Ernest Lawson (1873-1939)
Ernest Lawson was born in Nova Scotia. He enrolled in classes at the Kansas City Art League School, but without sufficient money for art studies, he accompanied his father the following year to Mexico City where he found work as a draughtsman for an engineering company. By 1890, Lawson moved to New York City and commenced studies at the Art Students League with J. Alden Weir and John H. Twachtman, who had an
immense impact on the young artist's work. He later worked in Paris where, like some of The Eight, he learned from the French Impressionists. Devoted to landscape painting, Lawson moved to Washington
Heights in Manhattan in 1898 where no buildings obstructed the view of the Hudson River, which he loved to depict. He painted his most important canvases during his eight years in Washington Heights.
Lawson was convinced that freedom of expression was necessary if art were to survive in America. The strength of his conviction led him to become one of the Eight and to give active support to the famous New York Armory Show of 1913. This exhibition introduced many Americans to the advanced trends in European and American painting, and it received wide and critical attention. The date has become historic in the annals of twentieth century art.
Lawson suffered financial difficulties late in his career despite his renowned reputation. In 1936, suffering from rheumatoid arthritis which allowed him to paint only intermittently, Lawson settled in Coral Gables, Florida. In 1939, Lawson's dead body was found on the beach. It is unclear whether he suffered a heart attack, committed suicide, or was the victim of an attack on the beach on the morning of December 18th.
Source: Jean Ershler Schatz, artist and researcher from Laguna Woods, California. ASKART.
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