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MARY CABLE BUTLER (1865-1946) :New Hope/PA Impressionist "Mountain Riverscape" Watercolor

$375.00

MARY CABLE BUTLER (1865-1946) :New Hope/PA Impressionist "Mountain Riverscape" Watercolor

$375.00
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$25.00 (Fixed shipping cost)
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MARY CABLE BUTLER (1865-1946) :New Hope/PA Impressionist "Mountain Riverscape" Watercolor

 

Measures :   7.5 x 9.5;  14 x 16.5  Custom Framed 

 

Signature :  Lower Left

 

Condition: Very good, minor nicks frame, under glass (some flashback on glass)

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Date: First Half Twentieth Century

 

Shipping: $25

 

Butler, Mary (1865-1946)

 

Early 20th century landscape painter Mary Butler was born in Philadelphia in 1865 and is most noted for her depictions of mountains and the sea.  She was an important figure in the Philadelphia art world until her death in 1946.

Butler attended the Philadelphia School of Design for Women (now Moore College of Art), and the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts from 1896 to 1902, where she was said to have "discovered" the American landscape under her instructors, William Merritt Chase and Robert Henri.  Later, she went to Center Bridge, New Hope, Pennsylvania to study under Edward Redfield, the most celebrated American landscape painter of his time.  She then traveled to Paris, where she worked in the ateliers of Courtois, Prinet and Girardot.

She exhibited extensively at the National Academy of Design, Corcoran Gallery of Art, Chicago Art Institute, Carnegie Institute, Boston Art Club, Albright Gallery in Buffalo, New York, Cincinnati Museum of Art, Panama-Pacific Exposition, and the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts from 1894 through 1946.

Butler was President of the Fellowship of the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts for fifteen years, and a member of the Philadelphia Watercolor Club, Philadelphia Print Club, Philadelphia Contemporary Club, Philadelphia Art Alliance, American Federation of Arts, American Artists Professional League, Fairmount Park Art Association, and the Federation of Women's Clubs.

Her awards include Honorable Mention in 1913 and 1914, Buffalo Society of Artist; Gold Medal, 1918, and Watercolor Prize, 1929, Plastic Club; Mary Smith Prize, 1925, Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts; Special Award, 1926 and 1927, National Art Exhibition, Springville, Utah; and Honorable Mention, National Association of Women Artists.

Butler's paintings are found in museum collections throughout the country.  As President for the Fellowship, she organized exhibitions throughout eastern Pennsylvania, and started a movement that became known as American National Art Week.

Courtesy Newman Galleries

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