A bit of serendipity grew out of tragedy recently. After seeing a Town Topics letter I wrote about the tragedy of Beech Leaf Disease, and another written by Wendy Mager of Friends of Princeton Open Space, Jim Firestone decided it would be highly appropriate to donate a painting he had acquired long ago to the Friends of Herrontown Woods. Jim wrote his own letter to the editor, telling the story.
It's a lovely painting of a beech forest by William Eyden, Jr., an Indiana painter known for his paintings of beech trees.
We had a celebratory photo session outside Princeton Makes. That's Jim Firestone on the right. Jim grew up in Princeton, and remembers Einstein stopping by on occasion to visit his parents.
On the left is artist
Robert Hummel, who expertly repaired and refurbished the painting. Robert has painted many images of Princeton, including
one of Veblen House. Robert shared some research he had done on Eyden, Jr, who had won many awards for his landscape paintings. Both he and his father, who had moved to the U.S. from Germany in 1866, specialized in painting beech trees. Though Eyden, Jr's home base was in Richmond, Indiana, he lived and painted for a time in North Carolina, and also in NY City. Biographies of father and son are pasted below.
We plan to ultimately exhibit Jim's refurbished painting in a refurbished Veblen House. One remarkable coincidence: Eyden, Jr. studied for a time at the Art Students League in New York City. Kate Cory, also a painter of landscapes, one of which
once hung above the mantel at Veblen House, also had studied there. Nice to think they might have known each other.
Thanks to Jim Firestone and Robert Hummel for this beautiful gift to the Friends of Herrontown Woods.
BIOGRAPHIES
Born in Hanover, Germany, William Arnold Eyden came to the United States in 1866 with his mother, who died on the voyage. He traveled to Massillon, Ohio to live with an uncle. After his marriage he moved to Richmond, Indiana where he a studio at 2100 East Main. His mother was an artist and the source of his only instruction in art.
Early in his career, he painted genre scenes but later turned to painting landscapes almost entirely. He like many of the founders of the Richmond Group artists favored the beech trees. He lived in Buffalo, New York for a short time but returned to Richmond in 1904, where twelve of his landscape paintings were on view in the window of Ellwood Morris & Co. His pupils included Randolph Coats and his two sons, William and Walter.
The Eyden names have been familiar to almost anyone with interest in the world of Indiana art. Eyden inherited his artistic talent from his father who was born in Hanover, Germany. He studied from John Bundy, Charles Hawthorne, Daniel Garber and William Merritt Chase at the New York Art Student League. In addition to being a talented painter, Eyden was an accomplished violinist. He studied with Fredrick Hicks, professor of music at Earlham College. For eleven years, he operated a gallery/studio in Greenwich Village, painting many New York street scenes. Yet despite his travels, his favorite subject matter would be the woodland scene of beech woods. During his lifetime, he won numerous awards and honors, including a one-man show of his work in 1968 at McGuire Memorial Hall art galleries. On the closing day of the exhibition, he gave a painting demonstration. He was a consistent exhibitor in the Hoosier Salon and participated in the first salon held in Chicago. Additional info about William Eyden, Jr. can be found at askart and findagrave. |