Harriet
Randall was born on May 29, 1870, in Salem Connecticut.
After the Civil War, Salem was a small and prosperous
farming community. Harriet attended school and showed
an interest in the various arts, including music, drawing
and dance.
In 1892, at the age of 22, Harriet married Fred Lumis,
a 29 year old architect. The couple moved to Springfield,
Connecticut. It was here Harriet pursued formal art education.
The couple enrolled in the Evening Free Hand Drawing School
through the Springfield public education system. Harriet
continued her instruction with Leonard Ochtman.
In 1910, Fred Lumis was appointed City Building Commissioner
in Springfield. The new position allowed the Lumis’s
to buy a house and build Harriet a studio. She became
active in many regional art clubs and entered her work
in numerous exhibitions.
At
the age of 50, Harriet enrolled in the Breckenridge School
of Art and studied there for three years. Under Hugh Breckenridge,
Harriet’s work became less restrictive and more
colorful---adopting a more impressionistic style. Her
work employed broken color and vigorous brushwork.
In 1937, her husband died after an operation at the age
of 76. Harriet was left with no income except her painting
sales which were not enough to provide for her. Teaching
became her best solution. Harriet held classes outdoors
and at her studio for the rest of her life.
An outspoken opponent of the new painting styles predominant
at the time, Harriet never chased the trends of Modernism.
In 1949, with a group of like-minded artists, she formed
the Academic Artists Association. The purpose of the group
was to “encourage the showing of realistic works
of art in local museums and promote the interests of artists
who work in a realistic manner”.
The last years of her life, Harriet continued to paint
and teach, spending much of the time in her formal gardens
that surrounded her studio. She died in 1953 at the age
of 82.
Bibliography:
Harriet Randall Lumis 1870-1953
An American impressionist
Richard Love
Exhibition Catalog 1977