hobson-pittman-american-1899-1972-i-schubert-s-unfinished-symphony-i
Lot 267
Hobson Pittman (American, 1899-1972), Schubert's Unfinished Symphony
Lot Details & Additional Photographs
Oil on Masonite, 1940s, signed at lower right, presented in a period frame with brass gallery plaques.

Board 20 x 30 in.; Frame dimensions 27 x 37 in.

From a Private Collection, Eastern North Carolina

From the Capeheart Collection, assembled by Homer Earl Capehart, inspired by musical compositions.

Homer Capehart was a leader of the radio and phonograph industry and a U.S. senator from Indiana.

Sherry Britton, a noted burlesque performer, actress and cabaret singer, New York

Schwarz Gallery, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

Illustrated:
Time, 26 May 1947.

Born in rural Edgecombe County, NC, Pittman moved to Pennsylvania in 1918. After several one-man shows in Philadelphia, he was represented in the 1933 exhibition "Painting and Sculpture from 16 American Cities" held at the Museum of Modern Art in New York, NY. A celebrated regionalist, Pittman exhibited extensively throughout his lifetime and beyond.

Pittman was particularly known for his depictions of quiet rooms, writing “rooms are wonder for me—I like rooms and doors and windows—Mystery shrouds them all—mystery not revealed or explained...” John Canaday, Art Editor of the New York Times, reveled in Pittman's interiors as being both "nostalgic and visionary," seemingly at once "still peopled by the remembered presences of romantic personages."

$5,000 - 10,000