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Martha Walter
1875 – Philadelphia – 1976
To the Market Venice
Oil on board
10 x 7 1/4 inches
Signed with estate stamp en verso
Literature: The Paintings of Martha Walter, Impressionist Jewels, A Retrospective, Woodmere Art Museum, 2002
Martha Walter was born in Philadelphia in 1875. She attended Girls High School in Philadelphia and then began her artistic studies at the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts in 1894. At the academy she studied with William Merritt Chase, one of the most important American artists and the most celebrated art teacher of the time. Their student-teacher relationship continued, as Walter joined Chase at the Shinnecock School of Art, which he maintained at Southampton on Long Island from 1891 to 1902.
In 1902 Walter won the Toppan Prize for her work at the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Art. The following year she went abroad on a Cresson Traveling Scholarship awarded by the Academy. Once in Paris, she enrolled at the prestigious Académie Julian, where she was the only American in a class of fifty women. She also joined a class at the Académie de la Grand Chaumière. She began to paint outdoor scenes, recording Parisian public life. This undertaking coincided with Walter’s first encounter with the American painter Alfred Maurer, whose work she much admired and whose paintings of the period may have provided inspiration for Walter’s early work. In 1904 Walter exhibited two works at the Paris Salon. Walter frequently traveled, especially to North Africa and Europe. Together with her friend, the artist Alice Schille, she spent many summers abroad, while living the rest of the year painting in Philadelphia.
Martha Walter’s paintings were critically well received from the outset of her career. She was first included in the biennial exhibition of contemporary American paintings at the Corcoran Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C. in 1907, and she continued to show in this venue through 1926. In 1909 Walter received another award from the Pennsylvania Academy, the Mary Smith Prize for the best work by a woman resident of Philadelphia.
In 1910 Walter moved to New York City, eventually settling into the Chelsea Hotel on West Twenty-Third Street by 1914. She began exhibiting her paintings at the National Academy of Design. During these years she painted many portraits of children, most often in an outdoor setting. The advent of World War I, however, prevented Walter from enjoying her usual travels abroad. She began to spend her summers at the popular artists’ colony in Gloucester, Massachusetts. It was here that her work began to embody the full qualities of Impressionism, though her use of vivid colors and use of space showed a relationship to Post-Impressionism as well. Through the second half of the decade, Walter was a consistent exhibitor at the annual exhibitions of the Gallery on the Moors in Gloucester, often alongside fellow art colonists Cecilia Beaux, Jane Peterson, and travel companion Alice Schille. It was at her Gloucester studio where she first began to teach, subsequently offering classes while in residence in Chicago and New York.
In 1922 Walter painted what became her most celebrated images, a series of works depicting the immigrants on Ellis Island, awaiting entry into the United States. In contrast to her happy beach scenes, the Ellis Island series portrays the harsh realities of immigrant family life. Twenty-two of her Ellis Island paintings were included in a large one-artist exhibition at the prestigious Galleries Georges Petit in Paris in July 1922. The series subsequently appeared in 1923 at the Art Institute of Chicago and at the Arlington Galleries in New York. In that same year Walter resumed her travels overseas, first North Africa, then northern Italy, and finally Spain. She returned to Philadelphia in 1928, and the paintings that grew out her travels found enthusiastic critical reception at home.
Around 1940, Walter appears to have ceased her extensive travels. She spent the rest of her years in the Philadelphia suburbs, living with her sisters. The George Hunter Museum of Art in Chattanooga, Tennessee, held a one-artist show of her work in 1953, and two years later the Woodmere Art Gallery held a major Martha Walter exhibition. In the late 1960s, the David David Gallery in Philadelphia began to represent her and shared her paintings with the Hammer Galleries in New York. Shortly before her centenary the Hammer Galleries featured a solo exhibition that emphasized the joyous aspects of her outdoor work as well as a turn to still lifes, some painted en plein air.
Martha Walter died in 1976. She was one hundred years old. Today, the works of Pennsylvania impressionist painter Martha Walter are represented in the Louvre, The Musée du Luxembourg, The Musée d’Orsay, The Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts, The Art Institute of Chicago, Detroit Institute of Arts, Milwaukee Art Center, Toledo Museum of Art, Terra Museum of Art and The Woodmere Art Gallery.
Our painting The Wedding Ceremony, is one of Martha Walter’s spirited scenes from Seville, Spain, painted during her trip to Europe in the early 1920s. For much of her Spanish sojourn Walter seems to have lingered in Seville, a city that was thought to have especially retained the distinctive characteristics of the country and that had enticed such earlier Philadelphia painters as Thomas Eakins and Mary Cassatt. In our painting, Martha Walter takes us inside one of Seville’s grand cathedrals. In the front of the painting, extending into the room, people are seated watching the wedding ceremony. The people attending the ceremony, contrast the grandiose columns that rise up in the middle of the church room. The columns appear in a lighter color that the rest of the church interior, further enhancing their majestic appearance as they cast of a delicate soft light. |