1208

William Woodward (American/New Orleans, 1859-1939), "Portrait of the Artist's Son, Lieutenant Carl Ellsworth Woodward", 1917, oil on canvas, pencil signed and titled en verso and on Society of Independent Artists Exhibition label on stretcher, 38" x 22". Framed. Provenance: Descended in the family of the artist. William Woodward, an American Impressionist portrait, landscape, still life and cityscape painter was dedicated to organizing and promoting Southern art. Few artists have left such a profound legacy on the New Orleans and Gulf Coast area as Woodward and his brother and fellow artist Ellsworth. They were professors of art and drawing at Tulane University and helped found the Newcomb College, where Ellsworth remained as the chair of the art department until his retirement in 1931. William Woodward was equally pioneering in the development of Tulane. Trained in architecture at the Massachusetts Normal Art School, Woodward designed the campus' early buildings and founded its School of Architecture. Much of our knowledge of New Orleans' historic architecture in the Vieux Carre is owed to William Woodward's rich documentation of its people and buildings in his many paintings/vignettes of daily life. Woodward's portraits, though lesser known, exude the same passion and commitment to the city's residents. In 1817, after his son Carl enlisted in World War I, where he was seriously injured, Woodward painted several portraits of local soldiers, including the one offered here of his son. Other prominent "war portraits" of similar scale, palette and composition are those of General Allison Owen and Lieutenant General Bryan Black, both of which are conserved in the permanent collection of the Louisiana State Museum. In a moving editorial published in the "Times Picayune" on September 22, 1917, William Woodward calls upon New Orleaneans to support its recently departed soldiers, including the names of the above-mentioned portraits. Given the loss of students, who left to serve their country, he asks for assistance in maintaining the Tulane School of Architecture in their absence: "It occurs to me that no better support could be given them than to carry on the school until they return to fight its battles. I, therefore, offer one scholarship ($100) for the period of the war in hope that the friends of the above mentioned will do the same." Almost a century later, the Woodward family offers this portrait back to New Orleans in the hope that it too will follow in the tradition of William and Ellsworth and honor its veterans, as well as the Woodwards' memory. Carl Woodward, a lifetime New Orleanean, was born in 1894. He was a graduate of Tulane University, and served in World Wars I and II, achieving the rank of Colonel in the United States Airforce. He also founded Carl E. Woodward Inc. construction contractors, a company dedicated to preserving and emulating southern architectural styles. Woodward died in 1972, passing his legacy on to his two daughters and six grandchildren.


  • Condition: No losses, inpainting or restoration detected under UV light. Light craquelure to impasto in cloud regions. Light accretions (easily removed with cleaning). In overall very good condition.

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December 6, 2015 10:00 AM CST
New Orleans, LA, US

New Orleans Auction Galleries

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