithographs, a black and white work entitled, Anna Karenina in Hollywood, and a four colour lithograph entitled, New England Meeting House. On the original presentation folder the publisher wrote, | |
"Mr. Newcombe has chosen to make a color lithograph, 'New England Meeting House'. It is a complicated technique presenting many problems in the printing and registry of the proofs on the stone, in the separation and manipulation of colors. And he has solved the problem with conspicuous success. There are four separate stones, and thus four successive printings for each completed print. One is the black or key-stone, the second is for grey-blue ink, the third for grey-sepia ink and the fourth for blue-green ink. The final result is a beautiful representation of a typical New England Meeting House (at Concord, Massachusetts). He has managed to convey some of the dignity and beauty of this specimen of a great period in American architecture. He has suggested a flavor and atmosphere that sums up both its past and its present. The whole scene is rendered with a fine painter-like feeling at once vigorous and subtle." | |
The American Artists Group: During the years of the Great Depression the American Artists Group was a leading publisher of original lithographs and woodcuts. Artists such as Warren Newcombe, Alan Lewis, Emil Ganso and many others were commissioned for works of art. Prints commissioned by the AAG were usually not hand-signed nor numbered in specific editions. Warren Newcombe's New England Meeting House was one of the few signed and numbered prints issued by this publisher. | |
Edition: | Limited Edition of one hundred impressions. |
Size: | 9 1/4 X 13 1/2 (Sizes in inches are approximate, height preceding width of plate-mark or image.) |
Matted with 100% Archival Materials | |
Buy Now | Price: $395.00 US |
Condition: | Printed on wove paper and with full margins as published in New York in 1937. Signed by Warren Newcombe in pencil and numbered, "40/100". Containing very faint traces of matte burning in the outer margins else a finely printed impression and in excellent condition throughout. This original colour lithograph represents a fine example of the art of Warren Newcombe. |
Important Information: | The artist biographies, research and or information pertaining to all the original works of art posted on our pages has been written and designed by Greg & Connie Peters exclusively for our site, (www.artoftheprint.com). Please visit us regularly to view the latest artworks offered for sale. We will soon be posting an update of our most recent research and include the biographical and historical information pertaining to our next collection of original works of art created by artists throughout the centuries. We hope you found the information you were looking for and that it has been beneficial. Our Gallery, (Art of the Print / www.artoftheprint.com) guarantees the authenticity of every work of art we sell 100%. Full documentation and certification is provided. We offer a wide selection of international fine art dating from the early Renaissance to the contemporary art period. |
Original Lithograph (Four Colour Printing) by the American artist, Warren Newcombe.
New England Meeting House |
View other original works of art by Warren Newcombe..
Newcombe, Warren (Waltham, MA., 1894 - Los Angeles, 1960) | ||||||
# | Image | Title & Artist | Medium | Date | Notes | - |
01- | Anna Karenina in Hollywood by Warren Newcombe | Original Lithograph | 1937 | Signed by Warren Newcombe in the stone with his monogramme in the lower right corner. | Sold | |
02.- | New England Meeting House by Warren Newcombe | Original Lithograph (Four Colour Printing) | 1937 | Signed by Warren Newcombe in pencil and numbered, "40/100". |
View other original works of art published by the "American Artists Group", New York.
American Artists Group, New York | |||||||
# | Image | Title & Artist | Artist Info | Medium | Date | Notes | - |
01.- | A Summer Day by Rudolph Ruzicka | Rudolph Ruzicka (Czechoslovakia, 1883 - Vermont, 1978) | Original Wood Engraving | 1936 | Signed with the artist's 'R' monogram within the block to the lower right. | Sold | |
02.- | Anna Karenina in Hollywood by Warren Newcombe | Warren Newcombe (Waltham, Ma., 1894 - Los Angeles, 1960) | Original Lithograph | 1937 | Signed by Warren Newcombe in the stone with his monogramme in the lower right corner. | Sold | |
03.- | Fording The Stream by Barbara Latham | Barbara Latham (Walpole, Massachusetts, 1896 - Taos, New Mexico, 1989) | Original Wood Engraving | 1936 | Signed and dated by Barbara Latham in the block to the lower right. | Sold | |
04.- | New England Meeting House by Warren Newcombe | Warren Newcombe (Waltham, Ma., 1894 - Los Angeles, 1960) | Original Lithograph (Four Colour Printing) | 1937 | Signed by Warren Newcombe in pencil and numbered, "40/100". | ||
05.- | Sea Gulls by Leo John Meissner (Leo Meissner) | Leo John Meissner (Hamtramck, Michigan, 1895 - Monhegan, Main, 1977) | Original Wood Engraving | 1936 | Signed and dated by Leo Meissner in the block to the lower left. | ||
06.- | Studio Mirror by Emil Ganso | Emil Ganso (Halberstadt, Germany, 1895 - New York, 1941) | Original Chiaroscuro Woodcut | 1936 | Signed and dated by Emil Ganso in the block (lower right margin). | ||
07.- | Sunday Afternoon by Julius John Lankes (J. J. Lankes) | Julius John Lankes 'J. J. Lankes' (Buffalo, Ny, 1884 - Durham, Nc, 1960) | Original Woodcut | 1936 | Signed and dated in the block by J. J. Lankes to the lower left. | Sold | |
08.- | Swinging The Gate by Arthur Allen Lewis | Arthur Allen Lewis (Mobile, Alabama, 1873 - New York City, 1957) | Original Wood Engraving Printed in Colour | 1936 | Signed in the block by Arthur Allen Lewis. Edition of 200 impressions. |
View Our Selection of Original American Art of the Depression Era (c. 1930 - c. 1945)
American Art of the Depression Era (c. 1930 - c. 1945) | ||
The American Art of the Depression Era directory contains a listing of original works of art from the Depression decade of the 1930’s and into the early 1940’s created by American artists. These pages also include information about the art publishers, associations, clubs, groups and societies located in major cities throughout the United States, such as Boston, Brooklyn, Chicago, Cincinnati, Cleveland, Buffalo, Wichita, Philadelphia, Rochester, San Francisco, Washington D.C. and elsewhere. Many of these organizations provided an opportunity for American artists to work and create original works of art during the Great Depression. A few of the art associations and clubs active during this period that are discussed in this directory include the American Artists Group, the Associated American Artists, New York, the Buffalo Print Club, the Chicago Society of Etchers, the Lone Star Printmakers, the Prairie Print Makers, the Print Club of Cleveland, the Print Club of Philadelphia, the Print Club of Rochester, the Society of American Etchers, the Indiana Society of Printmakers, the Society of Washington D.C. Artists and the Syracuse Print Club. | ||
01.- | American Art of the Depression Era - Page 1 (Artist Index (A to E) | American Art of the Depression Era dating from 1930 to 1945 (Art of The Print / www.artoftheprint.com - Artist Index: A to E): The following four pages contain a listing of original American etchings, lithographs woodcuts, serigraphs, watercolors, drawings, linocuts and wood engravings from the Depression decade of the 1930’s and into the early 1940’s. Despite the dire economic times publishers of original prints continued to survive and successfully raise revenue for the artists as well as making original art affordable during the Great Depression years. Listed on the first page of the 'American Art of the Depression Era' directory are over fifty original works of art created by American artists such as, George Elbert Burr, his etchings, Little Canyon, Arizona and Morraine Park were both commissioned by The Print Connoisseur, while his Evening, Arizona was published by The Brooklyn Society of Etchers. Also, works such as, Kenneth Ballantyne's original linocut, Wood Nymphs appeared in The Colophon in New York in 1931. George Elmer Browne’s The Fishing Fleet and Adolf Dehn’s Threshing Near Kilkenny published by the Associated American Artists (A.A.A.), are other outstanding examples of early prints from this decade. |
02.- | American Art of the Depression Era - Page 2 (Artist Index (F to J) | American Art of the Depression Era dating from 1930 to 1945 (Art of The Print / www.artoftheprint.com - Artist Index: F to J): The second page of this directory also contains a list of over fifty original works of art created during the Great Depression years by American artists. One of the more interesting aspects of art of the Depression is how seldom the actual misery and privation of the decade is depicted. On this page, for example, only Hugo Gellert’s original lithograph, Primary Accumulation, protests the contemporary state of affairs. The visual arts (including films) set out to divert and entertain. Perhaps for artists an almost sure recipe for failure would have been to remind the average man of his sorry condition. On the contrary most areas of the entertainment industries thrived. The art of Kenneth Hartwell is an excellent example. His lithographs of circus acrobats, jugglers and clowns and of the music, dancing and comedy of the Burlesque shows are worlds into themselves. Gazing at his imagery the viewer is granted a temporary reprieve from the real world. |
03.- | American Art of the Depression Era - Page 3 (Artist Index (K to P) | American Art of the Depression Era dating from 1930 to 1945 (Art of The Print / www.artoftheprint.com - Artist Index: K to P): Even in a Depression the sense of a continuation of normal activities persists. In Joseph Margulies, New England Granny the subject does exactly what grannies do best as she contentedly sits in her rocker, sewing. Philip Parsons depicts a joyful family reunion in Home for Christmas and Henry Pitz depicts the dignity of work in his monumental art deco style in both Maine Fisherman and Man Against the Sky. Purely by alphabetical accident, page 3 also contains two of my favorite night scenes: Alan Lewis’ delightful color woodcut, Swinging the Gate and Martin Lewis’ renowned Night in New York. This famous etching was published by the Chicago Society of Etchers in 1932. |
04.- | American Art of the Depression Era - Page 4 (Artist Index (R to Z) | American Art of the Depression Era dating from 1930 to 1945 (Art of The Print / www.artoftheprint.com - Artist Index: R to Z): Like the previous three pages, page four of this directory provides a full variety of Depression era themes and techniques. Stark realities of the times are provided by W. P. Robinson (Abandoned Farm) and Isadore Weiner (Gardening). In contrast are pieces like John W. Winkler’s playful landscape, Rae Lakes, California and the fine animal studies by Clarence Zuelch. Two magnificent drypoints by Albert Sterner -- Meditation and The Promised Land – will also be found listed on that page. In particular, The Promised Land seems like a potent symbol of man’s journey through the decade of the Great Depression. In total, there are over two hundred works of original art created by American artists from the Depression decade of the 1930’s and into the early 1940’s listed in the 'American Art of the Depression' directory. |
Selected Directories in our Gallery (Art of The Print / www.artoftheprint.com), with a focus on the area of interest for this original work of art. | |
Art of the Print / www.artoftheprint.com sells international fine art. Our collection consists of original paintings, watercolors, drawings, and original prints, such as etchings, engravings, lithographs, woodcuts, silk-screens, aquatints, mezzotints, linocuts, monoprints, and other mediums of original art. All of these works of art have been created by prominent and established painters, illustrators, watercolour artists and printmakers from around the world. The art in our gallery ranges from the early Renaissance period to the modern and contemporary art period. You can view other original artworks similar to the subject under discussion on this page listed in the following art directories. | |
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Fine 20th Century Artist Index | The '20th Century artist' directory contains a listing of original works of art created by watercolor artists, painters, illustrators and graphic artists from around the world. These original works date from 1900 to the present day. |
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American Artist Index | The 'American Artist' directory contains a listing of original works of art created by artists from the United States of America, and or art with an American theme. These artworks date from the 17th century to the 20th century. |
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Architecture in Art Index | Our 'Architecture' directory of International artists focuses on original art from the 17th century to the present time, with depictions of architectural art, monuments and ornamental sculpture. |
Landscapes, Seascapes, City & Town Views Art Index | This directory contains a selection of original works of art with a focus on landscapes, seascapes, city views, town views and farm views from around the world. These artworks date from the 16th century to the 20th century. |
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