Misplaced Pages

John Englehart

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
(Redirected from C. N. Doughty) American painter
This (October 2010) possibly contains original research. Please improve it by verifying the claims made and adding inline citations. Statements consisting only of original research should be removed. (November 2012) (Learn how and when to remove this message)
John Englehart
Yosemite Valley — by John Englehart, signed as C. N. Doughty, 1908.
BornJoseph John Englehart (?)
(1867-06-14)June 14, 1867
DiedApril 14, 1915(1915-04-14) (aged 47)
MovementRealism

John Englehart or Joseph John Englehart (1867–1915), was an American landscape painter who worked under a number of pseudonyms. Englehart was born on June 14, 1867, in Chicago, Illinois, and died on April 14, 1915, in Oakland, California.

Pseudonyms

John Englehart's numerous variant spellings and pseudonyms include:

  • Joseph John Englehart, Joseph John Engelhart, J. Englehart, J. Engelhart, J. Englehardt, J. Engelhardt, and Emblhart.
  • C. N. Doughty, C. C. Foucks, C. Williams, C. L. Willis, W. L. Willis, J. Cole, J. Delane, J. Enright, J. Gran, J. Grant, J. Hart, J. Lang, J. L. Monahan, Wm. J. Schon, and Ed Shroder.

Career

Englehart documented America's Western landscape and frontier during the late 19th and early 20th centuries. He was known for his landscape oil paintings of California and the Pacific Northwest.

The style of landscape paintings by Englehart never brought the critical acclaim given to his contemporary landscape painters, such as those of the Hudson River School, including Albert Bierstadt and Thomas Moran. However he was successful as an artist, and his works are included in the collections of several museums.

California

John Englehart's career started during the popular 'California landscape paintings' period of the latter 19th-century. From the late 1880s until the turn of the century he maintained a studio in San Francisco on Clay Street. During those prosperous years he commuted to work from a residence across the San Francisco Bay in Oakland. He painted scenes of California, including various views of Yosemite Valley.

"The wealth generated (in California) by the Gold Rush, the railroads, the Comstock Lode, banking, and commerce, created a very favorable climate for artists. People like the Stanfords, the Crockers, the Hopkins, and the rest of San Francisco society were buying art. Landscape paintings of famous places in the West were eagerly bought, and the current doings of the artists, where they were now and what they were painting, was duly reported in the papers and periodicals."

— William C. Miesse, from Siskiyous.edu: The San Francisco Art Boom, Mount Shasta as a Visual Resource

Pacific Northwest

Tacoma

In the late 1890s Englehart traveled and painted in the Pacific Northwest. He did many landscapes of the Tacoma, Washington area during this period.

Portland

In 1902, after San Francisco's art patrons' taste had moved on to European art, he opened a studio in Portland, Oregon. He spent a large part of his time there until 1904. He participated in the Lewis and Clark Centennial Exposition in 1905.

In 1909, he was awarded a prize for a landscape painting in a New York exhibit.

San Francisco Bay area

By 1910 Englehart had returned to the Bay Area, where he resided in Alameda near Oakland, until his death on April 14, 1915.

Realism style

John Englehart's style was Realism, focusing on being illustrative and descriptive. He did not emphasize an evocative or romantic style, such as Thomas Hill did, to paint "Not as it is, but as it ought to be." Englehart's landscape compositions had a goal to bring the viewer closer to an actual experience of 'being there.' For most of his paintings he avoided effets de soir, choosing the midday light over the 'romantic light' of sunrise and sunset. He also incorporated multiple viewpoints in his paintings to depict the scene.


See also

Selected works

Picture Subject Englehart's
Signator
Inches
inc. org.
frame
Price Auction
House
Yosemite signed as J. Englehart 64x44

$19,120

2004 Christies
Yosemite signed as Ed Shroder 53x31

$10,158

2006 Bonhams
Yosemite signed as J. J. Englehart 50x30

$7,832

2009 JMoran
Mining signed as J. J. Englehardt ?x? $7,500

2001 O'Gallerie
Yosemite signed as J. J. Englehart 46x32

$5,581

2005 Bonhams
lake signed as J. Englehardt 50x30

$3,250

2007 O'Gallerie
Mythical Valley signed as J. J. Englehart 50x30

$3,000

2001 O'Gallerie
Mt. Hood signed as Englehart 50x30

$2,750

2007 O'Gallerie
Mount Hood, Oregon signed as J. Englehart 48x30

$2,500

2002 O'Gallerie
Lake signed as WM. J. Schon 52x30

$2,040

2008 Bonhams
Crater Lake, Oregon signed as J. Englehart 36x26

$2,000

2000 O'Gallerie
Yosemite signed as WM Hart 36x18

$1,952

2009 Bonhams
Mt. Hood, Oregon signed as J. Englehart 36x22

$1,900

2002 O'Gallerie
Mt. Hood, Oregon signed as C. N. Doughty 34x18

$900

2003 O'Gallerie
Picture Subject Signature Size $Price Auction
House
Joseph John Englehart's Paintings Sold at Auction

Museum collections

  • Oakland Museum of California.
  • Washington State Historical Society.
  • College of Notre Dame, in Belmont, California.
  • De Young Museum, on loan to the Society of California Pioneers, San Francisco.
  • Nevada Museum, Reno.
  • The historic Baldwin Saloon (large collection), The Dalles, Oregon.
Picture Subject Englehart's
Signator
Inches
inc. org.
frame
Museum
Add here Add here Signature Size Museum
Picture Subject Signature Size Museum
Joseph John Englehart's Paintings In Museum

Unrelated artists

Englehart used many pseudonyms, however there are other similarly named artists, including:

  • Josef Engelhart — European oil painter.
  • Charles Montagu Doughty — poet.
  • Edna Palmer Engelhardt — oil painter.
  • Walter Albert Engelhardt — oil painter.
  • LeRoy Updyke (1876–1959) — copied Englehart in paintings for the tourist trade, University Of Washington painting instructor.

References

  • Hughes, Edan Artists in California 1786-1940
  • Falk Who Was Who in American Art
  • Dawdy Artists of the American West
  • Taylor, Mrs. H. J. Yosemite Indians and Other Sketches (1936)

Notes

  1. William C. Miesse, from Siskiyous.edu: The San Francisco Art Boom, Mount Shasta as a Visual Resource
  2. Washington State Historical Society
Premodern, Modern and Contemporary art movements
List of art movements/periods
Premodern
(Western)
Ancient
Medieval
Renaissance
17th century
18th century
Colonial art
Art borrowing
Western elements
Transition
to modern

(c. 1770 – 1862)
Modern
(1863–1944)
1863–1899
1900–1914
1915–1944
Contemporary
and Postmodern
(1945–present)
1945–1959
1960–1969
1970–1999
2000–
present
Related topics
Categories: