June 6, 2022 14:00 EST

American Art and Pennsylvania Impressionists

 
  Lot 58
 

58

Sarah S. Stilwell Weber (American, 1878–1939)
Three of Us (Saturday Evening Post Cover)

Signed with Artist's initials 'S.S.W' bottom center right (under the far right girl's foot); also with original preparer's label on bottom stretcher verso, oil on canvas
32 x 27 in. (81.3 x 68.6cm)

Provenance

Collection of Alexander R. Boyd, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
A gift from the above in 1929.
Private Collection, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
By descent in the family.
Private Collection, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.

Sold for $119,700
Estimated at $30,000 - $50,000


 

Signed with Artist's initials 'S.S.W' bottom center right (under the far right girl's foot); also with original preparer's label on bottom stretcher verso, oil on canvas
32 x 27 in. (81.3 x 68.6cm)

Provenance

Collection of Alexander R. Boyd, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
A gift from the above in 1929.
Private Collection, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
By descent in the family.
Private Collection, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.

Literature

The Saturday Evening Post, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, August 25, 1917 (illustrated on the cover as Three Little Girls at Beach).

Note

Sarah S. Stilwell Weber was an important Philadelphia-based illustrator of magazines and books who studied at Drexel Institute under Howard Pyle. As he considered her one of his best students along with Franck Schoonover, Pyle advised Weber not to marry to focus on her career, and helped her secure deals in New York City. She was also a member of Philadelphia’s very own The Plastic Club (an art organization for women which included, among many noteworthy women artists of the day, fellow artists Jessie Willcox Smith, Violet Oakley, Cecilia Beaux and Fern Coppedge), which enabled her to own a revenue of her own, and therefore compete with the all-male students of the nearby Philadelphia Sketch Cub. Weber painted a total of 60 covers for The Saturday Evening Post from 1904-1921, and is renowned for her charming depictions of young children at play, as in the present work - a charming depiction of three young girls gleefully enjoying a day at the beach, and which can be seen as a classic example of the artist’s best known oeuvre.

The painting has strong tied with the city of Philadelphia as its first owner, Mr. Alexander R. Boyd (Doyle & Sons), was one of the builders of the historic Art Deco Boyd Theatre, which opened its doors in December 1928, and was the last movie theater in downtown Philadelphia prior to its closure in 2002. It was through the friendship between Mr. Boyd and the grandparents of the present consignor that Three of Us came to be acquired via family descent. Its sale at Freeman's marks its first public appearance since it was shown in the ladies lounge of the city's landmark theater.

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