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Guy Carleton Wiggins

Guy C. Wiggins was born in Brooklyn, New York in 1883, the son of Carleton Wiggins, who had a long and highly acclaimed career as a landscape painter. The younger Wiggins, who first studied with his father, continued the American landscape tradition, winning many prestigious prizes from 1916 on.

Around 1900, Guy C. Wiggins studied architecture and drawing at the Brooklyn Polytechnic Institute, but went on to study painting at the National Academy of Design. Early recognition came at age 20, when he was the youngest American to have a work accepted into the permanent collection of the Metropolitan Museum of Art.

Old Lyme, Connecticut became Wiggins's summer home around 1920, and he became one of the younger members of the group of painters in Old Lyme who were developing their version of impressionism by fusing French technique with American conventions. Though American art was moving more and more toward realism, Wiggins was dedicated to maintaining his own style; it was based on French impressionism but influenced by Childe Hassam and other American impressionists of The Ten.

Wiggins earned a fine reputation in the 1920s for his city snow scenes, often painted from the windows of offices in Manhattan. His Washington's Birthday (1930, New Britain Museum) expresses the feeling of snow quietly hushing the bustling city street. In her American Art Review article of December, 1977, Adrienne L. Walt said of Wiggins that "his resolution was to constantly emphasize color, elevating it above all else and achieving luminosity through it...."

In 1937 Wiggins moved to Essex, Connecticut and founded the Guy Wiggins Art School. During the following years, in addition to teaching, he traveled widely throughout the United States and painted scenes of Montana, Massachusetts and Connecticut.
With the permission of President Dwight D. Eisenhower, he completed two paintings of the Executive Mansion from the lawn of the White House, one of which eventually was placed in the Eisenhower Museum in Abilene, Kansas, after hanging in the president's office.

Wiggins died in Florida in 1962.

MEMBERSHIPS:
Connecticut Academy of Fine Arts
National Academy of Design
National Art Club Lotus Club
Lyme Art Association
Salmagundi Club
PUBLIC COLLECTIONS:
Art Institute of Chicago
Beach Memorial Gallery, Storrs, Connecticut
Brooklyn Museum; Dallas Art Association
Hackley Art Gallery, Muskegon, Michigan
Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York City
National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C.
Reading Museum, Pennsylvania
Syracuse Museum, New York
Wadsworth Athenaeum, Hartford, Connecticut

Biography courtesy of Roughton Galleries, www.antiquesandfineart.com/roughton

Celebrated for his Manhattan snow scenes, Guy Wiggins's vibrant cityscapes captured the movement and color of the early-twentieth century. The son of the landscape painter Carleton Wiggins, Guy honed his technique under William Merritt Chase and Robert Henri and drew inspiration from the French Impressionist movement. Charged with energy yet subdued under covers of snow, his idealized depictions of New York proved extremely popular, earning him honors throughout his career. At the age of twenty, Wiggins became the youngest artist to have his work accepted into the Metropolitan Museum of Art's permanent collection, and he soon won prizes from the Salmagundi Club, the Rhode Island School of Design, and the Art Institute of Chicago. His paintings are also in the White House, the National Gallery of Art, and the Smithsonian American Art Museum.

Biography courtesy of Questroyal Fine Art, LLC, www.antiquesandfineart.com/questroyal

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