This is a follow on from yesterday’s post “Composition Part 1.”
It’s almost exactly sixty years (“Oh no it’s not!” says voice from the back*) since Edgar Alwin Payne died on the 8th of April 1946.
His Wikipedia page reveals that there is a lake named after him in the High Sierra Nevada of California. How many other artists have a lake named after them?
Here are a few images to use in a Compare & Contrast exercise against Payne’s composition thumbnails from yesterday’s post.
(Click on the thumbnails for the big pictures)
A mini-bio:
Painter, muralist. Born in Washburn, MO on March 1, 1883. Payne left home at age 14 and found work painting houses, stage sets, and signs. His travels took him through the Ozarks and into Mexico. Except for a brief period at the Art Institute of Chicago, he remained a self-taught artist. On his first visit to California in 1909 he spent several months painting in Laguna Beach before visiting San Francisco. While in San Francisco he met artist Elsie Palmer whom he married in Chicago in 1912. In 1917 he returned to Glendale, CA with a commission from Chicago’s Congress Hotel for a mural of 11,000 square yards of muslin which was accomplished with the help of other local artists and installed shortly thereafter. In 1918 the Paynes established a home and studio in Laguna Beach where he organized and became the first president of the local art association. He continued painting and exhibiting in Los Angeles and Laguna until 1922 when he and Elsie began a two-year painting tour of Europe. During the next eight years their winter residence was mainly in and around New York City. They traveled from coast to coast in the U.S. until 1932 when they returned to Hollywood and the following year separated. Payne is internationally famous for his canvases depicting Indians riding through desert canyons and landscapes of the Sierra Nevada. He produced a color motion picture called “Sierra Journey” and Payne Lake in the High Sierra is named for him. He died in Hollywood, CA on April 8, 1947.
Payne is perhaps the best known of the California Impressionists. His distinctive style, with his large, painterly brushstrokes, coupled to his penchant for dramatic subject matter, makes his work uniquely recognizable. His book on structure and composition can be found in most artists’ libraries.
Payne was a member of the Salmagundi Club in New York and the California Art Club. His work is held in numerous collections including the Chicago Art Museum, the Laguna Art Museum, the University of Nebraska Galleries, and the Fleischer Museum in Scottsdale, Arizona.
* (Oh alright, the year of his death is sometimes / often given as 1947)





































































One Comment
I followed your link from AN. Thanks for posting this. I had never heard of Payne and now I see what I’ve been missing. Beautiful stuff!