Price
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Circa :1893-1900
Description :Fading Light Sunset, near Denver Colo,
Clear creek (titled in pencil on back) by Charles Partridge
Adams
Born
Massachusetts, 1858 Died California, 1942, Young
Adams moved to Denver in 1876 at the age of 18. A year later
he began working at the Chain and Hardy bookstore, where he
received encouragement for his artistic interests from Helen
Henderson Chain, who had been a pupil of the noted artist,
George Inness. A three-month camping trip in the Rockies with
another young artist in 1881 resulted in numerous sketches
and paintings. In 1885 he traveled to the east coast, and
visited the studios of George Inness and Worthington Whittredge,
and the following year he visited the California studios of
William Keith and Thomas Hill. Though not isolated from other
artists, Adams was largely self-taught, experimenting with
different styles and techniques, continuing to use those that
best served his vision and his subject matter. His paintings
were first exhibited publicly in Denver in 1886, and he exhibited
work in both local and national shows through 1908. In 1893
Adams established his first Denver studio, and began to paint
watercolors in addition to oils. Since watercolors were less
expensive, they sold readily, and from that time on Adams
painted many watercolors in addition to oils. It is unusual
for an artist to be competent in both mediums; Adams was a
happy exception. In 1900 he began renting a studio in Estes
Park during the summer months, and in 1905 he built a studio
there called "the Sketchbox" on Fish Creek Road, a building
which stood until 2003, when it was demolished for a development.
Many paintings were purchased there by visitors to nearby
Rocky Mountain National Park, and taken home to all parts
of the country. He was so successful that by the end of the
summer he was able to pay off the cost of building "The Sketchbox"
and the land upon which it stood. Besides traveling extensively
in the Colorado Rockies, he traveled to New Mexico, Arizona,
Wyoming--where he painted the Tetons and Yellowstone, Montana--where
he painted Glacier National Park, and British Columbia. An
earlier trip to Louisiana in 1890 and a trip to Europe in
1914 resulted in a few paintings. In 1917 Adams became quite
ill and spent the winter in Los Angeles. He purchased a home
there in 1920, and purchased a second home in Laguna Beach
in 1926. Since paintings of the Colorado mountains were not
in demand in California, he primarily painted coastal scenes
and a few of the California mountains, continuing to paint
some Colorado scenes from memory for sale in Colorado. In
California Adams never achieved the success he had enjoyed
in Colorado, though he continued to paint until his death
in 1942.
External
links
Charlespartridgeadams.com
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