Clifford Holmead Phillips (1889 - 1975)
Clifford Holmead Phillips
Holmead, born Clifford Holmead Phillips, was a painter. From about 1920 he joined various artist colonies in New England. In 1923, some of his paintings were shown for the first time as part of an Art Association exhibition. They were delicate, airy idylls, traditional landscapes in a brittle, silvery light, lonely farmhouses and trees. But he found the painting practiced there to be too beautiful and looked for new inspiration. In Paris, seeing a work by the French Expressionist and Fauvist Maurice de Vlaminck caused a fundamental change in his view of art. Vlaminck's dynamic lines and strong colors impressed Clifford Holmead Phillips so much that he increasingly followed the expressive direction, but later defined his style as "Crude Expressionism". From the 1920s to 1940, he celebrated international success and exhibited in important galleries and museums on both continents.
Date and place of birt: | 2 october 1889, Shippensburg, USA |
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Date and place of death: | 22 february 1975, Brussels, Belgium |
Nationality: | Belgium, USA |
Period of activity: | XX century |
Specialization: | Artist, Landscape painter, Painter, Portraitist |
Genre: | Animalistic, Cityscape, Landscape painting, Portrait, Rural landscape, Still life |
Art style: | Expressionism, Post War Art, Realism |
Technique: | Oil, Oil on canvas |