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Untitled (landscape with house)

Untitled (landscape with house)

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Vincent Canadé

Originally born into a wealthy, landowning family in an Albanian village in Southern Italy, Vincent Canadé’s family lost their wealth and property and subsequently immigrated to New York when he was a teenager. His contemporary biographers described Canadé as living in poverty and performing odd jobs to support his wife and children. Around 1919, his drawings attracted the attention of artist Joseph Stella who encouraged him to become an artist. Canadé was self-taught and had his first solo exhibition at the Weyhe Gallery in New York in 1925. By all accounts, he was a temperamental person with a difficult personality. He typically represented self-portraits, landscapes, and scenes of Brooklyn, which critics described using terms such as: brooding, morbid, bitter, and melancholy. This landscape is light and bright, quite different from how many of his paintings were described by critics.
Artist
Vincent Canadé
(American, 1879 – 1961)
Title
Untitled (landscape with house)
Date
ca. 1920s-1930s
Medium
Oil on canvas mounted on board
Dimensions
9 3/4 x 9 in. image
Credit
Gift of David Prosser
Accession No.
2021.45.3
Classification
Paintings
Geography
United States

Related

2012, sold by an unknown seller (Bainbridge Island, WA) via eBay to David Prosser (Madison, WI); 2021, gifted to the Chazen Museum of Art

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