Monday, June 29, 2026

Artist of the Day, June 29, 2026 : Ammi Phillips, an American portrait painter (#2565)

Ammi Phillips (1788 – 1865) was a prolific American itinerant portrait painter active from the mid 1810s to the early 1860s in Connecticut, Massachusetts, and New York. His artwork is identified as folk art, primitive art, provincial art, and itinerant art without consensus among scholars, pointing to the enigmatic nature of his work and life. He is attributed to over eight hundred paintings, although only eleven are signed.

While his paintings are formulaic in nature, Phillips paintings were under constant construction, evolving as he added or discarded what he found successful, while taking care to add personal details that spoke to the identity of those who hired him. He is most famous for his portraits of children in red, although children only account for ten percent of his entire body of work. The most well known of this series, Girl in Red Dress with Cat and Dog, sold in 1985 for one million dollars, a first for folk art. His paintings hung mostly unidentified, spare for some recognition in the collections like those of Edward Duff Balken, for decades until his oeuvre was reconstructed by Barbara Holdridge and Larry Holdridge, collectors and students of American folk art, with the support of the art historian Mary Black. Ammi Phillips's body of work was expanded by their discovery that the mysterious paintings of a "Kent Limner" and "Border Limner" were indeed his.

Phillips pursued a long and successful career over fifty years, taking to the road as an itinerant artist painting portraits of clusters of friends, relatives, and neighbors in New York State and New England. His stock in trade was the plain likeness, devoid of shadows or modeling. Although he depended on repetitious formulas to work efficiently as he traveled the countryside, he was nevertheless able to individualize his sitters imaginatively. In "Mrs. Mayer and Daughter," Phillips’s masterful design abilities are evident in the cleanly contained forms of the mother and child, enriched by the use of brilliant, saturated color and careful detail.

As the life and work of Ammi Phillips has emerged, the Connecticut native has been revealed as a prolific artist of enormous complexity and scope, whose imagination, sensitivity, and sheer individualism makes him a star in the universe of American naïve painters. 

Although there is no record of Phillips having had any formal art instruction, on his travels he doubtless encountered the work of other limners working in the same area as well as the work of more academic artists. Notably, Ezra Ames (1768–1836), a generation older than Phillips, modeled his painting practice after the work of Gilbert Stuart, replicating a sophisticated style of painting that reflected the taste of contemporary London. Ames painted over 700 portraits as well as landscapes, history, and genre. Active primarily between 1800 and 1820, he was a prominent citizen of Albany, serving in his later years as a bank president. As Vanderlyn shrewdly perceived, Phillips painted for a different audience, his portraits meeting the needs and tastes of his rural gentry clientele.

As the century progressed, Phillips adjusted his style to meet the circumstances of his times and his clientele. While he may have begun at first with profiles, he soon acquired the skills to paint fully realized portraits. This portrait, an unidentified woman has been dated to sometime between 1824 and 1829, is in the style of Phillips’ so called “Realist Period,” when he had brought his skills to a high polish.
 

© 2026. All content on this blog is protected by international copyright laws All images are copyrighted © by  Ammi Phillip or assignee. Apart from fair dealing for the purpose of private study, research, criticism or review as permitted under the Copyright Act, the use of any image from this site is prohibited unless prior written permission is obtained. All images used for illustrative purposes only 


Henrietta Dorr, 1814
Henrietta Dorr, 1814
Caleb Sherman, 1815
Harriet Leavens, 1815
Mrs. Wilbur Sherman and daughter Sarah, 1815
Wilbur Sherman, 1815
Colonel Nathan Beckwith, 1817
Portrait of Mrs. Robinson, 1819
Jane Daney Smith, 1820
Lady in White, 1820
Mrs. Charles Westley Powers, 1829
Portrait of Margaret Platt Bockee, 1829
Catherine A. May, 1830
Portrait of a Child in a Plaid Dress with a Dog, 1830
The Strawberry Girl, 1830
Thomas Storm, 1830
Girl in a Red Dress with a Dog, 1830-35
Betsy Sutherland, 1832
Girl in Pink, 1832
Wife of the Journalist, 1832
Andrew Jackson Ten Broeck, 1834
Girl in Pink Dress with Dog, 1835
Henry Teller, 1835
Jane Storm Teller, 1835
Mrs. Mayer and Daughter, 1835–40
Blond Boy with Primer, Peach, and Dog, 1836
Jeannette Woolley, Later Mrs. John Vincent Storm, 1838
Portrait of Jane Kinney, 1848
Double Portrait of Theron Simpson Ludington 
and His Older Sister Virginia Ludington,
1852

Saturday, June 27, 2026

Artist of the Day, June 27, 2026 : Hermann Glöckner, a German painter and sculptor (#2564)

Hermann Glöckner (1889 – 1987) was a German painter and sculptor. He was an important representative of constructivism.

Glöckner was born in Cotta near Dresden. He attended the vocational school in Leipzig in 1903 and worked as a designer for textiles. From 1904 to 1911 he attended the evening classes at the Kunstgewerbeschule in Dresden, where he became friends with Kurt Fiedler. Among their lectures were Oskar Seyffert and Carl Rade, who later was a renowned professor at the Dresden Academy of Fine Arts and remained a friend of Glöckner for many years. Glöckner was mainly interested in drawings, but also in projections and geometry. From 1914 to 1918 he served in infantry divisions in France, Russia, and Poland.

After World War I, Glöckner earned some money with the copying of paintings for the Gemäldegalerie Alte Meister. At the Dresden Academy of Fine Arts he studied with Otto Gussmann from 1923 to 1924. Hans Grundig was among his fellow students. His experimental style, however, did not find everyone's appreciation and Glöckner left the academy again. As a freelancer he turned to constructivism ever deeper during the following years. In 1932 he became a member of the re-founded Dresdner Sezession. The Nazis refused him any opportunities to exhibit and sell his paintings and graphics. So he turned to sgraffito to earn his living.

Glöckner lost his home during the bombing of Dresden in World War II and moved to Loschwitz. Because of his formalist style, the officials of the GDR refused him the appreciation he deserved for a long time. His rehabilitation began with an exhibition of his graphical work in the Kupferstichkabinett, Dresden in 1969. In 1979 he received a permanent visa for the Federal Republic of Germany. Finally, in 1984, he was awarded with the National Prize of the GDR and the DEFA dedicated a film to him. Centrally in the area of the Technische Universität Dresden he was allowed to erect a sculpture, which had been banned just a few years before. Another sculpture was erected one year later in the park of the Hotel Bellevue, Dresden's first address that time.

In his later years Glöckner regularly visited West Berlin, where his cohabitee lived and where he died in 1987. Glöckner's urn was entombed in Loschwitz. A street in Loschwitz, newly built in 2008, is named after him.

Glöckner made his works from objects he had on hand: twine, cardboard, match boxes, and wood scrapes. These common objects were put together in a unique way to create something entirely new. This art was private with the only audience being his wife.

© 2026. All content on this blog is protected by international copyright laws All images are copyrighted © by Hermann Glöckner or assignee. Apart from fair dealing for the purpose of private study, research, criticism or review as permitted under the Copyright Act, the use of any image from this site is prohibited unless prior written permission is obtained. All images used for illustrative purposes only


Hermann Glöckner
Right-Angled Penetration: Sign F on Black, 1932
Altrosa Faltung auf Gelb (Dusk Pink Folding on Yellow) 1933
Gefaltete Streifen in Rot und Weiß auf Schwarz 
(Folded Strips in Red and White on Black) 1933
Aufbau aus U-förmig gebogenen Quadraten 
(Structure of U-shaped Bent Squares)
1935
Modell einer beweglichen Säule 
(Model of a Movable Column)
1935
Pfeiler aus U-förmig gebogenen Quadraten 
Pillar of U-shaped Bent Squares)
1935
Reste harmonieren (Harmonizing Remains) 1935
Zwei verschlungene Bänder (Two Intertwined Bands) 1935
Gefaltete weiße Streifen auf Schwarz mit Rot 
(Folded White Strips on Black with Red) 1956
En face, 1956-57
Flächenteilung in Schwarz und Weiß 
(Division of Surface in Black and White)
1957
Flächenteilung in Schwarz und Weiß 
(Division of Surface in Black and White)
1957
Dreiecke in Schwarz-Weiß-Grau (Triangles in Black-White-Grey) 1958
Drei schwarze und zwei weiße Rechtecke, vertikal verschoben, 
in der Mitte an einer silbernen Platte fixiert 

(Three Black and Two White Rectangles, Vertically Displaced, 
Fixed in the Middle to a Silver Plate)
1963
10 Handdrucke (10 Handprints) 1963-74
Durchbruch (Breakthrough) 1965
Drei gelbe Rechtecke (Three Yellow Rectangles) 1968
Paar symmetrischer Körper aus gefalteten Elementen 
(Pair of Symmetrical Bodies Made of Folded Elements)
1968
Profil, 1970-84
Räumliche Brechung eines Rechtecks 
(Spatial Refraction of a Rectangle)
1972
Begegnung zweier gezackter Formen 
(Meeting of Two Jagged Forms)
1974
Aufrichtung von drei Streichholzschachteln, über zwei liegenden in Rotbraun 
(Erection of Three Matchboxes over Two Lying in Red-Brown)
1975
Mast mit zwei Faltungszonen (Mast with Two Folding Zones) 1975
Schwarz-Weiße Aufgipfelung vor Violett
(Black and White Summiting before Violet) 1976
Zwei verklammerte Scheiben (Two Clamped Discs) 1976
Nach links oben (To the Top Left) 1977-78
3 Phasen" (3 Phases - Sheet 1) 1980
Zwei Dreiecke, Durchdringung, symmetrisch 
(Two Triangles, Penetration, Symmetrical)
1980
Drei weiße Dreiecke, Schwarz über Blau 
(Three White Triangles, Black over Blue,
1981
Broken Band, 1982-85
Schwarz und Weiß, ineinander, auf Blau
(Black and White, Intertwined, on Blue) 1983