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  • William Wendt
    Feb 20, 1865 - Dec 29, 1946
  • The Silent Summer Sea - William Wendt is widely regarded as one of the most influential American artists of the early 20th century and the most important artist from the art colony of Laguna Beach, California. Wendt was a natural leader and educator. Primarily self-taught, he found inspiration en plein air, developing his skill and unique style directly from nature and within the landscape itself.
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The Silent Summer Sea
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  • The Silent Summer Sea

  • William Wendt
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  • $95.95
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  • 1915
    Oil on canvas
    40 1/2 x 50 1/2 in.


    The essence and lucidity of Wendt's art in 1915 is fully present in his large-scale work The Silent Summer Sea. At forty by fifty inches, it is most likely a painting (like his Avalon Bay) that was preceded by outdoor sketches, then finished in the studio. The work has remarkable angularity, sharpness and vivid contrasts. The shore is warm, yellowish brown, almost wholly uninterrupted save for a few clumps of grayed green, set in front of a flat sea of blue. The ocean's horizon is pressed close to the top of the large canvas, allowing for the characteristic Pacific sky of pale green and violet. The water hardly moves, the surf is barely audible in the few small upswings of white paint. The stillness, distance, and overall quiet are all the hallmarks of Wendt's most personal expression: nature is where respite is. Open, vast, and serene, The Silent Summer Sea is an homage to natural grandeur, a sensual success in terms of sheer color, and an object lesson in what he felt painting should leave out.

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Other paintings by William Wendt:

Rolling Hills, California
Rolling Hills, California
Village with a Church Spire in the Distance
Village with a Church Spire in the Distance
Houses Along the Coast
Houses Along the Coast
Santa Ana River 1928
Santa Ana River 1928
William WendtWilliam Wendt (1865-1946) is widely regarded as one of the most influential American artists of the early 20th century and the most important artist from the art colony of Laguna Beach, California. What is unusual for an artist of his stature is that what we know of him comes from second and third-hand contemporary accounts; Wendt left no diary, no scrapbook and very few papers, and had no children.

What we do know is that he was born in Germany in 1865, emigrated to Chicago at 15 and worked as a commercial painter. He enrolled in the Bromlet School of Art, and later studied at the Art Institute. In 1893, he quit his job, becoming a full-time painter in his studio. His talent was soon recognized, and in the same year, he won the Second Yerkes Prize in the Chicago Society of Artists Exhibition at the Art Institute. The prize was $200, which financed his first trip to California.

He held his first major show in Chicago in 1901 and sold half of the exhibited works—and even one to Frank Lloyd Wright, an early admirer. At this time, due to his training and current artistic trends, he was painting in the Barbizon and Impressionist styles. This was soon to change, when in 1906 he married the artist Julia Bracken and moved to Los Angeles.

Wendt was a natural leader and educator—in 1911 he became President of the California Art Club, a position he would hold for many years. He was instrumental in admitting women to the organization and was key in educating the public. Wendt arranged traveling exhibitions of works to San Francisco and also organized exhibitions at public libraries, bringing in school children from surrounding districts, and holding public nightly lectures around the exhibitions.

In 1918, Wendt built a studio in Laguna Beach and moved there, his wife remaining at their Los Angeles home. He became relatively reclusive, withdrawing from public life. There have been several suggestions as to the reason—it may have been partly due to his German heritage, as the onset of War lead to a wave of anti-German sentiment in America. Another observation was that he suffered from depression for many years, and a final theory was that he was escaping the encroaching industrialization and urban expansion that was destroying the California landscape; perhaps all three were true. In any case, he remained remarkably prolific until the last 10 years of his life, painting only 30 works during that period.

Wendt was a religious man. He was exposed to the Swedenborgian concept that nature was a manifestation of God and that all things in nature correspond to spiritual reality; the artist was simply nature’s interpreter. When looking at Wendt’s paintings, only rarely do we see people, animals, buildings, roads or bridges. Wendt was known to edit out such things, as he believed that tourism and industry were rapidly changing the environment—he felt that land was the central and most important source of human happiness. What we also see is that the sky plays a secondary role in the overall painting, usually taking up less than a third of the canvas—all attention is drawn to the landscape. When viewing a William Wendt painting, we feel, either consciously or unconsciously, a stillness and sense of serenity, simply nature on a grandiose scale.