John Whorf 1903-1959
Framed dimensions: 36 x 43 1/4 inches
Whorf’s ability to capture natural colors and blend them with shadow and light earned him renown. In 1924 he had his first one-man show at the Grace Horne Gallery in Boston. More than fifty of his paintings sold during that exhibition, and his reputation as a leading watercolorist was secured. Throughout his life, Whorf exhibited in galleries in New York and Boston. And in 1947 he was elected as a member of the National Academy of Design.
Whorf created realist depictions of urban and rural imagery, but his finest inspiration came from the Cape Cod landscape, where he ultimately settled. As a whole, his works have the uncanny ability to take his viewer to the everyday scenes of Provincetown as well as to the more exotic locales of Europe and North Africa. Though he is better known as a watercolorist, Whorf also produced remarkable oil paintings, such as Provincetown Summer Landscape. The scene is rendered with thick impasto and loose brushwork, which creates a sense of dynamic energy throughout the composition.
Provenance
The artist;Private collection, Hingham, MA;
By descent in the family, until 2019;
Parco Fine Art, Ipswich, MA, until 2024