Many others are gems and well
worth the visit of art lovers. Among
those which give great promise are the harmonious and rare pieces of coloring
which bear the name of W. Ferdinand
Macy. His genius for color has been
coveted by older and better known painters.
Three of his pictures have been sold within a week from this
gallery.71 To be lauded together with
the great Bierstadt must have buoyed Ferdinand’s
spirits immensely because, as will be next read, he so threw himself into his
work that 1886 became one of his most productive years. During June, 1886, the New Bedford Evening
Standard printed a notice about Ellis’s Fine Art Rooms that states “Mr. W.
Ferdinand Macy places several paintings in the gallery to-day ... ‘Nantucket
Commons in Autumn,’ painted to order for Dr. C.D. Prescott, and studies of
‘Tulips’ and ‘Poppies.’ ”72
Further mention of the collection at Ellis’s reads “An attractive
exhibition of paintings by W. Ferdinand Macy, William Baylies,
Jr., Charles H. Gifford, and other artists is now in the gallery.”73 Both Baylies, Jr. and Gifford were well-known contemporaries of
Ferdinand, and are essayed, with illustrations of their work, in Blasdale’s superb compendium on New Bedford artists.7 In July, the Evening Standard added “W.
Ferdinand Macy has three new canvases, in addition to those already noticed [at
Ellis’s], ‘Shore Scene near Nonquitt,’ ‘An Interior’
and ‘A Tree Study near the Sea-shore.’
Mr. Macy’s paintings have attracted much attention.”74 A week later, further mention of works
by W.F. Macy, Baylies and Gifford appeared in the
Evening Standard, and on July 17 that newspaper reported, in part, that
“Ellis’s Fine Art Rooms are unusually attractive these summer months with a
choice selection of oil paintings. New
ones are added frequently. W. Ferdinand
Macy has just placed an attractive canvas, Along the River Front, a local
sketch, most happily chosen and exceedingly well executed.”75,76
Throughout the summer and fall of
1886 Ferdinand was busy at his easel, completing painting after painting and
exhibiting many at Ellis’s and, later in the season, at Lawton’s
art gallery in New Bedford. The August 7 issue of the Evening Standard
reported that at Ellis’s Fine Art
Rooms “Several paintings have been
added to the collection now on exhibition: - W. Ferdinand Macy, Salt Marshes--.”77 On September 25,
another notice concerning Ellis’s included the following:
Mr. W. Ferdinand Macy has placed
in the gallery today five oil paintings that he has very recently finished...An
Old New England Barn, View on the west side of Point drive, The Old Orchard in
October, A Bit of the Pasture, A Bridge in New Hampshire.78
Notice of these works and their
exhibition was placed also in the Nantucket Journal, which maintained continued
interest even though Ferdinand was then living in New Bedford.79 About Ferdinand’s paintings, which
were at this time on display at Ellis’s, the New Bedford Evening Standard
opined, in part, “A superb collection of paintings is now on exhibition,
embracing several pictures by William F. Macy, William Baylies,
Jr., and Charles Gifford.”80
More paintings were soon on display at Lawton’s
art gallery where, the Evening Standard reported, “There have been placed on
exhibition a fine fruit piece by Whittaker, a dog’s head and a small marine by
Harry Chase, and three pictures by Ferdinand Macy, which are remarkable both
for their artistic coloring and their fidelity to nature.”81 Meanwhile, at Ellis’s, “A choice
selection of Oil Paintings by Macy, Gifford, Baylies,
Mrs. E.F. Smith and Miss Bigelow is now on exhibition.”82
At the end of October, 1886, the
Evening Standard reported that at Lawton’s Art Gallery, in addition to
paintings of flowers by Mrs. Nelson, “Three canvases by Harry Chase, one by
W.S. Macy, two by Ferdinand Macy, one by Whittaker, and one by C.H. Gifford,
and a local landscape by Edmund Rodman, complete the exhibition which should be
seen by every lover of the fine arts.”83 Two weeks later, the newspaper inserted a note on events at Ellis’s
Fine Art
Rooms, a portion of which states
that “Several important paintings have been added to the collection of
paintings--.William Baylies, Jr. adds three sketches
of Winter scenes, and W. Ferdinand Macy a landscape, ‘Willows.’ ”84 And, still later
in November, an article about Ellis’s in the same newspaper reports:
Two large paintings by W.
Ferdinand Macy will be placed in the gallery today, and may be seen by gaslight
tonight. One of these is a marine, -- a
wild, tempestuous scene on the open sea; a piece of wreck floats in the
foreground. The title of the other is,
“On the Edge of the Marsh,” and is a most brilliant bit of color. We are confident that both these paintings
are the best ever produced by this artist, and will materially add to his
reputation.
If not sold here, they will be
sent to Boston and Philadelphia
for exhibition. Mr. Macy has already
received offers on both, by two of our well-known citizens.