October 13, 2006 through January 28, 2007
Carol & Louis Della Penna Gallery in New Hope
Sponsored by RAGO Arts and Auction Center
For some painters a single way of working can last a lifetime. This was not
Charles Rosen's story. Rosen
began his creative career as a highly successful landscape painter,
prominently associated with the impressionist art colony centered in
New Hope, Pennsylvania, in the early twentieth century. His best-known
New Hope canvases are large-scale snow scenes and spring scenes,
utilizing a simple but elegant compositional style sometimes reminiscent of
Japanese prints. These landscapes explore many different techniques and
often exhibit a stylistic restlessness.

Charles Rosen, The Roundhouse, Kingston, New York, 1927, oil on canvas,
H. 30.125 x W. 40.25 inches, James A. Michener Art Museum,
Gift of the John P. Horton Estate.
In his late thirties and early forties, Rosen became dissatisfied with the
landscape style, and under the influence of modernist ideas his work changed
radically. He completely abandoned traditional landscapes in favor of a manner of
working that might be described as both rhythmic and semiabstract, one that usually
used man-made structures as subjects and was based on a passionate exploration of
form as a living, organic phenomenon. Rosen himself described this idea as
"form that radiates life" and spoke of the "effort to achieve this in paint."
In 1920 he moved to Woodstock, New York, where he taught at the Art Students
League summer school. He developed close friendships with fellow Woodstock painters
George Bellows and Eugene Speicher, and also taught painting in Columbus, Ohio,
and San Antonio, Texas.
The exhibition featured more than 48 works, including major examples of
both his landscape and modernist styles, as well as works on paper.

Charles Rosen, Opalescent Morning, n.d., oil on canvas,
H. 32 x W. 40 inches, Gift of Marguerite and Gerry Lenfest.
The exhibition was accompanied by a major publication that provides an
in-depth examination of the life and work of Charles Rosen, studying
both phases of his career and featuring paintings from major museum and
private collections that demonstrate this unusual range of styles.
Principally authored by the Michener's Senior Curator Brian H. Peterson,
the book also includes an essay on Rosen's Woodstock years by Tom Wolf,
Professor of Art History at Bard College; it is co-published by the
Michener Art Museum and the University of Pennsylvania Press.
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