Willard
L. Metcalf was born in Lowell, Massachusetts in 1858.
He began his art studies at the Lowell Institute and apprenticed
to the painter, George Loring Brown. For the next few
years, Metcalf illustrated articles on the Zuni and the
Southwest for Century Magazine.
In 1883, with enough money earned from his illustration
assignments, Metcalf traveled to France to study at the
Julian Academie under Gustave Boulanger and Jules Lefebvre.
After a few years in France, Metcalf slowly moved away
from the painting style being taught in the Academie.
He now embraced the Impressionist ideal that revered painting
from life as the core of good painting. In 1888, Metcalf
returned to America and prepared to mount a one-man show
of 44 paintings---mostly studies executed in the open
air style he adopted in Europe. While the show was praised
critically, sales were low and Metcalf decided to leave
Boston for New York.
In New York, Metcalf continued work as an illustrator
and in order to provide a steady income, took portrait
commissions. In
addition, Metcalf taught at the Art Students League and
Coopers Union.
In 1896, Metcalf won the Webb Prize from the Society
of American Artist’s show. It was his last time
exhibiting with this organization. Metcalf and his artist
friends were becoming increasingly dissatisfied with the
crowded settings and selection standards of the organization.
They felt the standards had dropped too low and were compromised.
Metcalf and other notable artists resigned and formed,
“The Ten American Painters”. “The Ten”,
as they were referred to by the press, were Childe Hassam,
John Twatchman, Willard Metcalf, Frank Benson, J Alden
Weir, Thomas Dewing, Robert Reid, Edward Simmons, Edmund
Tarbell, and Joseph De Camp. In 1905, William Merritt
Chase was asked to join the group, replacing the now deceased,
Twatchman. They were the embodiment of the American Impressionist
movement. “The Ten” held yearly exhibitions
until 1919.
Metcalf
struggled for continued financial and critical success
for most of his life. It wasn’t until late in his
career that his unique vision of the New England countryside
took hold with critics and profited him financially. Metcalf’s
perception was thoroughly American and was appreciated
for its naturalism.
Metcalf’s success as a painter lies in his ability
to depict the landscape with honesty and fidelity. His
New England scenes are an intimate glimpse of a totally
American ideal. He stayed true to his artistic beliefs
in a time when proponents of modernism sought to marginalize
established forms of style. This focus helped him create
a personal style whose roots were founded in the tenets
of American Impressionism that lasts to this day.
Willard Metcalf died in 1925.
Bibliography
Sunlight and Shadow
Elizabeth De Veer and Richard J. Boyle
1987
Willard Metcalf Yankee Impressionist
Richard J. Boyle
Bruce Chambers
William H. Gerdts
2003