Maud Lewis (attributed To) | Signed Primitive Naive Oil
Item History & Price
This charming oil on canvas is signed "Maud" and is sold "as attributed to Maud Lewis".Some of her paintings were signed "Maud", others "Lewis" and most of them "Maud Lewis"This painting was acquired around 1996 at a Maine antiques shop by a Boston collector.As we are not able to confirm the exact provenance of this artwork, we sell it as "attributed to"
Size: 9.5 to 13 inchesNot framedNo returnsFlat fee shipping from Wilmington, Delaware....
From Wikipedia:
Maud Lewis used bright colours in her paintings, and subjects were often flowers or animals, including oxen teams, horses, birds, deer, or cats. Many of her paintings are of outdoor scenes, including Cape Island boats bobbing on the water, horses pulling a sleigh, skaters, and portraits of dogs, cats, deer, birds, and cows. Her paintings were inspired by childhood memories of the landscape and people around Yarmouth and South Ohio, as well as Digby locations, such as Point Prim and Bayview. Commercial Christmas cards and calendars also influenced her.Most of her paintings are quite small - often no larger than eight by ten inches, although she is known to have done at least five paintings 24 inches by 36 inches. The size was limited by the extent she could move her arms, which had been affected by arthritis. She used mostly wallboard and tubes of Tinsol, an oil-based paint. Lewis' technique consisted of first coating the board with white, then drawing an outline, and applying paint directly out of the tube. She never blended or mixed colours.[11]Early Maud Lewis paintings from the 1940s are quite rare. A large collection of Lewis' work can be found in the Art Gallery of Nova Scotia (AGNS). The AGNS occasionally displays the Chaplin/Wennerstrom shutters (now part of the Clearwater Fine Foods Inc. collection). This collection comprises twenty-two exterior house shutters that Lewis painted in the early 1940s. The work was done for some Americans who owned a cottage on the South Shore. Most of the shutters are quite large, at 5 ft x 1 ft.6 inches. Lewis was paid 70 cents a shutter.Between 1945 and 1950, people began to stop at Lewis' Marshalltown home on Highway No. 1, the main highway and tourist route in western Nova Scotia. They bought her paintings for two or three dollars each. Only in the last three or four years of Lewis' life did her paintings begin to sell for seven to ten dollars. She achieved national attention as a folk artist following an article in the Toronto-based Star Weekly in 1964. In 1965, she was featured on CBC-TV's Telescope.[12] Two of Lewis' paintings were ordered by the White House in the 1970s during Richard Nixon's presidency.[13] But, her arthritis limited her ability to complete many of the orders that had come from her national recognition.In the early 21st century, her paintings have sold at auction for ever increasing prices. Two of her paintings have sold for more than $16, 000. The highest auction price so far is $22, 200.00 for lot 196 A Family Outing. The painting was sold at a Bonham's auction in Toronto on November 30, 2009. Another painting, A View of Sandy Cove, sold in 2012 for $20, 400.[14] A painting found in 2016 at an Ontario thrift store, Portrait of Eddie Barnes and Ed Murphy, Lobster Fishermen, sold at auction for almost three times its estimated price. The online auction ended May 19, 2017, and the painting, which was appraised at $16, 000, sold for $45, 000.[15]