Frederick Oakes Sylvester

American painter

Frederick Oakes Sylvester
Frederick Oakes Sylvester
Born(1869-10-08)October 8, 1869
Brockton, Massachusetts
DiedMarch 2, 1915(1915-03-02) (aged 45)
St. Louis
NationalityAmerican
EducationMassachusetts Normal Art School
Known forArt educator and artist
MovementArts and Crafts
SpouseFlorence I. Gerry
AwardsBronze medal at the Louisiana Purchase Exposition

Frederick Oakes Sylvester (October 8, 1869 – March 2, 1915) was an American art educator and artist in the Arts and Crafts movement in St. Louis, Missouri.

Biography

Takuma Kajiwara and Frederick Oakes Sylvester at Elsah

Frederick Oakes Sylvester was born in Brockton, Massachusetts, on October 8, 1869, the son of Charles Frederick Sylvester, a hardware dealer, and Mary Louise, who died two weeks after his birth.[1]

Sylvester's father did not encourage his son's artistic aspirations, and Sylverster as a boy sold newspapers to buy art supplies. He attended high school in Fall River, Massachusetts, and during the summer of 1887 he hiked around Massachusetts and Connecticut with a friend, camping out and sketching. He entered Massachusetts Normal Art School in 1888 and took the six-year Teacher's Course. His aunt Rebecca Noyes and his great-aunt Hannah Soule, descendant of the Mayflower Soules, financially supported him in this period. He graduated in 3 years with honors in public speaking and reading.[1]

From 1891 to 1892 he was the acting director of the Art Department of the H. Sophie Newcomb Memorial College at Tulane University, New Orleans.[1]

On December 25, 1891, Sylvester married Florence I. Gerry, a Fall River schoolteacher. They had two children: Dorothy Louise (b. 1894) and Kilburn Gerry (b. 1899). In June 1892, Frederick O. Sylvester moved to St. Louis, Missouri, and took the position of art director at the Central High School. They lived at 5924 Horton Place, St. Louis. One of his pupils was Helen R. Rathbun. He also taught night classes at YMCA. In 1899 he was admitted to the Society of Western Artists and later became its vice-president. He was also member of the Two-by-Four Club, the Artists' Guild and the St. Louis Art League. The paintings of this period focus on the St. Louis' riverfront, specifically the area surrounding the Eads Bridge. In 1900 Sylvester exhibited twenty-five paintings of Eads Bridge at the St. Louis Exposition. By 1904 the paintings of the Eads Bridge amounted to over 100, and Sylvester became known as "the painter of the Eads Bridge". He was an impressionist documenting the growth of St. Louis' industrial life.[1]

In 1902 Sylvester went to work part-time for Principia, a young private school located at Page and Belt Avenues, St. Louis. In 1904, Sylvester won a bronze medal at the Louisiana Purchase Exposition and a silver medal at the Portland Exposition.[1]

Takuma Kajiwara moved to St. Louis in 1905, "lured to the city partly by an offer of employment in a studio and even more by a desire to see the Mississippi River," according to his obituary in the St. Louis Star-Times.[2] Kajiwara and Sylvester were friends. According to one account, their amity was "warm enough to cause them to cut wrists and mingle blood in a gesture of unity." Sylvester designed a silver watch fob for Kajiwara showing an artist and a photographer clasping hands, and carrying, on the reverse side, the statement: "No East no West, But hand in hand, Life's Unity, To Understand, T. Kajiwara, from:, F.O. Sylvester, 1909." Kajiwara did photographic work for The Great River, a book by Sylvester collecting his paintings of the Mississippi, published in 1911. Photos show the men painting together.[1]

In 1906 Sylvester spent a period in Europe. Back from Europe, Sylvester started his second period, focused his paintings on the area around Elsah, Illinois. Elsah is a historic river town in Illinois and Sylvester owned a summer home, Oak Ledge, there which he bought in 1902. In Elsah, Sylvester tried to move beyond impressionism and the urban subjects of before towards the spiritual values of nature. In 1986, Paul O. Williams published Frederick Oakes Sylvester, The Artist's Encounter with Elsah. Frequent guest at Elsah were Kathryn E. Cherry, who succeeded Sylvester as Principia art director, and Takuma Kajiwara.[1]

In 1906, Sylvester was awarded the Fine Arts Building of Chicago Prize by the Society of Western Artists. In 1909 and 1910 he served as president of the St. Louis Artists' Guild. In 1910, he exhibited 28 paintings in Columbia, Missouri, for the Art Lover's Guild and gave two lectures, Artists' Ideals and The Relation of Art to Life. In 1911, the St. Louis Art Museum held a major exhibition of 83 Sylvester paintings from the Elsah years.[1]

He died in St. Louis on March 2, 1915, and, according to his wishes, a boat set out from Elsah upriver to the confluence of the Mississippi and Illinois Rivers, where his wife and Kajiwara sprinkled his ashes on the water.[1][3]

Today Frederick O. Sylvester's paintings hang in a number of institutions and private homes in the St. Louis' area.[1]

  • Grapes
    Grapes
  • Gladiolas
    Gladiolas
  • Landscape with trees and stream, 1885
    Landscape with trees and stream, 1885
  • Landscape with farm house, 1891
    Landscape with farm house, 1891
  • The meadow pool, 1893
    The meadow pool, 1893
  • Mississippi harbor scene, 1897
    Mississippi harbor scene, 1897
  • Eads Bridge
    Eads Bridge
  • Sunset, March 15, 1900
    Sunset, March 15, 1900
  • Landscape with rolling hills, 1902
    Landscape with rolling hills, 1902
  • Bluffs along the river, 1902
    Bluffs along the river, 1902
  • Missouri river scene, 1903
    Missouri river scene, 1903
  • Along the Missouri river, 1904
    Along the Missouri river, 1904
  • Venice, 1905
    Venice, 1905
  • Menaggio, north from Cadenabbia, Italy
    Menaggio, north from Cadenabbia, Italy
  • Venetian canal scene
    Venetian canal scene
  • Lake Como
    Lake Como
  • Bavarian landscape, 1906
    Bavarian landscape, 1906
  • Elsah, c. 1906
    Elsah, c. 1906
  • Elsah, c. 1906
    Elsah, c. 1906
  • Elsah, c. 1906
    Elsah, c. 1906
  • Elsah, c. 1906
    Elsah, c. 1906
  • Elsah, c. 1906
    Elsah, c. 1906
  • Elsah, c. 1906
    Elsah, c. 1906
  • Elsah, c. 1906
    Elsah, c. 1906
  • Elsah, c. 1906
    Elsah, c. 1906
  • Soft Twilight Lingers, c. 1906
    Soft Twilight Lingers, c. 1906
  • Sunrise through the Trees
    Sunrise through the Trees
  • Cloudy Day
    Cloudy Day
  • Bluffs along the Mississippi River
    Bluffs along the Mississippi River
  • The Sunlit Cottenwood
    The Sunlit Cottenwood
  • Tonalist River Landscape
    Tonalist River Landscape
  • Summer landscape
    Summer landscape
  • River landscape from the bluffs
    River landscape from the bluffs
  • Twilight and evening star
    Twilight and evening star
  • Sunset on the Mississippi, 1909
    Sunset on the Mississippi, 1909
  • Pageantry of sky and stream, 1909
    Pageantry of sky and stream, 1909
  • The Light that Makes the Heart Glad, 1910
    The Light that Makes the Heart Glad, 1910
  • Summer landscape, 1910
    Summer landscape, 1910
  • Summer landscape, 1910
    Summer landscape, 1910
  • Summer landscape, 1910
    Summer landscape, 1910
  • Nocturne, 1910
    Nocturne, 1910
  • Verdant bluff landscape, 1911
    Verdant bluff landscape, 1911
  • River landscape, 1911
    River landscape, 1911
  • The song of the Mississippi, 1911
    The song of the Mississippi, 1911
  • The purple Grafton Heights, 1911–1912
    The purple Grafton Heights, 1911–1912
  • Untitled, 1912
    Untitled, 1912
  • Piasa bluffs on the Mississippi, 1912
    Piasa bluffs on the Mississippi, 1912
  • Dreaming, 1913
    Dreaming, 1913
  • Trees a' shimmer, 1913
    Trees a' shimmer, 1913

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Williams, Paul O. (1986). Frederick Oakes Sylvester: the artist's encounter with Elsah. Historic Elsah Foundation. Retrieved September 25, 2017.
  2. ^ "St. Louis Losing Kajiwara Because He Finds After 31 Years It Is Poor Soil for His Art," St. Louis Star-Times, February 7, 1906, page 1
  3. ^ "F. O. Sylvester's Funeral Friday at Artists' Guild". St. Louis Post-Dispatch. March 3, 1915. p. 11. Retrieved February 14, 2020 – via Newspapers.com.
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