Willard LeRoy Metcalf 1858-1925
Spring, 1904
Oil on canvas
25 3/4 x 29 inches (65.4 x 73.7 cm)
Signed and dated lower left: W. L. Metcalf - 04 -
Inscribed on verso of stretcher bar: June 1, 1904
Inscribed on verso of stretcher bar: June 1, 1904
Willard LeRoy Metcalf was not only an excellent painter who played a significant role in the development of American Impressionism, he also affected the way his viewers felt about the...
Willard LeRoy Metcalf was not only an excellent painter who played a significant role in the development of American Impressionism, he also affected the way his viewers felt about the American landscape in all of its variety. The directness of his style and its absence of artificiality were prized by his peers. He was appreciated, in the words of the nineteenth-century critic Royal Cortissoz, for the "sincerity and force with which he puts familiar motives before us."1
As a founding member of The Ten, Metcalf combined his artistic training in France––which included formal classes at the Académie Julian in Paris and informal sketching trips in Giverny, where he was influenced by Claude Monet–– with his love for the landscape that surrounded him. He became best known for his intimate pictures of the New England countryside. The views he chose to paint were undeniably beautiful but not grand and majestic or even dramatic. Instead, Metcalf evoked the timelessness of the natural world’s charm and his deep personal connection to the land.
Spring is a superb example of Metcalf’s deliberate choice of subject matter and the signature way he chose to render it. The subtlety of the painting, as revealed in the soft palette and graceful lines, perfectly matches the bucolic scene. A vaporous haze casts a thin veil over the painting and effectively captures the atmosphere. In all of Metcalf’s paintings from this important period in his career, and particularly here in this work, he combined the influence of the Barbizon School, French Impressionism, James McNeill Whistler, and John Henry Twachtman with his own strong desire to find a place for himself in American art and culture. “The perfect days and nights in his canvases were not artificial, optimistic, or sublime,” writes Elizabeth deVeer and Richard Boyle. “They were a continuous reflection of a journey ‘home,’ expressed with a delicate, assured sense of color and texture. . . ."2 Indeed, nostalgia and sense of place were essential characteristics of Metcalf’s best paintings.
Spring is a newly discovered painting by the artist, making it an extremely rare and important work. It rivals the delicate beauty of Metcalf’s masterworks Benediction (Smithsonian American Art Museum) and May Night (Corcoran Museum of Art/National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C.). All of these scenes conjure a sense of past romance that deeply enthralled Metcalf while he was in Europe, something he missed profoundly upon his return to the States.3 Thus, he endeavored to capture what was unique and beautiful about American heritage as it was expressed in the landscape, and Spring is a tour de force of this effort.
1 Royal Cortissoz, “Willard Metcalf.” American Academy of Arts and Letters, Academy Publications, no. 60 (1927).
2 Elizabeth de Veer and Richard J. Boyle, Sunlight and Shadow: The Life and Art of Willard L. Metcalf (1987).
3 Ibid.
Note: This work has only recently been rediscovered and is now being introduced to the market. It has been submitted to the forthcoming Willard Leroy Metcalf Catalogue Raisonné Project, under the direction of Betty Krulik, with Dr. Lisa N. Peters and Deborah Spanierman. According to the present owners, the painting was discovered in 1980 by the purchasers of the historic residence known as “Old Battery,” Tucker’s Town, Bermuda. The house was originally built in the early 1920s by noted golf course designer and architect Charles Blair Macdonald (1855–1939). Research into the ownership of Old Battery between Macdonald’s death in 1939 and its purchase in 1980 isongoing.
As a founding member of The Ten, Metcalf combined his artistic training in France––which included formal classes at the Académie Julian in Paris and informal sketching trips in Giverny, where he was influenced by Claude Monet–– with his love for the landscape that surrounded him. He became best known for his intimate pictures of the New England countryside. The views he chose to paint were undeniably beautiful but not grand and majestic or even dramatic. Instead, Metcalf evoked the timelessness of the natural world’s charm and his deep personal connection to the land.
Spring is a superb example of Metcalf’s deliberate choice of subject matter and the signature way he chose to render it. The subtlety of the painting, as revealed in the soft palette and graceful lines, perfectly matches the bucolic scene. A vaporous haze casts a thin veil over the painting and effectively captures the atmosphere. In all of Metcalf’s paintings from this important period in his career, and particularly here in this work, he combined the influence of the Barbizon School, French Impressionism, James McNeill Whistler, and John Henry Twachtman with his own strong desire to find a place for himself in American art and culture. “The perfect days and nights in his canvases were not artificial, optimistic, or sublime,” writes Elizabeth deVeer and Richard Boyle. “They were a continuous reflection of a journey ‘home,’ expressed with a delicate, assured sense of color and texture. . . ."2 Indeed, nostalgia and sense of place were essential characteristics of Metcalf’s best paintings.
Spring is a newly discovered painting by the artist, making it an extremely rare and important work. It rivals the delicate beauty of Metcalf’s masterworks Benediction (Smithsonian American Art Museum) and May Night (Corcoran Museum of Art/National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C.). All of these scenes conjure a sense of past romance that deeply enthralled Metcalf while he was in Europe, something he missed profoundly upon his return to the States.3 Thus, he endeavored to capture what was unique and beautiful about American heritage as it was expressed in the landscape, and Spring is a tour de force of this effort.
1 Royal Cortissoz, “Willard Metcalf.” American Academy of Arts and Letters, Academy Publications, no. 60 (1927).
2 Elizabeth de Veer and Richard J. Boyle, Sunlight and Shadow: The Life and Art of Willard L. Metcalf (1987).
3 Ibid.
Note: This work has only recently been rediscovered and is now being introduced to the market. It has been submitted to the forthcoming Willard Leroy Metcalf Catalogue Raisonné Project, under the direction of Betty Krulik, with Dr. Lisa N. Peters and Deborah Spanierman. According to the present owners, the painting was discovered in 1980 by the purchasers of the historic residence known as “Old Battery,” Tucker’s Town, Bermuda. The house was originally built in the early 1920s by noted golf course designer and architect Charles Blair Macdonald (1855–1939). Research into the ownership of Old Battery between Macdonald’s death in 1939 and its purchase in 1980 isongoing.
Provenance
Private collection since 1980;By descent in the family until the present, Navasota, Texas;
Barridoff Auctions, South Portland, Maine, January 24th, 2026, The Second Annual Vose Barridoff American Fine Art Auction, lot 63
Literature
This work has been submitted to the forthcoming Willard Leroy Metcalf Catalogue Raisonné Project, under the direction of Betty Krulik, with Dr. Lisa N. Peters and Deborah Spanierman.36
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