
Chauncey Foster Ryder, American, (1868-1949).Chauncey Foster Ryder was born in Danbury, Connecticut in 1868. He spent much of his youth in New Haven, Connecticut, where he began to pursue an interest in painting between the ages of ten and twelve. In his early twenties he moved to Chicago for artistic instruction, studying first at the Art Institute and then at Smith's Academy, where he became an instructor after his first year as a student. In 1891, he moved to France so that he could study art in Paris. He first enrolled in the Academie Julien. After two years there, he began to exhibit works at the annual Paris Salon, and showed works regularly there from 1903-1909. 1907 was also an important year for Ryder when the prominent New York art dealer, William Macbeth, began to represent him, selling the first of Ryder's works after only two months of partnership. Theirs was a lifelong business relationship. Ryder soon moved to New York City and began to show his work both in Paris and in New York, and finally in 1909 he opened a studio in New York City. In 1910 Ryder began to travel throughout New England, the landscape of which provided much of the subject matter for his work. He and his wife bought house and in Wilton, New Hampshire. They also summered for several years on Monhegan Island, Maine and painted for some time in Old Lyme, CT with the Old Lyme Art Colony. Ryder's exhibition career is extensive from the the National Academy of Design, the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, the Lyme Art Association, the Art Institute of Chicago, and many other galleries and art associations. Ryder's paintings are included in the collections of the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, the Museum of Modern Art, the New York Public Library, the Wadsworth Athenaeum, Hartford, CT and the New Haven Paint and Clay Club, to name a few. A landscape of similar size by Chauncey Foster Ryder is also available. Please click on "Verdant Hillside" to view. Credit: Falk; Who Was Who in American Art On exhibit: "Autumn Hillside with Distant River", Signed lower left. Oil on Canvas. 11" x 14" $ |