W. FERDINAND MACY (1852-1901): PAINTER OF NEW ENGLAND LANDSCAPES

A CHRONICLE OF HIS LIFE, HIS FAMILY, AND HIS ARTISTIC LEGACY

by DONALD E. HATTIN


Formats

Hardcover
£15.37
Hardcover
£15.37

Book Details

Language : English
Publication Date : 12/05/2004

Format : Hardcover
Dimensions : 6x9
Page Count : 272
ISBN : 9781418436131

About the Book

W. Ferdinand Macy devoted his professional career mainly to capturing on canvas the large number of strikingly realistic maritime portrayals that have accorded him lasting recognition in the annals of New England art.  Evincing youthful artistic talent, he was painting by the age of 16, and at the age 18, undertook three years of study with R. Swain Gifford in New York City.  Under Gifford’s tutelage, Ferdinand developed expertise in the genre which was to become his lifelong passion.

With marked concentration on coastal areas; Ferdinand’s oils depict a broad range of shoreline, dune, marsh, and lighthouse scenes which brought contemporary acclaim; but embrace also a wide range of nonmarine subjects such as woodlands, bridges, buildings, interiors, flowers, pastures, and atmospheric effects.  Art critics of the day heaped praise on his works, often describing them in superlatives and mentioning frequently his excellence as a colorist.

Ferdinand led a peripatetic lifestyle, relocating according to season or personal necessity.  He worked mostly in and around New Bedford, Nantucket, Wellfleet, Boston and Pembroke, MA; with short periods of residence also in Foxboro, Westborough, and Revere, MA; Hartford, CT; North Conway, NH; and coastal areas of Maine.  His recorded legacy comprises no less than 212 paintings, of which 117 are marines or marshscapes.  A preponderance of his surviving works are in private hands.


About the Author

Donald E. Hattin is Professor Emeritus at Indiana University, where he joined the faculty in 1954. A native of Scituate, MA, he met Marjorie E. Macy, granddaughter of W. Ferdinand Macy, in high school, and the two were married in 1950. Don's interest in Ferdinand was ignited during courting visits to the Macy home, where several of the artist's paintings adorned living room walls.  This interest was fueled in 1989 by opportunity to view several of Ferdinand’s paintings while visiting Nantucket, which was Ferdinand’s home for several seasons.  Following discovery and purchase of a W. Ferdinand Macy painting in 1995, Don commenced research for a comprehensive biography of the artist.

Don is known internationally for his research on Cretaceous-age fossils and strata, and is author of 5 geological monographs, numerous field-trip guidebooks, and many journal articles.  He maintains active affiliation with the I.U. Department of Geological Sciences.  As a volunteer at the Indiana Railway Museum in French Lick, IN, Don spent several years shoveling coal on the occasionally driving steam locomotives, and is still engaged in steam locomotive repair and maintenance.  He and his wife of 53 years have 3 grown children, and live on a country estate outside Bloomington.