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Ernest
L. Blumenschein was far and away the most well known of the Taos
painters during his lifetime. His painstakingly executed
canvases, in his distinctive style that was first called “post-impressionist” and
later modernist, garnered him a wide and appreciative audience,
and numerous awards. Ernest Blumenschein paintings today are held by the most
important museum collections in the United States.
Ernest Blumenschein was born in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, to parents
of German descent, and raised in Dayton, Ohio. His father was a
professional musician and composer, who chiefly made his living
as a conductor of large choruses. The young Ernest Blumenschein excelled at
music from the beginning, and his father had high hopes that he
would follow his footsteps and become a professional. When Ernest Blumenschein
showed an interest in art, his father only pushed him harder to
stay devoted to music, feeling that was where his greatest talent
lay.

Ernest Blumenschein, Las Tres Mujeres, Oil on Board, 9" x 12"
At 17, Ernest Blumenschein won a scholarship to study at the Cincinnati
College of Music. However, while studying music he also enrolled
in classes at the Art Academy. He was soon convinced that his future
career was to be that of an artist, and consequently moved to New
York City to study painting at the Art Students League. However,
Ernest Blumenschein remained a tremendously talented musician, supporting himself
by playing first violin in the New York Symphony. The conductor
at the time was none other than the world famous Czech composer,
Anton Dvorak. Dvorak was apparently so impressed with the youngster
that he appointed him first violin immediately after hearing him
play a D minor scale. Few people would have given up a music career
that was off to such a promising start (to say the least), but
Ernest Blumenschein had made his decision.
At the end of the 19th Century, it was compulsory that an aspiring
painter study in Europe. Ernest Blumenschein made his first trip in 1892
to study at the Academie Julian in Paris, where he worked at academic
figure painting. While in Paris, he met some other future Taos
painters: Bert Phillips, E.I. Couse, and most notably, Joseph Henry
Sharp. It was Sharp who would inspire the other three with his
stories and sketches of Arizona and New Mexico. Ernest Blumenschein determined
that he would visit the Southwest as soon as the opportunity arose.
Upon his return
from Paris, Ernest Blumenschein began what would become a hugely successful
illustration career. He worked for magazines
such as Century, Harper’s, Scribner’s and McClure’s.
It was an assignment for McClure’s that first sent him to
the Southwest. He came back from his trip enthralled, and excited
about the possibility of a painting trip to the region. Ernest Blumenschein urged
Bert Phillips to save enough money to join him, and 1898 they set
out by covered wagon. Crossing into northern New Mexico in early
September, they encountered roads that had been all but destroyed
by summer storms. After fighting their way up one particularly
steep and muddy road, one of the wagon wheels broke. They needed
a blacksmith, and the nearest town was Taos. After a coin toss,
Phillips stayed with the crippled wagon, and Ernest Blumenschein set out
on horseback with the wagon wheel. His feelings as he rode alone
through the New Mexico landscape are best told in his own words:
“
No artist had ever recorded the New Mexico I was now seeing. No
writer had ever written down the smell of this air or the feel
of that morning’s sky. I was receiving…the first great
unforgettable inspiration of my life.”
He was 24 years old at the time.
The natives that Ernest Blumenschein encountered were friendly, and once
the wheel was mended he and Phillips took their wagon into town
and started to paint. Phillips was as inspired by the surroundings
as Ernest Blumenschein, and it was he who stayed on. Blumenschein left
Taos after three months and went back to Paris for further study.
He only stayed a year, and returned to New York to continue his
work as an illustrator, but went back to Paris in 1902 for a more
protracted stay.
Ernest Blumenschein
continued his studies in Paris, and also kept working as an illustrator,
supporting himself easily. In fact, during this
time in Paris, his illustration work was much in demand by American
magazines, his commissions mounting every month. Ernest Blumenschein also illustrated
several books, including Jack London’s first book, “Love
of Life,” in 1904. This led to his working with other famous
writers such as Stephen Crane, Willa Cather, and Joseph Conrad.
During this time he also met a painter named Mary Shepard Greene,
who was fairly prominent in Paris at the time. She exhibited widely,
and had won medals at the Paris salons. Ernest Blumenschein and Greene
married in 1905, to the consternation of her friends, who thought
that a prominent painter should not be marrying an illustrator,
and that it would damage Greene’s career. In fact, both of
their careers went on fine. Even after their move to New York in
1909, Greene continued to exhibit widely in Europe, as well as
the United States.
Back in New
York, the Blumenscheins both taught at the Pratt Institute. Ernest
worked
tirelessly at his paintings and as an illustrator
during the fall and winter, and spent every summer in Taos. Mary
would not accompany him on these sojourns, as she was genuinely
terrified of the American Indians. Her fears were obviously unfounded,
as her husband returned safely from his summer trips, year after
year. They remained in New York, and Ernest Blumenschein began to have
great success exhibiting his paintings. Just a few awards from
a very long list are: Silver Medal, Pan Pacific Exposition, 1914;
Potter Palmer Gold Medal, Art Institute of Chicago, 1917; Steinway
Collection, commission for a painting based on MacDowell’s “Indian
Suite;” and he was elected as an associate to the National
Academy. He was, in fact, garnering accolades almost constantly,
something that would continue for the rest of his life.
In 1917, Mary Blumenschein received an inheritance that included
a nice house in Brooklyn, the sale of which two years later left
the Blumenscheins financially independent. At that time, Mary finally
acquiesced to moving the family to Taos, in no small part because
their daughter was in fragile health, and it was hoped that the
dry Western air would be good for her. The whole family settled
quite comfortably at Taos, their money enabling them to buy a large
property, and Ernest Blumenschein went to work at painting. He is remembered
as an artist of boundless enthusiasm, with extremely high standards,
both as an artist and an intellectual. He was so uncompromising
with his work that today only his best work survives:
“
I can’t explain why I paint and draw. It is as necessary
for me to do as for an apple tree to produce fruit. Just a job
I love. But a good many bad apples came off my tree – and
were often destroyed.”
He would often repaint canvases, sometimes after many years had
passed.
It should be
noted that Ernest Blumenschein had another vent, throughout his life,
for his enthusiasm
and determination: athletics. He had
played tennis as a boy, and football in high school. It was while
he was in Paris that he began playing tennis seriously, winning
several trophies there. He continued in the United States, often
traveling to play in tournaments that he frequently won. He was
ever the artist though, as he said: “There was never a tennis
trip that didn’t yield a picture.” He would often return
to paint landscapes that he had glimpsed while on the road or in
another town. Another passion of his was bridge, which he played
in tournaments across the country, and which he considered a great
discipline in memory.
All through
the 1920s, Ernest Blumenschein continued to win awards
for his paintings at an almost alarming rate. A short sample of
some of the institutions that honored him were: The Gilcrease Foundation,
Oklahoma; Art Director’s Show, New York; National Academy
of Design, New York; Fort Worth Art Museum, Texas; City of Philadelphia;
Brooklyn Museum, New York; National Arts Club; and the Chicago
World’s Fair. In 1927, he was elected to full membership
of the National Academy, which was the highest honor that an American
artist could receive at the time. He had gallery representation
through Grand Central Art Galleries, in the Grand Central Terminal,
New York, and his paintings continued to travel the country. Throughout
the following decades, his work would even traverse the globe,
as he was invited to exhibit at the Venice Biennial, and in Budapest,
Munich, Paris, England, New Zealand and Argentina.
Ernest Blumenschein remained in Taos for the rest of his life, though
at one point he began to spend winters in Albuquerque, where it
was not quite as cold. Even when he was eighty years old, he still
labored as diligently over his canvases as he ever had. When he
died in 1960, he was the most famous resident of Taos, and six
years later the Ernest L. Blumenschein home was designated as a National
Historic Landmark.
Today, Blumenschein’s work is held by the most prestigious
museums in the country, including the Museum of Modern Art, New
York, the Metropolitan, and the Smithsonian Institution. Ernest Blumenschein
once said that he considered his greatest artistic heroes to be
Shakespeare, Michelangelo, El Greco, Beethoven, and Bach. It is
fitting that he too became preeminent among artists in his lifetime
and has gone down as one of the most important painter’s
in American history.
Museum Collections
Stark Museum of Art
Arizona State University Art Museum
Colorado Springs Fine Arts Center
Dallas Museum of Art
Denver Art Museum
Eiteljorg Museum of American Indians and Western Art
Gilcrease Museum
Jonson Gallery of University of New Mexico
Museum of Art at Brigham Young University
Museum of New Mexico
Museum of The Southwest
National Academy of Design Museum
National Arts Club
National Cowboy and Western Heritage Museum
Oklahoma City Museum of Art
Panhandle-Plains Historical Museum
Phoenix Art Museum
Rockford Art Museum
Roswell Museum and Art Center
Sangre De Cristo Arts Center
Smithsonian American Art Museum
The Fred Jones Jr. Museum of Art
The Harwood Museum of Art
The Museum of Modern Art
The Newark Museum
University of Wyoming Art Museum
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