Francis William Van Vreeland

Early Impressionist Painting with a Horse Drawn Wagon, 1920-1930's

SOLD

Material

Watercolor

About

Early impressionist watercolor painting of a horse-drawn wagon by Francis Van Vreeland. The painting is signed by the artist in the bottom corner. It is framed in a gold wooden frame with an information card attached to the back.

Artist Biography

Known as a watercolorist, Francis Vreeland worked in Hollywood from the 1920s. In the early 1900s, he worked at Rockwood Pottery Company and while employed there studied at the Cincinnati art Academy. Then he continued his studies in Paris at the Academie Julian and the Art Students League in New York with George Bridgman. He was born in Seward, Nebraska, and after completing his formal education, stayed in New York as art director of the Aeolean Company and associate editor of "American Printer." In the mid 1920s, he moved to Hollywood, California, and was active in that area as a decorator, painter, lecturer, and writer until his death in 1954. He was a member of the California Art Club, the Artist Council of Los Angeles, the Mural Painters, the New York Architectural League, the Artists Council of Los Angeles, and the Artists Ceramic Society of Southern California. In 1911, he exhibited his work at the Paris Salon.

Dimensions

H 27 in. x W 33 in. x D 1 in.

Dimensions without Frame

H 22 in x W 28 in.
Francis William Van Vreeland Early Impressionist Painting with a Horse Drawn Wagon 1920-1930's
Early Impressionist Painting with a Horse Drawn Wagon, 1920-1930's