-40%

Sheckell pictorialist Arts & Crafts photograph Stieglitz Camera Work vintage

$ 39.6

Availability: 100 in stock
  • Date of Creation: 1900-1949
  • Listed By: Dealer or Reseller
  • Originality: Original
  • Refund will be given as: Money Back
  • Region of Origin: North America
  • Restocking Fee: No
  • Return shipping will be paid by: Buyer
  • All returns accepted: Returns Accepted
  • Item must be returned within: 14 Days
  • Width (Inches): 9 1/2
  • Subject: Landscape
  • Height (Inches): 7 1/2
  • Style: Impressionist

    Description

    This is a beautiful pictorialist photograph by the American artist Thomas O. Sheckell. Sheckell was active in the early decades of the 20th century, and was a leading figure in the PhotoSecessionist or Pictorialist movement, which sought to position photography as equal in its expressive and artistic capability to painting.  Other major members of this movement were Alfred Steiglitz, Alvin Langdon Coburn, and Arthur Wesley Dow. While I've found no direct citation that Sheckell was a student of Dow's, his work clearly shows and affinity to Dow and his circle.
    Here is the "official" biography of Sheckell
    Approved biography for Thomas O. Sheckell
    (Courtesy of Christian Peterson)
    Sheckell photographed from the 1910s until his death. He specialized in pictorial images of trees and published a book on the subject. He lived in the New York area, working much of the time in finance.
    Thomas O. Sheckell was born in Tekamah, Nebraska, in 1883. He graduated from the University of Indiana and then practiced law in Salt Lake City. He later moved to New York, and finally settled in East Orange, New Jersey, in 1928. While living in the Northeast, he was an executive at the New York Association of Credit Men.
    Sheckell was making accomplished pictorial photographs by 1919, when his work was included in salons in Montreal and Pittsburgh. He continued to submit to international salons for the rest of his life, with the 1942-42 season being his most prolific—113 prints shown at more than forty sites. His work was accepted by juries in Buffalo, Chicago, London, Los Angeles, Minneapolis, New York, Oakland, Philadelphia, Princeton, Rochester, San Diego, San Francisco, Madrid, Ottawa, Toronto, and Turin. Solo shows of his work were presented in 1922 at the California Camera Club (San Francisco) and in 1929 at the Newark Camera Club.
    Sheckell was particularly active in the Pictorial Photographers of America (PPA). He was a council member in 1920 and saw his pictures reproduced in the group’s handsome annual, Pictorial Photography in America, in 1920 and 1922. During the 1930s, he regularly spoke at PPA meetings, and he served as president of the organization for two terms, from 1937 to 1939.
    Sheckell assisted other groups, as both a teacher and a mentor. From 1936 to 1938, he was president of the Orange Camera Club. At about this time, he led a photographic tour of Europe and taught classes at the Ridgewood Camera Club (New Jersey) and the Metropolitan Camera Club Council (New York). In 1937, he gave the course on advanced pictorialism at the Brooklyn Institute of Arts and Sciences, and three years later was appointed dean of faculty at the New York Institute of Photography. In addition, he wrote articles on portraiture for
    Camera
    (February 1940) and on the mediobrome process for
    Camera Craft
    (January 1942).
    Sheckell favored tree subjects for his pictorial photographs. These images were frequently reproduced, especially in the monthly magazine
    American Photography
    . In 1933, the American Forestry Association awarded him first prize for an image it considered the year’s most beautiful tree photograph. He often pictured trees in silhouette, against a brooding sky, or prominently placed in the foreground against a tapestry of nature. In 1936, his book
    Trees: A Pictorial Volume for Lovers of Nature
    was published and favorably reviewed by the
    New York Times
    (January 10, 1937) and numerous photographic magazines. It comprised 100 full-page images with evocative lines of text. His only other publishing venture was editing the 1941 Universal Photo Almanac. Thomas O. Sheckell died on March 2, 1943, of a heart attack in his East Orange studio.
    Christian A. Peterson
    Pictorial Photography at the Minneapolis Institute of Arts
    (Christian A. Peterson: Privately printed, 2012)
    This image measures 7 1/2"h x 9 1/2"w, and is printed on thick photo paper. It is a vintage original print, and bears the estate stamp as shown.  I bought a large group of photographs by Sheckell from a dealer in the 1990's, and this is part of that collection. Please let me know if you have any questions.  All my items are guaranteed to be as described.
    NOTE: These images lend themselves to groupings for the best effect.  For anyone buying multiple photographs, I will refund for each image and combine shipping.  Good luck and good bidding!