Dana Bartlett is known for his landscapes and plein air views of California and the Southwest. In 1922, he served asPresident of the California Art Club, and he was founder and the first president of the California Watercolor Society. Born in Ionia, Michigan in 1882, Bartlett moved to New York City to study at the Art Students’ League. There he studied underWilliam Merritt Chase and Charles Warren Eaton. For a short time Bartlett had a studio in Boston before moving toPortland, Oregon, where he worked as a commercial artist for the Foster-Kleiser Company. He then relocated toCalifornia, and briefly had a studio in San Francisco before finally settling in Los Angeles in 1915. In 1921 he had the opportunity to show his work with a select group of fourteen artists at the first California Watercolor Society exhibition, and later become president of that Society. He held a solo exhibition at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art in 1927, and soon after opened his own gallery featuring work of local artists as well as his own. He was an accomplished watercolorist whose decorative style embodies the California ‘Eucalyptus School’, however he painted many nocturnes, landscapes, and scenes from his travels in Europe. He contributed greatly to his local art community and taught at the Chouinard Art Institute in Los Angeles during his career. His works are held in many museums, including the LagunaBeach Museum of Art, and the Huntington Library, San Marino. Dana Bartlett died on July 3, 1957 in Los Angeles, California.
Dana Bartlett
Lazy Surf
Oil on Canvas
20×24 inches
Categories: Dana Bartlett, Fine Art