72
Charles S. Chapman
(American, 1879-1962)
Tradition
Estimate: $8,000-$12,000
Sold
$13,000
Live Auction
American Art and Pennsylvania Impressionists
Size
23 3/4 x 47 1/8 in.
Description
Charles S. Chapman
(American, 1879-1962)
Tradition
oil on canvas laid to board
signed Charles S. Chapman, N.A. (lower left); also inscribed (on the reverse)
23 3/4 x 47 1/8 in.
Condition
Framed: 30 x 53 in.
Signature
signed Charles S. Chapman, N.A. (lower left); also inscribed (on the reverse)
Provenance
Provenance:Private Collection, Pennsylvania.Exhibited:(Possibly) New York, The National Arts Club, "Members Annual Exhibition of Painting and Sculpture," 1940 (recipient of the Allen Butler Talcott Prize for Landscape).Lot Note:Raised in upstate New York, Charles S. Chapman was educated at the Ogdensburg Free Academy before pursuing formal study at the Pratt Institute, William Merritt Chase's Chase School of Art, and the Art Students League in New York City. In addition to his academic training, Chapman's experiences in a Canadian logging camp (1902-03), where he worked as a culler, exposed him to the raw beauty and arduous labor of the North American landscape. However, it was his friendship with Frederic Remington that proved particularly formative, with Remington urging him to paint personally resonant subject matter. This influence is exemplified in his illustration work–for Century, Scribner's, Pictorial Review, and Zane Grey's tales of western adventure–and in notable mural commissions, including a thirty-by-thirty-foot landscape of the Grand Canyon for the American Museum of Natural History.Tradition, the recipient of the National Arts Clubs's Allen Butler Talcott Prize for Landscape in 1940, recalls the guidance he received from Remington. The work depicts several generations of an indigenous family along a placid waterway. The patriarch has risen from his seat in the canoe to create a pictographic rendering of the group upon the cliff face. The detail underscores the role of creation in preserving cultural memory and transmitting familial identity across generations. Both grounded and unromanticized, Tradition is reminiscent of Remington's depictions of the American West. In this context, it serves as a testament to cultural continuity, to self-definition, and to the enduring articulation of heritage within a community.