harriette-bowdoin-american-1880-1947-i-central-park-west-nyc-i
Lot 4058

Harriette Bowdoin (American, 1880-1947), Central Park West, NYC

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Oil on canvas board, signed at lower left, presented in a period appropriate gilt plein air style frame, retaining gallery labels to the verso.

Board 11 3/4 x 15 7/8 in.; Frame dimensions 20 5/8 x 24 5/8 in.

Harriette Bowdoin was born in South Hadley Falls, Massachusetts, and spent most of her adult life in and around New York City, where she built a varied career as a painter, illustrator, craftswoman, and teacher. She studied in New York with Henry Snell and Elliott Daingerfield and received further instruction from Sir Frank Brangwyn in France and London. Associated with American Impressionism, and likely traveling to Venice in 1908 with fellow Brangwyn student Jane Peterson, Bowdoin developed a style marked by vibrant color and bold brushwork.

She exhibited widely, including at the Art Institute of Chicago (1911–1918), the National Academy of Design (1913–1920), the Panama-Pacific International Exposition, and the Society of Independent Artists in 1917, where one of her works was illustrated in the exhibition catalogue. Bowdoin was a member of the American Watercolor Society, the New York Society of Painters, and the National Association of Women Painters and Sculptors.

Slight bow to board; very minor chipping to frame; no evidence of restoration or retouch visible under UV light.