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Louis L. Betts, American 1873-1961 browse these categories for related items... All Items: Fine Art:Paintings:Oil:N. America:American: Pre 1930: item # 942108
SUSQUEHANNA Antique Company, Inc. 3216 O Street, N.W. Washington, DC 20007 (202)333-1511 Guest Book $10,500 |
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| Oil on canvas, 60" x 36" oil on canvas, signed lower left. We do not know the identity of this elegant lady--very Chase like since the artists was close to Wm. Merrit Chase and his Chase painted the artist's portrait, From AskArt.com: Louis Betts was born in Little Rock, Arkansas. His art instruction came primarily from his father who was also a painter. At sixteen, he did his first portrait of his violin master in exchange for lessons, and Betts focused primarily on landscape painting until he was twenty-four. He then studied portrait painting at the Pennsylvania Academy for a year, and the first Cresson Scholarship permitted him to study for two years abroad. Betts then remained in France, England, Holland, Spain, and Italy for seven years painting portraits in court circles. The late John Lane, English publisher, once visited the Art Institute, and wrote, "The most live portrait in the exhibition is far and away La Verne W. Noyes, by Louis Betts. The skillful handling of hands is a characteristic of this strong artist. He probably belongs, though he may not know it, to the great traditional family of portrait painters, one of whom painted the time of Henry VIII and Queen Elizabeth, and whose works may be seen in the National Gallery of London." He later called on the artist and gave him a copy of the Betts genealogy. Betts painted a portrait of an historic member of the family, Elizabeth Betts of Wortham, whom he painted in a dress made by his wife after a description in old family letters. This painting won the first Altman Prize of the National Academy in 1923, and was then shown in the Toledo Art Museum. Betts painted such subjects as Emerson Hough, Hamlin Garland, Cardinal Mundelein, William O. Goodman, Drs. William and Charles Mayo, Dr. Goodspeed of the University of Chicago, the Rev. Jenkin Lloyd Jones, as well as graceful groups of children. He insisted on simple and beautiful costumes; and in some instances created outdoor backgrounds, works of art in themselves, revealing his ability in landscape, which was a part of his general artistic excellence. Louis Betts helped found the artist colony in Park Ridge, Illinois, is represented in the Art Institute of Chicago and elsewhere, and was a member of the National Institute of Arts and Letters. Source: Cuthbert Lee, Contemporary American Portrait Painters," Illustrating and Describing the Work of Fifty Living Painters | ||
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