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Lot 37: Eugene Francis Savage, American (1883 - 1978), rocky landscape with harvest dancers, charcoal and chalk on paper, 35 1/4"H x 28 3/4"W(frame), 22 1/2"H x 19 3/4"W(sight)

Est: $400 USD - $600 USDPassed
Ripley AuctionsIndianapolis, IN, USDecember 14, 2024

Item Overview

Description

Eugene Francis Savage
American, (1883 - 1978)
rocky landscape with harvest dancers
charcoal and chalk on paper
Signed lower right.

Biography from the Archives of askART: Eugene Francis Savage, widely known as an American regionalist muralist and a painter of both native Hawaiian and Seminole Indian cultural groups was born in Covington, Indiana on March 29, 1883. He studied at the School of the Corcoran Gallery, Washington, DC, and later at the Art Institute of Chicago, one of America's most influential schools of art.

He moved to Rome after being offered a fellowship at The American Academy created in the 19th century as a home for talented American artists who desired to study abroad. After returning to the United States, he was a mural painter for the Works Progress Administration Federal Arts Program. He later attended Yale University and received a Bachelor's degree in painting in the fine arts program. Following graduation, he was offered membership at the National Academy of Design, a preeminent invitational and honorary society of American professional artists founded in 1825 in New York City where it still operates a school of art and a museum.

Savage became interested in the history and mythology of Seminole culture after a number of visits to Florida that started in 1935. The Seminoles came to Florida in the early 18th century and were a branch of the Muskogee-Creek nation that developed its own identity in the territory known as Florida.

Savage's Seminole oeuvre is known for both its accuracy when portraying Seminole traditional mythology and for Savage's unique art-deco and colorful style of execution. When reviewing his Seminole paintings, it is apparent that much of the unique Seminole clothing that plays an important role in his vision consists of a wide array of bright fabric colors. Historically, Seminoles are said to have used primitive bone needles and fiber thread as well as human-powered sewing machines to create these colorful garment masterpieces from scraps of available fabric material.

Like other minorities in Florida both before and after statehood in 1845, the Seminole nation experienced a struggle while attempting to integrate their lifestyle into the mainstream culture of the western world. With rapid growth in the early 1900s, some of the Seminoles, who had lived in isolated communities throughout the State and in the Everglades of South Florida for decades, were forcefully removed to the American West. During this period of coercion, Florida was poised to experience exponential development which included harvesting much of the hardwood forests and the destruction of natural bodies of water through engineering designed to drain much of the State for agriculture. This rapid development and population explosion from people throughout the United States who moved to the State was met by a conservation effort to save much of the natural assets of the State and create an Everglades National Park. This idea was proposed to Congress by Eugene Savage and a group of environmental supporters. The Everglades National Park was created in May of 1934 but not dedicated until 1947 by President Harry Truman. It was during 1935-1936 that Savage painted an additional number of influential and historical paintings depicting the life and the mythology of the Seminoles in Florida.

Savage attempted to portray the Seminole culture in a positive light, but through themes of Seminole travail. Many of these paintings show Seminole families living in what would later become the officially established Everglades National Park. One specific painting, Gaunt Tamarac, painted by Savage in 1935, depicts a Native American family with the female figure holding a bag in her hand and with a sad look on her face. This theme of loss, which was present in several of his other Seminole paintings, references the hardships that Natives experience due to the introduction of development and industry in Florida. What was enclosed in the white sack held by the female figure, though, is unknown. It could symbolize a number of items including objects unable to survive due to a lack of resources. And/or it could be filled with the few and minimal scant resources the family salvaged as they began their trek away from their home to an uncertain future. Either way, though, the bag acts as a symbol for the burden of obstacles and difficulty that many Seminoles had to endure because of their unfortunate history in Florida.

Savage painted more of Seminole culture later in his career after additional visits to Florida in the 1950s. Most of his paintings demonstrate a contemporary Art Deco-inspired yet personal style of Surrealism and were called Dreamscapes by a number of critics because of their supernatural and often surreal subject matter. Following his work in Native-themed art, Savage taught mural and easel painting to students at Yale University.

While many of Savage's public works became famous and well-known throughout the United States, his Seminole paintings were relatively unknown to the public until an exhibition in 2011 organized by Jacksonville's Cummer Museum and accompanied by a catalog written by Elizabeth Heuer entitled, Eugene Savage – The Seminole Paintings.

Eugene Savage died in 1978 in Woodbury, Connecticut. Savage's Seminole paintings are included in the collections of several Florida, regional and national museums including a large body of Florida work at the Cummer Museum and Gardens, Jacksonville, Florida, and a number of Seminole paintings at the Museum of Arts and Sciences' Cici and Hyatt Brown Museum of Art, Daytona Beach, Florida. Savages's career and his Florida paintings are also discussed in 50 Masterworks from the Brown Collection by David K. Swoyer and Reflections Paintings of Florida 1865-1965 by Gary R. Libby.

Written by Talia Aslani, student of Gary R. Libby at The Honors College, The University of Florida, Gainesville

Submitted by Gary R. Libby, author of Reflections: Paintings of Florida 1865-1965

Dimensions

35 1/4"H x 28 3/4"W(frame), 22 1/2"H x 19 3/4"W(sight)

Artist or Maker

Medium

charcoal and chalk on paper

Payment & Shipping

Payment

Accepted forms of payment: ACH, American Express, Discover, MasterCard, Money Order / Cashiers Check, Personal Check, Visa, Wire Transfer

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Shipping and removal are the sole responsibility of the buyer. Shipping is available by request through a third party shipping service, Shipping Saint. Please contact our office if you would like to arrange your own shipping. Buyers will not automatically receive a shipping invoice. You will be sent a separate invoice for shipping once your initial invoice is paid and your items are packed and ready to ship. Shipping is invoiced via Shipping Saint and cannot be combined with your auction invoice.
Shipping Saint can be contacted at [email protected] or via phone, 317-644-6088.
PICKUP: Pickup is by appointment only. Items are subject to storage fees if they are not removed from premises within 10 business days. If items require shipping, arrangements and removal must be completed within 15 business days.

Auction Details

Great Estates Live! Fine Art Auction

by
Ripley Auctions
December 14, 2024, 11:00 AM EST

5451 N Rural Street, Indianapolis, IN, 46220, US

Terms

Buyer's Premium

30.0%

Bidding Increments

From:To:Increment:
$0$99$10
$100$199$20
$200$499$25
$500$999$50
$1,000$2,999$100
$3,000$4,999$200
$5,000$9,999$500
$10,000$29,999$1,000
$30,000+$2,500

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You must provide a verified credit card for bidder registration. Your card will be automatically charged 72 hours after the auction. Please call with questions prior to bidding. 317-251-5635

Payment Information

The card used at registration will automatically be charged 72 hours post sale.
Payments are accepted by Cash, Check, Money Order, Visa, MasterCard, Discover, AMEX, ACH, and Bank Wire Transfer. Gold jewelry or purchases over $5,000 will require confirmed funds, such as ACH or Wire Bank Wire Transfer. The full purchase price plus all applicable taxes, processing fees, and storage fees are expected before removal or shipping of any of the items. Guaranteed payment may be required for removal of goods for new or out-of-town bidders.
SALES TAX: Buyers may be subject to sales tax unless proper exemption documentation has been submitted to Invaluable. Tax exemption documentation can be submitted at [email protected].

Shipping Information

Shipping and removal are the sole responsibility of the buyer. Shipping is available by request through a third party shipping service, Shipping Saint. Please contact our office if you would like to arrange your own shipping. Buyers will not automatically receive a shipping invoice. You will be sent a separate invoice for shipping once your initial invoice is paid and your items are packed and ready to ship. Shipping is invoiced via Shipping Saint and cannot be combined with your auction invoice.
Shipping Saint can be contacted at [email protected] or via phone, 317-644-6088.
PICKUP: Pickup is by appointment only. Items are subject to storage fees if they are not removed from premises within 10 business days. If items require shipping, arrangements and removal must be completed within 15 business days.

Sales Tax

Buyers may be subject to sales tax unless proper exemption documentation has been submitted to Invaluable. Tax exemption documentation can be submitted at [email protected].

Condition Statement

Most items in our auction are estate consigned. All items should be considered "as-is". We make every effort to accurately describe each lot using complete descriptions and detailed photographs. You may email or call us with any questions prior to bidding. All sizes, weights and ages of lots are approximate. We encourage you to visit and inspect all lots during preview and/or carefully examine all additional images provided with online catalog and ask for more information, when needed. It is your responsibility to know what you are bidding on prior to placing any bids. Please note that any lot listed with "attributed" or "style" cannot be guaranteed to be the work of the noted artist or period. All sales are final.