This blog is about items that are to be auctioned on June 14, 2014, in Green Bay, WI and online.

Wednesday, May 28, 2014

Original Oil Paintings by Chicago Modernists Louis Alexander Neebe and Minne Harms Neebe

To go directly to the auction site: SuperiorAuction.com

Among the fine art offered at our auction, we have an unusual pair of oil portraits by Chicago artists Minnie and Louis Neebe.  


Minnie Harms was born in Chicago 1873, the same year that her future husband Louis Alexander Neebe was born in Philadelphia. Louis was an artist, whose day job was in newspaper lithography, and the young Minnie assisted her husband printing color ads and cartoons. During that time, she began sketching and eventually studied art both at the School of the Art Institute (SAIC) and under Charles Hawthorne in Provincetown, Mass. In his classes, she often sketched fellow classmates instead of the model. Other influential teachers included Lorser Feitelson, Walter Ufer, Charles F. Brown, Ambrose Webster, and Wellington J. Reynolds. Minnie and Louis’s home and studio—at 1320 North Clybourn Avenue, then a working-class Italian neighborhood—was decorated over the course of their thirty-five-year marriage with objects from China, India, Mexico, and the West American Indians (though she never went to China or India). It also was a hub for progressive artists and poets of the day, visited by notables such as Carl Sandburg, George Bellows, and Leon Kroll—one of her teachers at SAIC who was associated with the Ashcan School of urban realism in New York. Neebe and her husband were both active in Chicago in the 1920s and 30s within a circle of radical artists who called her “Aunt Minnie.” She was a member of progressive artist organizations, including the Chicago Society of Artists, the Neo-Arlimusc (founded in 1926 by artist Rudolph Weisenborn to further interaction between art, literature, music, and science), and Chicago No-Jury Society of Artists.
She typically used vivid colors, and, as she explained in J. Z. Jacobsen’s 1933 book on art in Chicago, “The purely abstract in art occupies a most important place, although I always fuse it with the more realistic phases of my canvases.” Her 1930 oil in the Friedman collection,Waukegan, shows colorful row houses standing against a snowy white foreground with barren trees, and the bluish grey lake in background. Above, a billow of white smoke drifts across the horizon, bringing together city and nature, and conveying an unmistakably modern sensibility.
Lisa Meyerowitz

This first portrait is by Minnie.  The canvas board is warped and the canvas is separating.  The surface of the paint is lightly creased, visible in the photo.


Label on the back identifying the subject as "Fisherman's daughter".   She also lists the address of their Chicago home and studio described as a "hub for progressive artists and poets of the day."



The second portrait is by Louis.  The board has chipping at the edges and the painted surface also is lightly creased, visible in photo.


Each is a beautiful oil painting by itself, but they are a very unique pair.   

Both are for sale at auction in Green Bay, June 14, 2014 at the Beja Shrine Hall.  Internet bidding will be available for both paintings at SuperiorAuction.net

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