George
Copeland Ault
(1891-1948)
This artist is available in our inventory
Traditional
American
Modern
American & European
A
descendant of French
Huguenots
and ancestors of the
American Revolution,
George Copeland Ault
was born in Cleveland,
Ohio, in 1891. When
he was eight, Ault's
family moved to London,
England, where his
father opened a printing
company and thus introduced
American printing techniques
and American inks to
Britain. Interested
in art, Ault undertook
a comprehensive study
of drawing and painting
at a variety of London's
creative institutions,
including University
College, the Slade
School, London University,
and St. John's Wood
Art School. He supplemented
this formal training
with visits to art
museums in London and
Paris where he could
copy the work of recognized
masters. In 1911, at
the age of twenty,
Ault returned to the
States. He moved around
New York and New Jersey
until 1937, when he
finally settled in
the rural community
of Woodstock, New York.
He remained there until
his accidental death
by drowning in 1948.
Throughout his life,
Ault devoted himself
to artistic production
in oil, watercolor,
and drawing. Preferring
familiar subjects from
the local landscape,
Ault's work firmly
roots itself in the
American scene. However,
his Cubist-Realist
technique of portraying
the natural world according
to the underlying geometry
of its forms shows
an influence of European
Modernism.
Ault's
early pictures were
first exhibited
at St. John's Wood
Art School in 1908.
The first American
showing of his mature
work occurred in New
York in 1920, where
the artist's individual
approach earned positive
attention. This trend
continued, and the
following year, he
was honored by the
Society of Independent
Artists, who selected
his work A New York
Skyline for their show
entitled "Our
Choice of Independents." In
his review of the exhibition,
critic C. Lewis Hind
commented that participating
artists "promised
that there was a future
of American art away
from the stereotype
of the moribund academic
productions of the
day."1
Provincetown
Waterfront depicts
familiar elements
from Ault's life in
the summer community
of Massachusetts. But
rather than merely
replicating an observation
of houses along the
shore, this watercolor
reduces the scene to
its primary elements,
presenting only "the
simple forms of which
it was composed [and]
leaving out all unessential
detail."2
1.
Quoted in a two-page
typed information
sheet given to the
Frick Library by
Milch Gallery on
November 30, 1967,
p. 1.
2. George C. Ault, quoted in a one-page information sheet, A Retrospective Exhibition:
George C. Ault, Charlotte, N.C., The Mint Museum of Art, October 15 - November
15, 1950.
4574
Meadowridge Road
Manlius, NY 13104-0310
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Email - art@caldwellgallery.com
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