A
student of Jean Léon Gérôme and William
Merritt Chase, Dennis Miller Bunker was equally adept
at academic portraits and open-air landscape paintings.
By his death, Bunker had already established a mastery
and sensitivity unmatched by most of his peers.
Born in 1861 in New York, Bunker grew up in Long Island
as one of four children. At the age of fifteen, he enrolled
in the Art Students League and the National Academy of
Design where he studied for four years. Like most young,
American artists, Bunker longed for European instruction,
so in 1882 he left for the École des Beaux-Arts
in France with a letter of introduction. Bunker studied
at the École for two years under Jean Léon
Gérôme.
Upon
his return to America, Bunker immediately began exhibiting
his works, winning a prize in the National Academy show
in 1885. The next year, he moved to Boston and accepted
a position as head of the anatomy and figure classes at
Cowles Art School.
That same year, Bunker held his first one-man show at
the Noyes Gallery. His 22 paintings included landscapes,
still life’s, portraits and figure studies. He was
introduced to Boston society and received commissions
for portraits from influential patrons, including Isabella
Stewart Gardner. It was through this mutual acquaintance
that Bunker met John Singer Sargent. Sargent painted Bunker’s
portrait, befriended him and greatly influenced his painting
style. Bunker’s brushwork became more confident
and his palette lightened---moving toward an Impressionist
style.
Never comfortable in Boston, Bunker moved back to New
York in 1889. His illustrious circle of artists and friends
included Charles Platt, Abbott Thayer, Thomas Dewing,
William Chase and John Singer Sargent. In 1890, Bunker
showed his Impressionist paintings to mixed reviews. He
won an award for a portrait in the same year at the Art
Institute of Chicago and was asked to take over Chase’s
classes in Brooklyn. In October, Bunker married Eleanor
Hardy. A month later, he won a gold medal for the painting
“The Mirror”, in Philadelphia. Bunker and
his new wife traveled to the Hardy family home for the
holidays. On Christmas day, Bunker complained of feeling
chilled. He tragically died three days later at the age
of twenty-nine.
Bibliography:
Dennis Miller Bunker American Impressionist
Erica E. Hirshler
Museum of Fine Arts, Boston 1994
American pupils of Jean Léon Gérôme
H. Barbara Weinberg
Amon Carter Museum 1984