caroline-bell-american-1874-1970-i-gray-day-i
Lot 1043

Caroline Bell (American, 1874-1970), Gray Day

Lot Details & Additional Photographs
Oil on canvas board, signed at the lower left, inscribed and titled to the verso, presented in a contemporary giltwood frame.

Panel 16 x 20 in.; Frame dimensions 22 x 26 in.

Caroline M. Bell was an American Impressionist painter and educator best known for her coastal and landscape scenes of Long Island’s North Fork and the Peconic Bay region of New York. A leading figure among the artists later referred to as the “Peconic Bay Impressionists,” Bell painted harbor views, fishing villages, marshes, and maritime landscapes with a distinctly atmospheric and plein-air style.

Born in New York City, Bell spent much of her life in Mattituck, Long Island, where she established a studio on Love Lane and became deeply involved in the local art community. She studied in Woodstock, New York, and was influenced by artists including Birge Harrison, John Carlson, Emile Gruppe, and Anthony Thieme.

Bell was also an influential teacher and mentor to many regional artists. Beginning in the 1920s, she taught painting both in her studio and outdoors at favored painting locations throughout Long Island and New England. She exhibited widely throughout New York and Massachusetts during her career and belonged to numerous organizations, including the National Association of Women Painters and Sculptors, the Woodstock Art Association, and the North Shore Arts Association.

Good estate condition.