To celebrate the restoration of the room at Bush-Holley House that
served at various times as the studio of Childe Hassam, John Twachtman
and Elmer MacRae, the Greenwich Historical Society will present an
exhibition exploring the changing concept of the artist's studio.
Representations of an American art student's Parisian garret, William
Merritt Chase's opulent Tenth Street studio in New York, Dorothy
Ochtman's view of her father in the studio they shared in their Cos Cob
home and the repurposed farm sheds used by artists in Old Lyme: these
and other paintings will suggest the wide range of spaces in which
turn-of-the-century artists worked and will provide a cultural context
for the restored studio.
The studio originally doubled as bedroom and workspace for its
occupants. To augment the natural light from windows on the northern
and eastern exposures, the owners, the Holley family, added a dormer
around 1900. Illuminated by windows on three sides, the room offered
views of the abundant gardens behind the house, the millpond to one side
and the bustling harbor across the street. Now when you visit the
Bush-Holley house, you can more easily imagine the vistas the artists
enjoyed.
In addition to depictions of American artists' studios in the
nineteenth and twentieth centuries, the exhibition presents the models
for Childe Hassam's work in Cos Cob and a sampling of work done outside
the studio in the environs by Hassam, John H. Twachtman and Elmer
MacRae. A complementary exhibition, Historic Artists' Homes &
Studios, on loan from Chesterwood (the home and studio of Lincoln
Memorial sculptor Daniel Chester French), will feature photographs that
focus on the fascinating and eclectic living and workspaces of famous
American artists including (among others) N.C. Wyeth, Jackson Pollock
and Augustus Saint-Gaudens.
A Good Light: The Artist's Studio in Cos Cob and Beyond will be on
exhibition from October 3, 2012 to January 6, 2013. Wednesday through
Sunday, Noon to 4:00 pm. Members: free; nonmembers: $10; seniors and
students $8 The Greenwich Historical Society Storehouse Gallery is
located on 39 Strickland Road in Cos Cob. www.greenwichhistory.org.
Area information www.visitfairfieldcountyct.com
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