![]() |
|
|
| Home | Search by Artist |
Biography of Robert Philipp
Robert
Philipp
was
born
Moses
Solomon
Philipp
on
February
2,
1895
in
New
York
City.
He
showed
early
talent
and
grew
up
in
a
family
atmosphere
that
fed
and
cultivated
his
creativity.
At
age
of
15,
he
entered
the
Art
Students
League
for
four
years
and
then
continued
his
training
at
the
National
Academy
of
Design.
His
teachers
at
the
League
included
George
Bridgeman
and
Frank
DuMond,
and
at
the
National
Academy
he
studied
with
Douglas
Volk
and
George
Willoughby
Maynard.
Recognition
came
quickly
to
Philipp,
and
his
early
works
exhibit
an
eclectic
range
of
artistic
sources:
Vermeer,
Rembrant,
Renoir,
Bonnard,
Sargent
and
Fantin-Latour.
After
the
death
of
his
father,
Philipp
turned
away
from
painting
for
a
time
and
joined
his
uncle’s
opera
company
as
a
tenor.
He
eventually
returned
to
painting
and
settled
in
Paris,
living
there
in
the
1920s.
The
exact
date
of
Paris
sojourn
are
not
known,
but
he
reportedly
lived
there
for
ten
years,
supporting
himself
through
the
sale
of
his
paintings.
Back
in
In
1934
he
married
artist
Shelly
(Rochelle)
Post,
who
became
his
favorite
model
until
her
death
in
1971.
Critic
Henry
McBride
called
Philipp
“One
of
the
top
ten
painters
in
America.”
It
was
during
the
1930s
that
he
began
to
paint
landscapes,
still
lifes
and
nudes
evolving
a
distinctively
lyric
and
modern
style.
Philipp
painted
passionately
and
directly
creating
a
synthesis
of
observation
and
poetic
vision
using
high
keyed
colors
and
rhythmic
treatment
of
form.
Philipp’s
work,
in
his
later
years,
began
to
increasingly
resemble
the
Expressionist
and
emotional
style
of
Chaim
Soutine.
Philipp
as
a
teacher,
at
the
Arts
Students
League
for
over
thirty
years
and
at
the
National
Acdemy
for
sixteen
years,
was
an
important
influence
on
American
art.
As
a
teacher
he
was
well
known
for
his
attention
to
color
and
his
constant
emphasis
on
the
importance
of
drawing.
He
was
a
member
of
the
Lotus
Club,
National
Academy
of
Design
and
Royal
society
of
Arts.
His
works
are
in
the
collections
of
the
Corcoran
Gallery,
Washington,
D.C.,
High
Museum,
Atlanta
Georgia,
Dallas
Museum,
Texas,
Metropolitan
Museum
of
Art,
Whitney
Museum
of
American
Art,
New
York
City.
| Home | Search by Artist |