Title: |
Fishermen at Pont Neuf, Paris |
Artist: |
Ulen, Paul Veronese 'Paul Ulen' (Frankfort, Ohio, 1894 - Cleveland, 1976) |
Date: |
c. 1927 - 1928 |
Medium: |
Original Watercolor |
Note: |
Paul Veronese Ulen 'Paul Ulen': "In 1938,
the Ulens began working together at West Technical High School on the west
side of Cleveland, which they transformed into a mini-Slade. It quickly
earned the reputation as the foremost 'drawing academy' in the city.
Year after year, the Ulens' students swept all the top prizes ('Golden Keys')
for drawing at the National Scholastic Art competitions." * |
|
Paul Ulen and his wife, Jean Ulen (1900-1988), were pivotal
figures in the formation of artistic ideas and ideals in Cleveland art
during the first half of the twentieth century. While many artists and
art educators pursued modernist, abstract trends, the Ulens stood as stalwarts
in support of the craftsmanship of representational art. From their positions
as principal instructors at the West Technical High School the Ulens influenced
several generations of future artists. They also regularly exhibited their
own art at the Cleveland Museum of Art and elsewhere during the 1930's
and 1940's. |
|
Following his graduation from high school, Paul Ulen's
first unlikely profession was that of a football player, playing professionally
for two years with Dayton Oakwoods. He then worked five years as a commercial
artist in Dayton, before attending the Cleveland School of Art from 1916
to 1920, and studying under such well known artists as Henry Keller and
Frank Wilcox. He began his teaching career at the West Technical School
in 1921. |
|
Both Paul and Jean Ulen received scholarships to complete
their art education abroad. They first went to London in 1922-23, with
Paul studying at the Slade School, primarily under Henry Tonks (1862-1937).
After teaching in Cleveland for four years, Paul and Jean Ulen returned
to complete their studies at the Slade in 1927 and 1928. At this time they
visited Paris twice, as well as parts of Italy, Belgium and Germany. This
watercolor depicting fishermen at Pont Neuf, Paris, thus probably dates from this period. |
|
Altogether, Paul Ulen taught art to Cleveland students for
forty years. After her husband's death, Jean Ulen catalogued Paul's
drawings and watercolors. This drawing bears her catalogue number, "41-81/3",
on the verso. |
|
"Fishermen at Pont Neuf, Paris"
is one of a grouping of three pen and ink drawings and one watercolor
acquired at the same time. Three deal with scenes depicting the famous
Paris bridge, Pont Neuf, while the other portrays barges on the River
Thames, London. All are unsigned (as are many of Paul Ulen's drawings)
but each bears Jean Ulen's catalogue numbers on the verso. |
Reference: |
* Christopher Bedford and Marianne Beraldi, "Drawn to Perfection: Jean
and Paul Ulen and the Slade School Legacy in Cleveland", Cleveland Artists
Foundation, Cleveland, Ohio. |
Size: |
8 1/2 X 10 1/4 (Sizes in inches are approximate, height preceding width of plate-mark or image.) |
|
Matted with 100% Archival Materials |
Condition: |
Painted upon thick wove paper and with full margins. Unsigned,
as noted, but containing Jean Ulen's catalogue number on the verso.
In very good condition throughout without a trace of staining or fading.
"Fishermen at Pont Neuf, Paris" represents a superb, original example of
the influential art of Paul Veronese Ulen. |
Price: |
Sold - The price is no longer available. |
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