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  • Granville Redmond
    Mar 9, 1871 - May 24, 1935
  • Spring - Antelope Valley - Granville Redmond is nationally known for his Impressionist landscapes featuring the California wildflowers, as well as his coastals, and Tonal moonlit scenes. He is known as one of the most prominent and successful "California Impressionists" of the early 20th century.
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Spring - Antelope Valley
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  • Spring - Antelope Valley

  • Granville Redmond
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  • 1932
    Oil on canvas
    30 x 40 in. (76.2 x 101.6 cm.)

    Granville Redmond's depictions of poppy fields in bloom are among his most celebrated subjects. His glorious paintings of hillsides and valleys, dotted with bold orange and yellow blooming poppies and set against cooler green meadows and towering hills, are at once both realistic views of the California spring and confident personal expressions from the leader of the region's plein-air movement.

    Though born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, Redmond was raised in San Jose, California. Despite an early bout with scarlet fever that left him deaf, he quickly demonstrated an aptitude for fine art and received a scholarship to study abroad at the Académie Julian in Paris. Redmond returned to California in 1898 and settled in Los Angeles where he became a leader of The California Impressionist group, also known as the California plein-air school. A regional sub-set under the broader umbrella of American Impressionism, the group was drawn to the dramatic landscape and shimmering light of the California landscape, for which the Impressionist style was well suited. Painting directly from nature, the painters recorded the color and atmosphere they experienced. Redmond brilliantly captured the California poppies in bloom in Antelope Valley in northern Los Angeles County in his richly colored and energetically painted Spring--Antelope Valley. Today, Antelope Valley is a State Natural Reserve.

    Spring--Antelope Valley displays the influence of the French Impressionists, as well as the staccato brushstrokes of the Post-Impressionists, and the delicate patterning of the Nabis. The low horizon line evokes the vastness of the western landscape. The horizontality of the work with three bands making up the field, the mesas and the sky makes the work feel modern and almost abstract. The bright colors and lively thick paint application bring the eye forward, while the plunging perspective lines of the bushes and clouds draw the viewer deep into the painting.

    In 1932, Granville Redmond gave Spring--Antelope Valley to Dr. Lemuel Clarence "Bud" Houser in exchange for dental work. Houser was a three-time Olympic gold medalist for shot put and discus at the 1924 and 1928 Olympics. He carried the flag at the 1928 opening ceremonies for Team USA. Houser went on to study dentistry at the University of Southern California and then started a practice in Hollywood where the artist, along with several movie stars, was his patient.

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Other paintings by Granville Redmond:

Landscape
Landscape
Snow Capp Spring
Snow Capp Spring
Landscape 1914
Landscape 1914
California Meadow
California Meadow
Granville RedmondGranville Redmond was one of the best and most prominent landscape painters of Los Angeles during the first decade of the century. Born Grenville Richard Seymour Redmond, the artist was four years old when his family moved to San José, California. They later moved to Los Angeles. Having been left completely deaf by scarlet fever, Redmond lived at the California School for the Deaf (then called the Institution of the Deaf, the Dumb, and the Blind) in Berkeley, where he received training in drawing and sculpture. After his graduation in 1890 he next attended the California School of Design in San Francisco, studying with Arthur Mathews (1860-1945) and Amédée Joullin (1862-1917) and receiving recognition for his good work. With funds lent by his former school’s board of directors, in 1893 he was sent to Paris, where he studied with Benjamin Constant (1845-1902) and Jean-Paul Laurens (1838-1921) at the Académie Julian. He exhibited a winter landscape in the Paris Salon of 1895.

Leaving Paris in 1898, Redmond settled in Los Angeles. He changed his first name to Granville and married in 1899. He painted views of the Los Angeles area until 1908, when he moved to Northern California. In contrast to his absence from exhibitions in later life, during this period he sent works to exhibitions in Philadelphia, Saint Louis, and Seattle. He settled in Parkfield in Monterey County in early 1908, but moved to Menlo Park, California, in 1910, and that year exhibited in San Francisco and Los Angeles. He had solo exhibitions at commercial galleries and in 1914 at the Los Angeles Museum.

In 1917 Redmond returned to Los Angeles and worked as a pantomimist; he was befriended by Charlie Chaplin, who gave him roles in several of his movies, including City Lights (1931). Redmond also had a feature role in Raymond Griffith’s mystery, You’d Be Surprised (1926). Chaplin also gave the artist the use of a studio on his movie lot to paint in, where Redmond worked until shortly before his death in 1935.