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Catherine Carter Critcher Sold at Auction Prices

Painter, b. 1868 - d. 1964

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    • Catharine Carter Critcher, Self Portrait
      Nov. 09, 2024

      Catharine Carter Critcher, Self Portrait

      Est: $12,000 - $18,000

      Catharine Carter Critcher (1868 - 1964) Self Portrait oil on canvas signed lower left: CCRITCHER inscribed verso: C C / 32 x 39 1/2

      Santa Fe Art Auction
    • Catharine Carter Critcher, Still Life with Basket and Pottery
      Nov. 09, 2024

      Catharine Carter Critcher, Still Life with Basket and Pottery

      Est: $15,000 - $20,000

      Catharine Carter Critcher (1868 - 1964) Still Life with Basket and Pottery oil on canvas signed upper right: C.C.Critcher

      Santa Fe Art Auction
    • CATHARINE CARTER CRITCHER, AMERICAN 1868-1964, PUEBLO WOMAN, Oil on canvas, 17 x 18 in. (43.2 x 45.7 cm.), Frame: 24 1/2 x 25 1/2 in. (62.2 x 64.8 cm.)
      Jun. 25, 2024

      CATHARINE CARTER CRITCHER, AMERICAN 1868-1964, PUEBLO WOMAN, Oil on canvas, 17 x 18 in. (43.2 x 45.7 cm.), Frame: 24 1/2 x 25 1/2 in. (62.2 x 64.8 cm.)

      Est: $30,000 - $50,000

      CATHARINE CARTER CRITCHER AMERICAN, 1868-1964 PUEBLO WOMAN Oil on canvas Lower right signed: C. Critcher

      Potomack Company
    • CATHERINE CARTER CRITCHER (VIRGINIA / NEW MEXICO, 1868-1964) STILL-LIFE OF NASTURTIUMS IN A GREEN VASE
      Apr. 22, 2023

      CATHERINE CARTER CRITCHER (VIRGINIA / NEW MEXICO, 1868-1964) STILL-LIFE OF NASTURTIUMS IN A GREEN VASE

      Est: $5,000 - $8,000

      CATHERINE CARTER CRITCHER (VIRGINIA / NEW MEXICO, 1868-1964) STILL-LIFE OF NASTURTIUMS IN A GREEN VASE, oil on canvas, a fine example of vivid color, signed lower right. Housed in likely original painted frame. Circa 1925. 17 3/4" x 16 3/4" sight, 20 3/4" x 19 3/4" OA. Catalogue Note: Born in Westmoreland County on the Northern Neck of Virginia to a prominent family, Catherine Carter Critcher (1868-1964) enrolled at the Cooper Union School in New York in 1890 and attended the Corcoran School of Art the following year. After working for several years as a portrait painter in the DC area, she moved to Paris to study at the Academie Julien, which consistently attracted a host of talented expatriate painters from the United States. Finding success in France, Critcher exhibited frequently and even established a school tailored exclusively for visiting American artists. In the 1920's she began traveling to Taos, New Mexico, where she established herself within the burgeoning artistic community and was elected to the Taos Society of Artists in 1924, which included such noteworthy figures as Joseph Henry Sharp, Ernest Blumenschein, and Oscar Berninghaus. In speaking of this area, Critcher said "Taos is unlike any place God ever made, I believe, and therein is its charm and no place could be more conducive to work." The present still-life, recently discovered in a Virginia estate, exhibits the artist's keen abilities and was likely executed under the influence of her Taos experience.

      Jeffrey S. Evans & Associates
    • Catherine Critcher | Still Life with Fruit and Flowers
      May. 31, 2019

      Catherine Critcher | Still Life with Fruit and Flowers

      Est: $25,000 - $40,000

      Artist: Catherine Critcher | 1868-1964 Title: Still Life with Fruit and Flowers Signed u/l: C. C. Critcher Media: Oil on canvas Dimensions: 24 by 20 inches

      Altermann Galleries
    • Catherine Critcher | Still Life with Fruit and Flowers
      Aug. 11, 2018

      Catherine Critcher | Still Life with Fruit and Flowers

      Est: $30,000 - $50,000

      Artist: Catherine Critcher | 1868-1964 Title: Still Life with Fruit and Flowers Signed u/l: C. C. Critcher Medium: Oil on canvas Dimension: 24 by 20 inches

      Altermann Galleries
    • CATHARINE CARTER CRITCHER (1868-1964) Mother and Daught
      May. 02, 2015

      CATHARINE CARTER CRITCHER (1868-1964) Mother and Daught

      Est: $100,000 - $150,000

      CATHARINE CARTER CRITCHER (1868-1964) Mother and Daughters, 1936 Oil on canvas 37-1/2 x 32 inches (95.3 x 81.3 cm) Signed and dated upper right: Critcher / 36 Titled on label verso: Mother and Daughters PROVENANCE: Private collection, Charlestown, West Virginia; By descent to the present owner. EXHIBITED: Southern States Art League, Charleston South Carolina, "18th Circuit Exhibition," 1940-41. Long before her move to Taos in 1924 at the age of fifty-eight where she became the only woman unanimously elected into the all-male Taos Society of Artists, Catharine C. Critcher had established an impressive career as a portraitist and art educator. Critcher's father, a wealthy Virginia judge and U.S. Congressman, adored his fiercely independent daughter, and fully supported her desire to study painting, first at the Cooper Union School of Design in New York in 1890, and subsequently at the Corcoran School of Art in Washington, D.C. She won medals at both institutions. For the next decade, she worked as a formal portraitist in Virginia and D.C., receiving commissions from elite military and political families such as the rebel Confederate soldier John Singleton Mosby, and later, President Woodrow Wilson and Senator Harry F. Byrd. Like many artists of this period, Critcher was enticed by the artistic developments in Paris, and after a year of training at the Academié Julian, in 1905 she founded the first of several art schools, the Cours Critcher, designed for non French-speaking students. Her successful role as an art school administrator compelled her to teach at the Corcoran School of Art from 1911-17, upon her return to D.C., and in 1924 to open nearby The Critcher School of Painting and Applied Arts. By the time Critcher made her first trip to Taos in 1920, the Taos Society of Artists had been active for five years. With the financial backing of the Atchison, Topeka, & Santa Fe Railroad, founding TSA members Oscar Berninghaus, Ernest Blumenschein, E. Irving Couse, W. Herbert Dunton, Bert Phillips, and Joseph Henry Sharp had headed to New Mexico to record the exotic land and lifestyle of the Pueblo Indians for tourist publications. For Critcher, the lure of Taos was less the financial gain associated with lucrative illustration assignments than it was the prospect of experiencing a new culture and finding new portrait subjects. Unmarried, she set out on an adventure: "Taos is unlike any place God ever made I believe & therein is charm & no place could be more conducive to work -- there are models galore & no phones -- The artists all live in these attractive funny little adobe houses away from the world, food, foes, and friends" (Van Vechten-Lineberry Taos Art Museum Newsletter, vol. I, no. II, Spring 1996, p. 4). Critcher rendered her "models galore" -- whether women at work, mothers with children, or Indian chiefs -- with especial sensitivity to facial expressions and colorful native clothing. Undeniably Critcher's most ambitious and accomplished work, Mother and Daughters, 1936, celebrates the abundance, hospitality, and promise of her New Mexico home. Here, Critcher positions beneath an outdoor awning a statuesque and proud mother, perhaps a personification of Taos, together with her daughters; her weathered face and formidable hands embodying the strength of her people, the mother offers to the viewer her full basket of ripe pumpkins and gourds. At her knee, a stack of pineapples, the traditional symbol of hospitality, also welcomes the viewer to enter this land of purity and abundance. A slight glimpse into the market in the background suggests trade and prosperity. Critcher underscores the beauty and desirability of the produce by echoing their bright colors in the salmon shirt of the teenage girl, the polka-dotted green skirt of her younger sister, and the sun-kissed highlights in the elder's face. By turning these multi-generational figures in different directions, Critcher suggests that Taos -- its past, present, and future - offers vibrant riches. Indeed, a veritable love song to Taos, Mother and Daughters, 1936 is Critcher's invitation to come and enjoy her city. In Mother and Daughters, Critcher emphasizes both the spirituality and fertility of women - and, by extension, of Taos -- by borrowing the formal vocabulary of early Renaissance Maestà (majesty) paintings that she was likely exposed to in Europe. In works such as Giotto's Ognissanti Madonna, Mary sits on a frontally-positioned throne with Jesus in her lap and angels at her side, while the top of the panel is shaped into a pediment recalling the "canopy of heaven." In Critcher's version of the Maestà composition, the traditional wide-lapped, blue-mantled mother (Madonna) sits with a basket in her lap and her girls at her side, while above her the distinctive triangular top of the tent, through which appears the bustling market beyond, serves as the heavenly canopy. A successful and creative woman, Critcher purposely identified the women of Taos as emblems of the best the city had to offer -- spiritual character and bountiful, beautiful painting subjects. Critcher exhibited widely and won numerous awards in her later career, yet she never placed her Taos paintings in the same category as her private portrait commissions, which funded her income. In fact, before her death, Critcher gave most of her Indian paintings away to family members. For her, they were not commercial products, rather intimate gifts made from the heart about her beloved Taos. Extremely rare to the market, Critcher's Taos paintings capture the only female perspective among TSA members -- and a highly unique one at that.

      Heritage Auctions
    • CATHARINE CRITCHER PORTRAIT PAINTING OF A LADY
      Jul. 20, 2014

      CATHARINE CRITCHER PORTRAIT PAINTING OF A LADY

      Est: $5,000 - $8,000

      CRITCHER, Catharine Carter, (American, 1868-1964): Portrait of Frances Wyly Hall, Oil/Canvas, 20 1/8'' x 17 1/8'', signed lower right, framed, 23 1/2'' x 20 1/2''. From the son of the sitter.

      Burchard Galleries Inc
    • Catharine Carter Critcher (American, 1868-1964) A woman in traditional garb 18 x 17in
      Nov. 23, 2009

      Catharine Carter Critcher (American, 1868-1964) A woman in traditional garb 18 x 17in

      Est: $10,000 - $15,000

      A woman in traditional garb unsigned oil on canvas 18 x 17in

      Bonhams
    • Catharine Carter Critcher (American 1879-1964) Portrait of Star Road Unsigned Oil on canvas
      Dec. 14, 2002

      Catharine Carter Critcher (American 1879-1964) Portrait of Star Road Unsigned Oil on canvas

      Est: $80,000 - $120,000

      37 x 32 in (94 x 81.3 cm) Provenance: By repute, a wedding gift from the artist to Jane and Philip DeLauder in 1947 Note: Philip DeLauder, a professional photographer, was employed to photograph Catharine Critcher's works in her Dupont Circle studio. Their friendship continued after Critcher closed her school at the outbreak of World War II and moved to Charles Town, WV Literature: Barbara Brennen, transcript from a lecture given at the Art History of New Mexico Conference, Taos, NM, 1988, p. 7.

      Weschler's
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