Bowman
Settling in New Hope in a home overlooking the Delaware River in 1916, John Fulton Folinsbee began painting winter scenes of the river and canal with a broken-brush technique and in a broad and vigorous style that captured the temporal effects of light and atmosphere. While his small canvases were often painted direct from nature, many of his larger canvases were painted in his studio from sketches. After traveling to England and France in 1926, his work changed. His colors became more somber, his treatment of light more dramatic, and, as River Ice suggests, his work more expressionist in approach while also exhibiting a stronger emphasis on structural design.
John Fulton Folinsbee (? – ?)
American painter John Fulton Folinsbee (Jack) captured New Hope & Lambertville's factories/canals in impressionist scenes. Known for emotive landscapes & Cézanne influence.
James A. Michener Art Museum (Doylestown, United States of America)
Houses preparation areas and collection storage spaces.
O tomto díle
- Název: Bowman
- Autor: John Fulton Folinsbee
- Formát: Landscape
- Stav autorského práva: Chráněno autorským právem
- Místo umístění: James A. Michener Art Museum
- Hlavní barva: Espresso
- Klíčová slova: broken brush technique , winter landscape art , new hope painting
- Barva a odstín: Green Spectrum
- Vnímaná jasnost: bright
- Témata: river scene , atmospheric , impressionism

