Portrait of Frederick Childe Hassam Frederick Childe Hassam

Frederick Childe Hassam Painting Reproductions 1 of 13

1859-1935

American Impressionist Painter

In rain-swept paint, flags mirrored in puddles and windows, a modern city pulses. From such scenes of movement and light, Frederick Childe Hassam fashioned a recognisable American Impressionism. Born in Dorchester, Boston, on 17 October 1859 and dying in East Hampton, New York, on 27 August 1935, he became one of the most visible interpreters of urban life and the Atlantic coast, and a driving member of The Ten - the seceding circle that championed Impressionism to American collectors and museums.

In Dorchester he grew up in a household shaken by the Boston fire of 1872, which ruined his father’s cutlery business and sent the young man to work. Accounting at Little, Brown & Company paid the bills while apprenticeship with a wood engraver taught exacting draftsmanship. Illustration for Harper’s, Scribner’s, and The Century followed; precision in line met an eye already alert to weather and street. Around the same time he adopted the name Childe - his uncle’s - and began placing a small crescent before his signature, a theatrical flourish that teased at exotic origins and turned a signature into branding.

Evenings brought study at the Lowell Institute and the Boston Art Club. By 1883 Hassam had a studio and, in Williams and Everett Gallery, a first solo show of watercolours. That year a long look at Europe sharpened his ambitions. With Edmund H. Garrett he travelled through Britain, the Netherlands, France, Italy, Switzerland, and Spain, making watercolours and absorbing the varieties of sky. Turner’s handling of light in watercolour registered strongly, not as a formula but as permission to treat atmosphere as subject. In 1884 he married Maud Doane, taught at the Cowles Art School, and moved with purposeful energy among Boston’s clubs and critics.

Paris called in 1886. At the Académie Julian he drew from the figure under Gustave Boulanger and Jules Joseph Lefebvre, then bristled at routine. He preferred the city itself as teacher. Street scenes - initially keyed to browns - soon brightened. In 1887 his Grand Prix Day pictures opened the palette to pastels and broken strokes, a language closer to the French avant-garde without importing its doctrines whole. Four works went to the Exposition Universelle of 1889, where he won a bronze medal and wrote, with pride, that American painters could stand as their own school. Renoir’s colour experiments, discovered by chance in a studio he rented, confirmed his own pursuit of clear, unblended colour laid directly to canvas.

Back in New York in 1889 he faced Fifth Avenue. Fifth Avenue in Winter shows carriages and trolleys threading a dark, velvety day; Washington Arch in Spring gleams with whites that lift the whole scene. The range mattered - he could lean into blacks and browns or into a pastel shimmer. Friendships with J. Alden Weir and John Henry Twachtman anchored him within the American Water Color Society, while Theodore Robinson kept Giverny close in conversation. Rather than opera boxes or boating parties, he favoured pavements and crossings - humanity in motion set against masonry and weather.

Summers belonged to the Isles of Shoals, and to Celia Thaxter’s salon on Appledore Island. He painted the rocky shore, the tang of garden colour, and intimate interiors. The Room of Flowers, painted after Thaxter’s death in 1894, carries that mix of affection and observation. Often he worked with colour straight from the tube onto unprimed canvas - a frank, high-key application that keeps the light fresh. Other seasonal stations followed: Gloucester, Cos Cob, Old Lyme. An ambitious 1896 auction in New York yielded low prices and bruised reviews; he crossed again to Europe, studied the Old Masters in Italy and France, then returned determined and prolific, never long without a dealer or a buyer.

In 1897 he helped form The Ten - a secession from the Society of American Artists that argued for an artist-led exhibition platform. His New England summers brought more architecture and pure landscape into view, while Old Lyme shifted away from Tonalism toward a lighter key. Provincetown in 1900 produced Building the Schooner, an unusual record of shipbuilding on a town beach. Marketing savvy served him well. Recognition caught up - in 1906 he became an Academician of the National Academy of Design - and sales improved. A midlife patch of melancholy yielded to swimming and travel, and his city pictures climbed to higher vantage points. As subways and motor buses replaced carriage rhythm, figures shrink and the skyline asserts its zigzag. Skyscrapers, he said, taken in clusters became tender against distance - a new kind of beauty.

Two long trips to Oregon in 1904 and 1908 with C. E. S. Wood widened his geography. He answered the High Desert, the Cascades, and the Pacific coast with a palette adjusted to heat and alpine clarity. In 1910 he returned briefly to Europe and caught Bastille Day on Rue Daunou in July Fourteenth - a precursor to the great Flag series. Back in New York he painted his sequence of window pictures, often a figure in a patterned kimono held before soft panes of light, as in The Goldfish Window of 1916. The decade vibrated with output. The South Ledges, Appledore of 1913 balances sea and granite on an almost square canvas, a confident set of diagonals that makes tide and rock equivalent. He showed six works at the 1913 Armory Show, holding to Impressionism as Cubism and its heirs entered American discourse. A mural commission for the Panama-Pacific Exposition followed, along with renewed attention to etching and lithography - over four hundred plates and stones in the late career, even if buyers preferred oil and watercolour.

Then came the flags. In 1916 New York staged long Preparedness parades along Fifth Avenue - the newly styled Avenue of the Allies - and Hassam found a motif that fused pageant and weather. He painted some thirty canvases where banners fill the foreground or ripple like reflections. The Avenue in the Rain of 1917, now familiar from the White House, pushes red, white, and blue into a watery lattice. Several flag pictures were given to Liberty Bond drives; he hoped the whole set might remain together as a memorial, but they dispersed to museums and collections. Patriotism here arrives through light, not through uniforms - an urban music of colour and air.

In 1919 he bought a house in East Hampton. Prices rose in the 1920s; honours accrued, including the Gold Medal of Honor from the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts in 1920 and participation in the art competition of the 1928 Olympic Games. Travel narrowed to American circuits. Modernism’s newer impulses left him cold, and he said so with biting wit. Yet the studio remained busy - coastal scenes, gardens, windows, streets. He died in 1935, leaving thousands of works across media, from oil and watercolour to etching and lithography.

Frederick Childe Hassam continues to speak to a present that lives by streets and seasons. His city pictures read as diaries of tempo and weather, and his coastal views grant seawater and granite equal dignity. Perhaps the pageantry of crowds gave his brush its clarity - pattern found in motion, not imposed. The crescent by his name, part affect, part myth, stands now as a small emblem of self-invention within a thoroughly American career. Hassam’s insistence on painting the world at hand - New York’s avenues, New England’s shore, the glare of July and the glisten of rain - remains his most persuasive argument.

299 Hassam Paintings

Newport Waterfront, 1901 by Hassam | Painting Reproduction

Newport Waterfront 1901

Oil Painting
$740
SKU: HSS-3930
Frederick Childe Hassam
Original Size: 66.6 x 61.4 cm
Flint Institute of Arts, Michigan, USA

An Outdoor Portrait of Miss Weir, 1909 by Hassam | Painting Reproduction

An Outdoor Portrait of Miss Weir 1909

Oil Painting
$891
Canvas Print
$56.03
SKU: HSS-5108
Frederick Childe Hassam
Original Size: 96.5 x 96.5 cm
Crocker Art Museum, California, USA

Place Centrale and Fort Cabanas, Havana, 1895 by Hassam | Painting Reproduction

Place Centrale and Fort Cabanas, Havana 1895

Oil Painting
$681
Canvas Print
$58.69
SKU: HSS-5109
Frederick Childe Hassam
Original Size: 54 x 66.7 cm
Detroit Institute of Arts, Michigan, USA

Surf and Rocks, 1906 by Hassam | Painting Reproduction

Surf and Rocks 1906

Oil Painting
$688
Canvas Print
$56.03
SKU: HSS-5110
Frederick Childe Hassam
Original Size: 50.8 x 76.2 cm
Detroit Institute of Arts, Michigan, USA

The Smelt Fishers, Cos Cob, 1896 by Hassam | Painting Reproduction

The Smelt Fishers, Cos Cob 1896

Oil Painting
$543
Canvas Print
$67.45
SKU: HSS-5111
Frederick Childe Hassam
Original Size: 54 x 44.5 cm
Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco, California, USA

Seaweed and Surf, Appledore at Sunset, 1912 by Hassam | Painting Reproduction

Seaweed and Surf, Appledore at Sunset 1912

Oil Painting
$848
Canvas Print
$125.88
SKU: HSS-5112
Frederick Childe Hassam
Original Size: 64.8 x 69.2 cm
Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco, California, USA

Easter Morning (Portrait at a New York Window), 1921 by Hassam | Painting Reproduction

Easter Morning (Portrait at a New York Window) 1921

Oil Painting
$998
Canvas Print
$96.07
SKU: HSS-5113
Frederick Childe Hassam
Original Size: 93.7 x 65 cm
Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco, California, USA

Celia Thaxter's Garden, Isles of Shoals, Maine, 1890 by Hassam | Painting Reproduction

Celia Thaxter's Garden, Isles of Shoals, Maine 1890

Oil Painting
$617
Canvas Print
$69.13
SKU: HSS-5114
Frederick Childe Hassam
Original Size: 45.1 x 54.6 cm
Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, USA

The Water Garden, 1909 by Hassam | Painting Reproduction

The Water Garden 1909

Oil Painting
$905
Canvas Print
$56.03
SKU: HSS-5115
Frederick Childe Hassam
Original Size: 61 x 91.4 cm
Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, USA

Surf, Isles of Shoals, 1913 by Hassam | Painting Reproduction

Surf, Isles of Shoals 1913

Oil Painting
$945
Canvas Print
$59.42
SKU: HSS-5116
Frederick Childe Hassam
Original Size: 71.8 x 89.5 cm
Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, USA

Coast Scene, Isles of Shoals, 1901 by Hassam | Painting Reproduction

Coast Scene, Isles of Shoals 1901

Oil Painting
$863
Canvas Print
$60.85
SKU: HSS-5117
Frederick Childe Hassam
Original Size: 63.2 x 76.5 cm
Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, USA

Point Lobos, Carmel, 1914 by Hassam | Painting Reproduction

Point Lobos, Carmel 1914

Oil Painting
$956
Canvas Print
$109.62
SKU: HSS-5118
Frederick Childe Hassam
Original Size: 72 x 92 cm
Los Angeles County Museum of Art, California, USA

Golden Afternoon, 1908 by Hassam | Painting Reproduction

Golden Afternoon 1908

Oil Painting
$998
Canvas Print
$56.03
SKU: HSS-5119
Frederick Childe Hassam
Original Size: 76.4 x 102.6 cm
Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, USA

Parc Monceau, Paris, 1897 by Hassam | Painting Reproduction

Parc Monceau, Paris 1897

Oil Painting
$600
Canvas Print
$77.44
SKU: HSS-5120
Frederick Childe Hassam
Original Size: 61.3 x 45 cm
Frye Art Museum, Seattle, USA

Pont-Aven, Noon Day, 1897 by Hassam | Painting Reproduction

Pont-Aven, Noon Day 1897

Oil Painting
$665
Canvas Print
$86.91
SKU: HSS-5121
Frederick Childe Hassam
Original Size: 61.3 x 50.5 cm
Private Collection

In Brittany, 1897 by Hassam | Painting Reproduction

In Brittany 1897

Oil Painting
$789
Canvas Print
$85.45
SKU: HSS-5122
Frederick Childe Hassam
Original Size: 60.3 x 71.4 cm
Private Collection

July Fourteenth, Rue Daunou, 1910, 1910 by Hassam | Painting Reproduction

July Fourteenth, Rue Daunou, 1910 1910

Oil Painting
$956
Canvas Print
$71.06
SKU: HSS-5123
Frederick Childe Hassam
Original Size: 74 x 50.5 cm
Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, USA

Winter Sickle Pears, 1918 by Hassam | Painting Reproduction

Winter Sickle Pears 1918

Oil Painting
$729
Canvas Print
$56.03
SKU: HSS-5124
Frederick Childe Hassam
Original Size: 51.4 x 76.8 cm
Private Collection

Long Island Pebbles and Fruit, 1931 by Hassam | Painting Reproduction

Long Island Pebbles and Fruit 1931

Oil Painting
$822
Canvas Print
$56.03
SKU: HSS-5125
Frederick Childe Hassam
Original Size: 41 x 99 cm
American Academy of Arts and Letters, New York, USA

Colonial Quilt, 1922 by Hassam | Painting Reproduction

Colonial Quilt 1922

Oil Painting
$945
Canvas Print
$56.03
SKU: HSS-5126
Frederick Childe Hassam
Original Size: 106.7 x 66 cm
American Academy of Arts and Letters, New York, USA

Old House and Garden, East Hampton, 1898 by Hassam | Painting Reproduction

Old House and Garden, East Hampton 1898

Oil Painting
$627
Canvas Print
$87.42
SKU: HSS-5127
Frederick Childe Hassam
Original Size: 61.3 x 50.8 cm
Henry Art Gallery at the University of Washington, Seattle, USA

Little Old Cottage, Egypt Lane, East Hampton, 1917 by Hassam | Painting Reproduction

Little Old Cottage, Egypt Lane, East Hampton 1917

Oil Painting
$877
Canvas Print
$75.34
SKU: HSS-5128
Frederick Childe Hassam
Original Size: 83.2 x 115.6 cm
Guild Hall Museum, East Hampton, USA

Lilies, 1910 by Hassam | Painting Reproduction

Lilies 1910

Oil Painting
$892
Canvas Print
$85.62
SKU: HSS-5129
Frederick Childe Hassam
Original Size: 69.2 x 83.8 cm
Private Collection

The Fourth of July, 1916, 1916 by Hassam | Painting Reproduction

The Fourth of July, 1916 1916

Oil Painting
$848
Canvas Print
$60.37
SKU: HSS-5130
Frederick Childe Hassam
Original Size: 91.4 x 66.4 cm
Private Collection

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