Stettheimer, Florine

Stettheimer, Florine

▪ American painter
born Aug. 29, 1871, Rochester, N.Y., U.S.
died May 11, 1944, New York, N.Y.

      American painter whose highly personal and idiosyncratic style was characterized by vivid colour, a purposeful naiveté, and whimsical humour, often in the service of wry social comment.

      Stettheimer received training in painting at the Art Students League in New York City, where she studied from 1892 to 1895. In 1906 she moved to Europe with her mother and two sisters. While living abroad she continued her studies in painting and was exposed to the work of the Symbolists and the Postimpressionists.

      With the outbreak of World War I in 1914, the family returned to New York City, where the Stettheimer women began hosting salons. Among their most frequent guests were the artists Marcel Duchamp (Duchamp, Marcel) and Marsden Hartley (Hartley, Marsden) and the author and critic Carl Van Vechten (Van Vechten, Carl). Stettheimer often painted portraits of her well-known visitors, and the group was also her primary audience. After an unsuccessful gallery exhibition in 1916, Stettheimer only sporadically showed her work in public. Instead, she chose to pursue her art privately, developing a unique style. Her paintings are characterized by their vivid palette and stylized figures. The canvases present a playful view of a privileged, urban world while still maintaining a critical edge.

      Stettheimer did receive some recognition during her lifetime. In 1932 her work was included in the First Biennial Exhibition of Contemporary American Painters at the Whitney Museum. She was also applauded in 1934 for her set and costume designs for Four Saints in Three Acts, an opera written by Virgil Thomson (Thomson, Virgil) and Gertrude Stein (Stein, Gertrude). Her most ambitious work was a series of four canvases in which she glorified and critiqued the cathedrals of the modern city: the financial district, theatre, department stores, and art museum. Stettheimer was still working on Cathedrals of Art when she died.

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Universalium. 2010.

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