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JULIUS BLOCH (1888-1966) WATERCOLOR/BLACK AMERICANA browse these categories for related items... All Items: Fine Art:Paintings:Watercolor: Pre 1940: item # 780133 Please refer to our stock # JBloch when inquiring.
Shelton Gallery and Fine Silver 5133 Harding Road B-10, PMB #392 Nashville TN 37205 (615) 477-6221 Guest Book $2500 |
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| Julius Bloch, one of the prominent Jewish artists of Philadelphia, was a social realist painter whose subjects focused on the working classes. His admiration for Thomas Eakins, also a social realist, likely contributed to his interest in these subjects. For many years, he was a teacher at the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, and his message to students was that one needed to know life in order to paint life. Bloch began his career painting floral still lives, but witnessing Depression-era social conditions changed his focus to express his sympathy for persons who were affected by them. One of the first American artists to paint poverty-stricken black Americans, he tried to make sure that his subjects retained their dignity. In doing this, he painted many of the poor blacks with the formality of high-dollar, commissioned portraits. Not everyone was accepting of this presentation. In 1934, he was asked to submit a painting to a Center City Philadelphia department store for National Art Week. His entry was a portrait of Alonzo Jennings, a black man. Store officials said it was one of the finest paintings they had seen in years, but that the store 'could not exhibit a portrait of a Negro in its windows.' They asked Bloch if he had any pictures of whites. He said that he did, but that they were not available. This extremely well done watercolor of a young barefoot black boy sitting on a wooden crate is signed lower left by the artist. It measures 14 x 10 inches, sight size, and 24 x 21 inches framed. Bloch was born in Kehl, Germany in 1888 and emigrated to the United States with his parents in 1893 when he was age five. They settled in North Philadelphia and had little money, but his mother, seeing his art talent, encouraged him to follow that path. She seems to have been the dominant influence in his life, and he made many portraits of her. Bloch attended Central High School, the School of the Pennsylvania Museum and Industrial Art from 1905-06 through 1908 (now The University of the Arts College of Art and Design), and then the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts where Thomas Anshutz had replaced Thomas Eakins as instructor in the life class. Bloch benefited from the fact that Anshutz, like his earlier instructor Eakins, emphasized drawing and the human figure. After the Academy, Bloch attended the classes at the Barnes Foundation in Merion, a suburb of Philadelphia. He also served in the Army during World War I and never forgot the horrors, especially his experiences at Verdun. Like so many of his peers, Block became involved in left-wing politics, and this, combined with his own lack of money, inspired much of his interest in poor people. He became one of the first artists in the Public Works of Art Project and his painting, "Young Worker," circa 1934, in the collection of the Philadelphia Museum of Art, was touted by Eleanor Roosevelt, then the First Lady. He worked regularly at his studio at 10 South 18th Street from early in the morning until around 4:00 in the afternoon. He was never successful at earning much money from his artwork, but by the end of the 1930s, Bloch was supported by two sisters, Ellen Winsor and Rebecca Winsor Evans. They became his patrons and built him a home and studio in the countryside and gave him regular financial support. For the first time, he was financially comfortable, but he continued to focus on the underprivileged as his subjects. He also earned money from teaching and from other patrons in Philadelphia society, which allowed him to spend summers in Woodstock, New York and to travel in Europe. Ironically with the support of the rich, he portrayed the poor. In the early 1950s, on a trip to Europe he became so fascinated by the colorful Byzantine mosaics that he changed his style to colorful, happier more abstract depictions. He never explained the reason for his change, but this more lighthearted expression was a counter to his life-long mental depression, a family trait. However, feelings of happiness were crushed when on a trip to Venice in 1962, he picked up his mail at the American Express office and learned that the Pennsylvania Academy no longer wanted his teaching services. It is said that his forced retirement from there at age 74 crushed his spirit and left him even more financially strapped. In 1966, he died of a massive hemorrhage. He left his artwork to the Philadelphia Museum of Art. Collections: Allentown Art Museum, Pennsylvania; Fleisher Art Memorial, Philadelphia; LaSalle College Art Museum, Philadelphia; Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York City; Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, Philadelphia; Philadelphia Museum of Art; Skillman Library, Easton, Pennsylvania; Whitney Museum of American Art, New York City; and the William Penn Memorial Museum, Harrisburg, Pennsylvania. | ||||||||||||
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