Description: MASTERFUL ANTIQUE MODERN ABSTRACT LANDSCAPE EXPRESSIONIST OIL PAINTING ON BOARD BY RENOWNED ILLUSTRATOR, ART PROFESSOR AND PAINTER LOUIS BASSI SIEGRIEST. (American 1899-1989). THIS WORK IS TITLED DESERT CLIFF. THIS WORK DEPICTS A BEAUTIFULLY RENDERED THICK IMPASTO DESERT ABSTRACT LANDSCAPE SCENE. THE EARTHY TONES BLEND SEAMLESSLY, CAPTURING THE ESSENCE OF ARID TERRAIN. BOLD BRUSHSTROKES CONVEY THE PLAY OF LIGHT AND SHADOWS ON DUNES, WHILE THE HEAVY IMPASTO TECHNIQUE ADDS DEPTH TO THE COMPOSITION. SUBTLE HINTS OF CERULEAN AND SIENNA SUGGEST DISTANT MOUNTAINS AND HIDDEN OASES, ADDING AN AIR OF MYSTERY TO THE SCENE. SIMPLY AMAZING. THIS IS ARGUABLY ONE OF LOUIS SIEGREST FINEST WORKS. SIGNED AND DATED 1961 BY LOUIS SIEGRIEST ON THE FRONT AND VERSO. EXCELLENT OVERALL CONDITION. DIMENSIONS: 19” H x 25” W PROVENANCE: PRIVATE COLLECTION, BEVERLY HILLS CALIFORNIA. Louis Bassi Siegriest (1899 - 1989) was active/lived in California. Louis Siegriest is known for Modernist landscape illustrator. Louis Siegriest Born: 1899 - Oakland, California Died: 1989 - Oakland, California A commercial artist and fine-art painter whose styles ranged from Impressionism Fauvism to Mixed-Media Abstraction, Louis Siegriest had a long, distinguished career, including association in the 1920s with a California Bay Area group called the Society of Six. Members rebelled against the prevalent sombre Tonalism of William Keith and the genteel Classicism of Arthur Mathews. He was born to a father who drove the first horse-drawn streetcars in Oakland and then made a fortune in the heating oil business with acetylene gas machines for gaslights. Louis lived his entire life in the family mansion where he was born in north Oakland and later raised his own family, including a son, Lundy, who became a well-known artist. His parents encouraged his talents, and at age fifteen, he enrolled at night in the California School of Arts and Crafts while attending high school during the day. His early interest was cartooning, and he won a San Francisco Chronicle comic strip contest. A good friend and classmate at the Arts and Crafts School were Bernard von Eichman, and together they attended the California School of Fine Arts on Nob Hill in San Francisco to study with Frank Van Sloun. The boys later followed Van Sloun to his own school and studied with him until 1919, when he left for New York. Unlike other art teachers in that area, Van Sloun was of the Robert Henri, New York social-realist philosophy that artists had to listen to their own instincts and paint what seemed relevant to their lives, not what was fashionable in Europe. Siegriest was fascinated by billboards and got a job with Foster and Kleiser, the biggest outdoor advertising firm in San Francisco. In his work there, he developed a bold, realist, and simple style. But this commercial art venture did not seem to affect his fine art, which from the beginning was modernist with an undercurrent of playfulness and energy and experimentation with perspective and shapes. About 1917, he began his association with the Society of Six led by Selden Gile, and included William Clapp, Bernard von Eichman, Maurice Logan, and August Gay. The group, based in Oakland, focused on California scene subject matter, aggressive use of color, and a freedom of style rooted in Impressionism. In the 1920s, while continuing this Society of Six association, he also did commercial art assignments in Seattle, Dallas, Chicago, and Milwaukee, as well as for the San Francisco Chronicle. For him, the 1930s Depression years were a time when he traveled in the Midwest, and further East, and his palette darkened with industrial themes. But he also discovered Taos, New Mexico, where he did about one hundred brush drawings on typewriter paper. Unknown at the time was that his young son, Lundy, was making paper airplanes out of them and tossing them out of the car. Returning to California, he worked in advertising for Maurice Logan and did poster work for the WPA. In 1945, he became a full-time fine artist and, from 1948 to 1951, taught at the Art Students League of San Francisco. Poor eyesight caused him to stop painting in the 1970s. His work is in the collections of the Oakland Museum, Stanford University Museum, and the University of Nevada, which houses several hundred of his paintings of Virginia City.
Price: 5000 USD
Location: Pasadena, California
End Time: 2024-11-26T19:10:25.000Z
Shipping Cost: 0 USD
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Item Specifics
All returns accepted: ReturnsNotAccepted
Artist: Louis Bassi Siegriest
Unit of Sale: Single Piece
Signed By: Louis Siegriest
Size: Large
Item Length: 25 in
Region of Origin: California, USA
Framing: Framed
Year of Production: 1961
Original/Licensed Reproduction: Original
Item Height: 19 in
Style: Abstract, Cubism, Expressionism, Modernism
Features: One of a Kind (OOAK)
Item Width: 25 in
Culture: Modernism
Handmade: Yes
Time Period Produced: 1960-1969
Signed: Yes
Period: Post-War (1940-1970)
Title: Desert Cliff
Material: Oil On Board
Subject: Landscape
Type: Painting
Theme: Modern Art
Production Technique: Oil Painting
Country/Region of Manufacture: United States