Roswell Weidner (September 18, 1911–September 22, 1999) was an American artist known for his paintings, charcoal and pastel drawings, and prints. His subject matter included still life, landscapes, and portraits. He was a student at the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts (PAFA) city school and country school in Chester Springs, and the Barnes Foundation. He worked in the Works Progress Administration Arts Project during the Great Depression and in a shipyard as an expediter during World War II. Weidner began teaching at the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts in 1938. He was associated with the academy for 66 years, first as a student and later as a teacher, until his retirement in 1996.[1]
Roswell Weidner was born in Reading, PA on September 18, 1911. His father, Harry, was an iron puddler who lost his job and the family savings in the Great Depression. Harry Weidner worked on road crews as part of WPA and made bootleg liquor.[2] Weidner's mother, Almeda Hughes, who only had a fourth grade education, taught him his multiplication tables before he went to school.[2] Weidner's youth included hunting and fishing with his father, which provided still life subjects for his early artwork.[2][3] He was a member of the Reading High School (Pennsylvania) Art Club which took frequent trips to nearby art shows.[3] The instructor for the art club was Italo L. De Francesco[4] who later became the Art Director, then President of Kutztown University from 1959-1967. De Francesco was instrumental in Weidner's admission to the Reading Museum drawing classes while he was still in high school.[3][5]
In 1930, Weidner received a scholarship from Reading High School in Pennsylvania[2] to attend the country school of the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts (PAFA) in Chester Springs.[6] Weidner got odd jobs at the school including working for the English gardener mowing lawns, weeding, cleaning out the swimming pool, and doing dishes.[7] This gave Weidner opportunities to work outside and enjoy nature and the outdoors. Weidner was known for his energy and strength which was needed to maintain the gardens on this large property. He attended the country school until 1934 when PAFA closed it as a year-round school. Weidner was awarded the Cresson Traveling Scholarship in 1935.[8][9] He completed his studies at PAFA's city school in Philadelphia in 1936. He also studied at the Barnes Foundation in Merion, PA, from 1934-1936. Weidner met Doris (Dorcas) Kunzie at Chester Springs Art School whom he married in 1938.[3]
Works Progress Administration
1938-Portrait of Dox Thrash by Roswell Weidner (see carborundum printmaking)
In 1936, the Works Progress Administration (WPA) accepted Weidner for its National Youth Administration program. For the NYA, Weidner worked at the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts in the library cataloging books. In the 1989 Smithsonian Archives of American Art interview, Weidner pointed out that the PAFA library at the time didn't have art books but rather first editions "like Uncle Tom's Cabin". Art students at the time didn't have access to color reproductions and there were very few modern art books.[3]
Weidner turned 25 in September 1936 and aged out of the NYA. At that point he was moved to the WPA Art Project. In a 1986 interview with David R. Brigham,[10] Weidner said that he created drawings in the margins of the booklets that the children could color in. He was later assigned to the Museum Project in West Philadelphia and created animals for dioramas for museums. He requested a transfer to the Painting Section where he had to create one oil painting per month. The paintings were given to Federal Buildings including schools. Much of this art has been lost.[11] Finally, he worked in the WPA Graphics Arts Workshop (Print Section) in Philadelphia with Dox Thrash, Michael J. Gallagher and Hugh Mesibov.[12][13] Weidner created a Portrait of Dox Thrash[14] (lithograph) while they worked together.[15][16] Prints of most of the 21 etchings, lithographs or carborundum prints created by Roswell Weidner while on WPA are in the Philadelphia Free Library print collection.[17]
Artist and teacher
1947-The Stone House by Roswell Weidner (oil on canvas)
In 1938, Weidner was offered and accepted a teaching position at the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts.[18] He left the WPA at this time and was not part of WPA when it was liquidated in 1943. His early successes in art exhibitions at the Carnegie International in Pittsburgh, Corcoran Biennial in Washington, D.C.,[19] and PAFA Annual Exhibitions [20] in Philadelphia resulted in his inclusion in the 1939 New York World’s Fair representing Pennsylvania.[21]
Weidner's teaching and art were interrupted in 1941 with the advent of World War II. He was laid off from PAFA and took night courses to be able to read blueprints.[3] He was hired by the John H. Mathis & Company Shipyard in Camden, NJ, as an expeditor, marine pipefitter, layout man, and marine draftsman. During this time Weidner got special permission to paint pictures of men working on the docks at the shipyard. One of these paintings is in the collection of the Independence Seaport Museum. In 1944, as the war was ending, another construction company offered Weidner a job in South America but at the same time he received an offer to return to teaching at PAFA. He decided to take the teaching position.[3]
Also in 1944, Roswell and Doris Weidner bought a farm outside Philadelphia in Christiana, PA with the money he saved while working at the shipyard. Weidner returned to teaching painting, drawing and lithography at PAFA and the Philadelphia College of Art. The farm and surrounding area including the Mercer's Mill Covered Bridge were frequent subjects of Weidner's art in the 1940s and 1950s.[3] In 2001 the farm was the subject of a novel by Jack Lindeman, "Appleseed Hollow", in which he describes life on the farm in the late 1950s.[22]
During his career as an instructor at PAFA, Weidner taught various art media (graphics arts, lithography, painting, and drawing) and levels of students but he was also involved with decisions regarding the school. As a faculty member he worked with the administration on a number of issues most notably the use of the Belgravia Hotel (which was later named the Peale House) as studios for advanced students and faculty. Weidner took over management of the PAFA evening school and boosted attendance from 28 to over 200 per semester in the late 1950s and early 1960s. Weidner also served as president of the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts Fellowship (alumni association) from 1955-1967.[3][23][24]
Until the mid-1950’s Roswell Weidner was content to paint in the style of his early teachers at the Academy that included Henry McCarter, George Matthews Harding, Daniel Garber, Francis Wayland Speight[Wikidata] and Joseph Pearson Jr.[3][7] He described himself as a Jack-of-all Trades since he was proficient in landscape, portrait, figure and still life painting. Influences of post-impressionist painting at the Barnes Foundation and of Japanese art permeated his work.[2] Despite the popularity of subsequent trends, such as the use of color in ‘Op Art”, the hard edges of ‘Pop Art’ and the simplicity of ‘minimalism', Weidner continued to paint nature in a realistic style. His work became more ambitious in scale and incorporated the Oriental concept of space while retaining Western form of modeling, light and perspective. He also returned to drawing – large, powerful but delicately executed charcoals.[2]
In the 1960's and early 1970's, Weidner's landscapes mostly focused on Smithville, Burlington County, New Jersey; Cheyney, Pennsylvania; and the area around Danville, Vermont, and the coast of Maine particularly near Bristol, Maine. In 1956, Weidner and his first wife divorced, and Weidner lost the Christiana farm which had been a source of inspiration for his landscapes.[2] In 1957, he married Marilyn Kemp. During this time, the growing Weidner family would spend entire summers at locations so that he could paint. Weidner also drove his emerald green Ford van to Maine to paint views of oceans waves crashing against the shore.[2]
In 1974 Weidner discovered the Pine Barrens (New Jersey). At his campsite, deep in the Wharton State Forest, he found solitude where he could work undisturbed from morning until dusk, following the changing colors and light of the seasons. He called it his “Paradise”.[7] In an article in American Artist in 1980, Bill Scott (artist) describes Weidner's style in this way:
"In his landscapes, Weidner takes a greater liberty in changing and rearranging the colors and shapes he sees than in his figure paintings. The dominant element in his work continues to be the intensity and vibrancy of his colors - strong violets, blues and greens. While his earlier work was "fluid"-looking, his paintings now have the dry surface and brilliant color of pastel."[7]
The Philadelphia Inquirer Art Critic from 1962 to 2012 was Victoria Donohoe,[25] who wrote the following about Weidner's 1981 show at the Marian Locks Gallery in Philadelphia:
"Weidner's talent was nurtured on Renoir and apparently on Monet's paintings of his famed garden at Giverny. Weidner hasn't attained the extraordinary refinement of their observation of momentary effects of light and color, but there's a robust directness in Weidner's work and fidelity of record as he zeroes in on the ground plane without looking skyward at all. To a larger extent than before, the quality of the artist's own reactions is now felt, as he goes about finding his inspiration in the outer aspects of nature. Weidner takes the colors of nature and heightens them considerably. He has shown increasing curiosity about color. Now he sometimes gets combinations to work that shouldn't. In this show, particularly in the pastels with the softer, quieter range of hues, Roswell Weidner can be appreciated as the fine landscapist he is. It's through a display such as this that artists may hope to regain appreciation of the fact that a natural source of art's interest, and one of its major functions, is to give expression to one's own locality and to living life naturally."[26]
Selected exhibitions
Roswell Weidner Beryl Lush Exhibition 1953Roswell Weidner Peale House Exhibition 1965"Paintings and Drawings by Roswell Weidner" at the Wm Penn Memorial Museum 1966Roswell Weidner "The Out-of-Doors" at the Newman Galleries 1978Roswell Weidner "Paintings and Pastels of the '80's" at the Newman Galleries 1987Roswell Weidner "Landscapes Here and Now" (group show) at the Noyes Museum 1987Roswell Weidner PA Convention Center Opening 1993Roswell Weidner and Ed Rendell at the opening of the Pennsylvania Convention Center in 1993
"Artists for Victory: An Exhibition of Contemporary American Art: Paintings, Sculpture, prints" sponsored by Artists for Victory, Inc. The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, New York, 1942 [51]
National Academy of Design 116th Annual Exhibition of contemporary American painting and sculpture, New York City, New York, 1942 [52]
"Paintings by Roswell Weidner" at the Beryl Lush Gallery, Philadelphia, PA, 1953 [57]
"The Peale House Galleries of the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts present and Exhibition of Paintings and Drawings by Roswell Weidner", Philadelphia, PA, 1966 [58]
"Paintings and Drawings by Roswell Weidner" at the William Penn Memorial Museum (aka, State Museum of Pennsylvania), Harrisburg, PA. Sponsored by the Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission, 1966 [59]
"Roswell Weidner Paintings & Drawings Exhibition Selected from 1938 to the present" at the McCleaf Gallery, Philadelphia, PA, 1970 [60]
"The New Deal and the Artist: An Exhibition of the 40th Anniversary of the Founding of WPA", Historical Society of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA 1975 [61]
"Paintings and Drawings of the Out-of-Doors by Roswell Weidner" Newman Galleries, Philadelphia, PA, February 1978 [62][63]
"Summer of 1978" New Paintings and Pastels by Roswell Weidner, Woodmere Art Gallery (aka, Woodmere Art Museum), Philadelphia, PA, Nov-Dec 1978 [64][65]
"Southern New Jersey Landscape" Long Beach Island, Foundation of The Arts and Sciences, July 1980 [66]
"The Pine Barrens by Roswell Weidner" Marian Locks Gallery, Philadelphia, PA, May 1981 [67][26]
"Roswell Weidner" Peale House Galleries of the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, Philadelphia, PA, 1985 [68]
"Roswell Weidner Paintings & Pastels of the '80's" Newman Galleries, Philadelphia, PA, April 1987 [69]
Burlesque Queen by Roswell Weidner, c. 1955, oil/tempera on burlap. Collection of the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts. (Interior of the Trocadero Theatre in Philadelphia, PA)
The Dam by Roswell Weidner, 1980, pastel on paper.
Personal life
Weidner's personal life could be divided into two parts based on his marriages. The first part of his life continued up to the divorce from his first wife, Doris ("Dorcas") Kunzie Weidner, in 1956. Doris and Roswell went to art school together at Chester Springs and PAFA.[6] They bought and lived on a farm in Christiana, Pennsylvania, and a home in Philadelphia near PAFA. They painted, exhibited in art shows,[104][105][106] judged art shows,[107] and worked on the farm together.[108] Doris Kunzie Weidner continued to paint and live on the farm after their divorce until her death in 2000.[109]
The second part of his personal life started in 1957 when Weidner married his second wife, Marilyn Kemp Weidner. Marilyn and Roswell Weidner lived in Center City, Philadelphia. Marilyn also painted with Roswell but their true partnership was their interest in conservation of art both on paper and canvas.[3] Marilyn Kemp Weidner founded the Conservation Center for Art and Historic Artifacts (CCAHA) in 1977 in Philadelphia, PA, with the help of her husband. Roswell Weidner retired from teaching at PAFA in 1996 at the age of 85.[23]
Weidner died in his home in Philadelphia with his wife Marilyn and his daughters by his side. His ashes were scattered in the Pine Barrens (New Jersey).[1][110]
Weidner, Marilyn (Winter 2004–2005). "Roswell Theodore Weidner (1911-1999) Famed Artist of the Pine Barrens was Berks County Native". Historical Review of Berks County. Historical Society of Berks County. 70 (1): 27–31. ISSN0018-2524.
Brigham, David R. (October 31, 1986). "Interview with Roswell Weidner, Artist". Free Library of Philadelphia Art Department Research Files. Please consult Art Department librarians for access. Retrieved July 21, 2021.{{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)CS1 maint: url-status (link)
Slobodzian, Joseph (August 20, 1987). "Dusting off 'the public's treasury'". The Philadelphia Inquirer. Philadelphia, PA. p.C1 and C4 – via Newspaper.com.
Ittmann, John W. (2001). Dox Thrash: an African American master printmaker rediscovered. Philadelphia, PA: Philadelphia Museum of Art. ISBN0-87633-151-7.
McKinzie, Richard D. (1973). The New Deal for Artists. [Princeton]: Princeton University Press. p.117. ISBN0691005842.
Russ, Valerie (December 27, 2020). "Fight wins a second chance for historic Phila. house". The Philadelphia Inquirer. pp.B1, B4. Retrieved March 7, 2021– via Newspapers.com.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
Shaw, Michael (October 16, 1938). "In and About The Studios". The Philadelphia Inquirer. Philadelphia, PA. Retrieved March 19, 2021– via Newspapers.com.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
Kantner, Dorothy (October 22, 1938). "WPA Paintings Offered To Public Schools Here". Pittsburgh Sun-Telegraph. Pittsburgh, PA. Retrieved March 19, 2021– via Newspapers.com.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
"Four Phila. Artists Win in WPA Contest". The Philadelphia Inquirer. Philadelphia, PA. October 26, 1938. Retrieved March 19, 2021– via Newspapers.com.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
"WPA To Display Art Of 4 Philadelphians". Reading Times. Reading, PA. October 27, 1938. Retrieved March 19, 2021– via Newspapers.com.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
"Art prints are displayed at the college". Mansfield Advertiser. Mansfield, PA. November 2, 1938. Retrieved March 19, 2021– via Newspapers.com.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
Shaw, Michael (November 27, 1938). "Tri-State WPA Prints". The Philadelphia Inquirer. Philadelphia, PA. Retrieved March 19, 2021– via Newspapers.com.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
"Museum Show 60 Prints from Federal Project". The Reading Times. Reading, PA. December 7, 1938. Retrieved March 19, 2021– via Newspapers.com.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
"Open Exhibit of WPA Art Here". The Evening News. Harrisburg, PA. December 19, 1938. Retrieved March 19, 2021– via Newspapers.com.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
"New Art Medium Seen In Center Exhibition". The Salt Lake Tribune. Salt Lake City, Utah. January 8, 1939. Retrieved March 19, 2021– via Newspapers.com.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
"Exhibition of Prints". Reading Times. Reading, PA. January 11, 1939. Retrieved March 19, 2021– via Newspapers.com.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
Alexander, Mary (March 19, 1939). "The Week in Art Circles". The Cincinnati Enquirer. Cincinnati, Ohio. Retrieved March 19, 2021– via Newspapers.com.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
"Art Exhibit to Open Tomorrow". The Evening News. Harrisburg, PA. April 21, 1939. Retrieved March 19, 2021– via Newspapers.com.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
"50 Artists are Represented in Art Show Here". The Evening News. Harrisburg, PA. April 24, 1939. Retrieved March 19, 2021– via Newspapers.com.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
"Art Show Opens on F.&M. Campus". Lancaster Daily Intelligencer. Lancaster, PA. May 16, 1939. Retrieved March 19, 2021– via Newspapers.com.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
"WPA Exhibits Works of Modern Artists". Harrisburg Telegraph. Harrisburg, PA. April 26, 1940. Retrieved March 19, 2021– via Newspapers.com.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
"Still Life to Feature S.L. Art Exhibit". The Ogden Standard-Examiner. Ogden, Utah. March 9, 1941. Retrieved March 19, 2021– via newspapers.com.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
"WPA Art to Be in Exhibition". Harrisburg Telegraph. Harrisburg, PA. September 16, 1941. Retrieved March 19, 2021– via Newspapers.com.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
"Art Center Notes". Statesman Journal. Salem, Oregon. January 4, 1942. Retrieved March 19, 2021– via Newspapers.com.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
"Academy of Design Opens its Art Show". The New York Times. New York City, New York. April 8, 1942. Retrieved March 20, 2021– via The Times Machine NYC.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
"Christiana Artist's Work in N.Y. Show". Intelligencer Journal. Lancaster, PA. March 18, 1946. Retrieved March 20, 2021– via Newspapers.com.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
Bonte, C.H. (March 14, 1948). "Academy Fellowship Exhibit is Varied". The Philadelphia Inquirer. Retrieved March 20, 2021– via Newspapers.com.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
Lestz, Gerry (March 9, 1948). "Arts and Crafts". Lancaster New Era. Retrieved March 20, 2021– via Newspapers.com.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
Feinstein, Sam (May 15, 1953). "Philadelphia". The Art Digest: 12 – via archive.org.
Donohoe, Victoria (March 28, 1965). "Art News". The Philadelphia Inquirer. Philadelphia, PA. p.6. Retrieved December 19, 2020– via Newspaper.com.
"Art Exhibits Open Saturday". Harrisburg, PA: The Evening Sentinel. February 14, 1966. p.5. Retrieved December 17, 2020– via Newspaper.com.
Donohoe, Victoria (April 6, 1975). "Graphics by WPA Artists Give Insight on Depression". The Philadelphia Inquirer. Philadelphia, PA. Retrieved March 19, 2021– via Newspapers.com.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
Flood, Ramona (January 1979). "Roswell Weidner Woodmere Art Gallery". Philadelphia Arts Exchange. 3: 35.
Butera, Anne Fabbri (November 22, 1978). "Roswell Weidner New Paintings and Pastels". The Drummer.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
Donohoe, Victoria (July 25, 1980). "Budding Picassos and Rodins". Philadelphia Inquirer. p.29. Retrieved March 18, 2021– via Newspaper.com.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
Katx, Jonathan G. (May 10, 1981). "Beautifying the forlorn". The Bulletin. p.D6.
Donohoe, Victoria (August 31, 1985). "A shadow on city sculpute show". Philadelphia Inquirer. Retrieved March 18, 2021– via Newspapers.com.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
Donohoe, Victoria (April 18, 1987). "On galleries". The Philadelphia Inquirer. p.3-D. Retrieved December 17, 2020– via Newspaper.com.
Slobodzian, Joseph (August 30, 1987). "Agency tries to round up Depression-era works". The Kansas City Star. Kansas City, Missouri. Retrieved March 19, 2021– via Newspapers.com.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
Slobodzian, Joseph (September 19, 1987). "WPA's Federal Art Program recorded Depression U.S."The Anniston Star. Anniston, Alabama. Retrieved March 19, 2021– via Newspapers.com.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
Sozanski, Edward (December 1, 1988). "WPA art comes out of storage". The Philadelphia Inquirer. Philadelphia, PA. Retrieved March 19, 2021– via Newspapers.com.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
Wasserman, Burton (February 1998). "'Living treasures' display works at Science Center". Art Matters.
Donohoe, Victoria (January 24, 1965). "Academy's 160th Annual Dominated by Newcomers". The Philadelphia Inquirer. Philadelphia, PA. Retrieved March 20, 2021– via Newspapers.com.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
Wasserman, Burton (October 2004). "Roswell Weidner A painter with Monet's Eye, Wordsworth's heart and Whitman's soul". Prime Time Arts and Entertainment. pp.2, 13, 40.
External links
PAFA Archives - Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts Digital Archives
Historic Yellow Springs - information about Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts country school
AskArt.com - more paintings, exhibition and biographical information on Roswell Weidner.
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