Part 717: Walter C. Hartson (1866-1946 )
In 1909, Thomas G. Moses wrote “Walter Hartson joined our force at 20th Street in August and seemed to be satisfied with conditions.” That year same year, the “Chicago Tribune” reported, “Walter C. Hartson, of New York, N.Y., and Jane Mahon Stanley of Detroit, Mich,” exhibited some of their at the picture galleries of Marshall Field & Company in Chicago (29 March 1909, page 6). Hartson had sporadically worked for Moses over the years and the two remained friends for the decades to follow. In 1902, Hartson worked for Moses as part of the Moses & Hamilton staff in their annex studio at the 14th Street Theatre in New York. While working for Moses that year, Hartson also won the Gold Medal of the American Art Society. Two years later he won the First Landscape Prize in the Osborne competition. By 1922, Moses would reflect, “I am drifting back to the days when some of the present day successful artists were working for me… As I look backward over the names of the successful ones, I wonder what I would have done had I been gifted with the same amount of talent.”
Hartson was born in Wyoming, Iowa, on Oct. 27, 1866. He attended the Art Institute in Chicago, Illinois, and then continued his artistic studies in Holland, Belgium, France and England. Of his fine art, the “Chicago Tribune” described Hartson’s paintings as being “light and lively in color and effect” (Chicago Tribune, 26 June 1898, Page 33). Hartson was a member of the Chicago Society of Artists, the Salmagundi Club of New York, the Kit Kat club of New York, the New York Water Color club, and the Allied Artists of Ameirca (Poughkeepsie Journal, 4 January 1946, page 8). By the age of twenty-nine, Hartson was winning awards for his work.
In 1895, Hartson won the bronze medal at the Atlanta Exposition. By 1898 Hartson received an award for his “Fields of September” at the seventy-third annual exhibition of the National Academy of Design (Chicago Tribune, 26 March, 1898, page 1); the Third Hallgarten Prize. By 1900, Hartson exhibited in a watercolor exhibition at the Chicago Art Institute. The Chicago “Inter Ocean” commented on two of Hartson’s paintings in 1898: “Of course, the best may not have been in sight, but some signed by Walter C. Hartson, arrested me. It is in tone and treatment much like a McIlhenny that stood not far away. Both these are in treatment between Corot and George Inness, Sr., although not so rich in color as the later. They lay in color, and then wash it down until everything is blurred, enveloped, atmospheric and gray. Still there is sufficient firmness and purpose, good modeling and no muddiness. Only an experienced painter can do this difficult thing.”
Three months later during June1895, Hartson was again noted in the “Chicago Tribune,” for two of his paintings: “Two cleverly painted water-colors of Dutch scenes by Walter C. Hartson, a former Chicago artist are shown at Thayer & Chandler’s. Both are light and lively in color and effect, and consequently more interesting than much of his more serious work, in which he inclined to blackness and heaviness” (June 26, 1898, page 33). It was is his ability to capture light and atmospheric effects that translated so well to Hartson’s stage work. He continued to gain ground in the field of American fine art and became associated with a new movement. It is a 1913 article that places Hartson within this context of a shifting aesthetic.
On April 1, 1913, “The Brooklyn Daily Eagle” reported,“The remarkable advance that has been made in American art within the last few years is almost incomprehensible to the average layman, and something of a surprise as well as gratification to the student and connoisseur. Appreciation has kept pace with development. A few weeks ago a George Inness brought $24,000 at public sale. A few years ago this would have seemed almost incredible. The fact is however, that the brush work of “our men of America” has reached a degree of excellence that places many of them on the same plane with leading artists abroad in artistic merit, and the time appears to be not far distant when they wil rival the modern European painter in price getting. A real comprehensive school of art is being developed here – a definite, distinctive, ambitiously independent class of work which breaking away from the traditions of old, has mingled the best thought of the Old World with the ideas of the New – bringing an atmosphere unmistakenly American. We are showing some of the better work of Walter C. Hartson to illustrate the young school as demonstrated by one of the men rapidly coming to the fore with his exquisite color work.”
Hartson was associated with fellow landscape artists G. Glen Newell, Harry Franklin Waltman, and Arthur J.E. Powell. All four men were born in small rural towns, but sought their art careers in nearby metropolitan areas. Hartson, Waltman, and Newell studied extensively in Europe and each independently found their way to the art scene of New York. All three were accepted to the Salmagundi Club. Moses had also joined the club under the sponsorship of R. M. Shurtless when he lived in New York from 1900-1904.
Newell, Waltman and Hartson left the city about the same time to seek solace in the Dover Plains, each establishing a studio in the picturesque region. Hartman relocated around 1917 and worked from his studio in Wassaic, New York, following Newell with Waltman who slightly proceeded him. Later, Powell joined the trio. It was the rolling hills of the Harlem Valley that kept the four men occupied (Poughkeepsie Journal, 21 June 1953, page 6A).The artists captured scenes of Dutchess County and painted the area with great affection. Each artist became a member of the Duchess County Art Association. In 1977, a third exhibit of the four artists’ works was exhibited at the Thomas Barrett House. The local newspaper included a lovely article about the exhibit entitled, “Once Important, They’re Forgotten.” The author of the article commented, “They were very integrated with their community…Their paintings still hang in the libraries, in school, the bank. You get a very definite sense of place with these paintings. It is definitely the Harlem Valley” (Poughkeepsie Journal, 25 Feb. 1977, page 3). The work of the four continues to be part of the community’s heritage elsewhere too, as they also painted murals in a number of local churches.
Although I have not tracked all three in terms of theatrical work yet, Powell painted a decorative panel for the first scenic artists ball held in Chicago in 1927.
Of Walter Hartson, he died in 1946 at the age of 79.
To be continued…
I have a print, painting not really sure because it is behind a glass frame that I am afraid to take out. It is a picture of looks like dutch print of 2 windmills, a woman and a man in a boat on a river. This was done by Walter C Hart Hartson and his signature is on the bottom left hand corner. Can you tell me anything about this print or painting? Where I can go or who to talk to about this. This has been in my family for yrs. My grandmother use to collect antiques but I don’t know where it came from.
Feel free to contact me through my business website http://www.historicstageservices.com. I will be happy to help.