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Charles
Caryl Coleman (1840-1928)
The life of the
expatriate artist is a strange one: you run off and leave your culture,
language, family, friends—all to pursue your muse, whatever it is that
attracts you about somewhere else in the world, somewhere else that you
must be in order to do that which you must do. In the case of
Charles Caryl Coleman, that attraction seemed to be the
anachronistically bucolic scenery in the Bay of Naples; not the
classical statues and temples of antiquity, but the even older scenes
of the land, itself—the colors, the water, the fields and those working
in the fields—all those things that never change, or at least change
even more slowly than empires rise and fall.
Coleman was born in 1840
in Buffalo, New York, and died on Capri
in December of 1928 after
spending 60 years of his life painting scenes of the island. His
landscapes and portraits show just how under the spell of the area he
was; his paintings—Early
Morning-Capri, The Capri Girl,
In the Garden of Villa Castello,
Vesuvius from Pompeii, A View of the Castello of Capri, Capri Terrace near the sea—are
gloriously unaware of such late-19th-century and early 20th-century
trends in art as abstraction. His works are found in many places in
Europe and the US, and they are prized. (His Women in the Wheat Fields, Anacapri
[top photo] sold in 2004 at a Christie’s auction for $600,000.)
Coleman studied art with
Andrew Andrews and W.H. Beard in Buffalo in the 1850s. He then traveled
to Paris to study for three years under the influential painter and
teacher, Thomas Couture, before returning to America in 1862 to enlist
in the Union army in the Civil War. He returned to Paris in 1866 and
then traveled around France, Spain and Italy. Before settling on Capri,
Coleman lived in Venice and Rome and some of his works are from that
period. His home on Capri was the Villa Narciso [Narcissus], which he
converted in 1870 from the premises of the old Santa Teresa convent.
Coleman produced about 300 paintings, and many of them are in
collections in the United States. In an 1899 review of a Coleman
exhibition in New York City, the reviewer (Charles de Kay) wrote:
“From his island home Mr. Coleman has watched the mass of
Vesuvius with its plume of smoke through all the changing seasons of
the year, and through the varied lights and shades of the twenty-four
hours from sunrise to sunrise. He has eight small views in pastel and
oil which he calls the “Songs of Vesuvius.” In one we see how Winter
has laid about the smoking crater a band of snow. In another the
brilliant foliage of Autumn near the foreground makes a charming
contrast with the clouds that hang about the summit. In a third we see
what tricks the north wind plays with smoke and cloud masses as they
train from the peaks of the volcano directly across the bay toward
Capri. In another picture we see Ischia like a delicate violet mass
between the sky and the dark-blue Mediterranean, while the foreground
is a bit of Capri, some terrace near the sea, with a couple of village
girls for an ornament. But Vesuvius dominates the Bay of Naples, though
for the most part its domination is of a gentle sort...His pictures are
happy in color and subject, like the warm sunshine of Capri and the
tints of its crags and sea.”
In 1910, in the latter part of his life, Coleman fell ill and was
not expected to live; yet, he did and carried on for almost another two
decades, playing the role of the eccentric artist, presenting himself
in outlandish dress to house-guests, throwing parties and generally
having a good time right to the end. Charles Caryl Coleman is buried on
Capri.
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