CARLE
J. BLENNER (1862-1952)
Artist Images
Carle J. Blenner was born in Richmond, Virginia in
1864. He was educated at Marburg, Germany, and
graduated from the Yale University Art School.
He studied for six years at the Academie Julien in
Paris, under Bouguereau, Robert-Fleury, and Aman-Jean.
He first exhibited at the Paris Salon in 1887, at
age 23, and for the next three years. His first
exhibitions in the United States were in New York,
and these commenced around 1889. From the 1890s, he
maintained a working studio on 57th Street in New
York City for more than 50 years.
Blenner's talent was recognized in the United States
early on, as two of his paintings were selected for
exhibition at the important 1893 Chicago World's
Fair Columbian Exposition. He also exhibited
regularly at the National Academy of Design and won
their prestigious Hallgarten Prize in 1899.
Additionally, Blenner won a medal in Boston in 1891,
a medal at the Pan Am Expo in 1901, a medal at the
St. Louis Expo in 1904, a medal in Charleston, South
Carolina, and won prizes in Springfield,
Massachusetts and in New Haven, Connecticut in 1932.
The early years for Blenner were also his most
successful commercially, as he was in high demand as
a portraitist of the wealthy, titled and famous--
particularly women. His subjects included Lady
Hamilton, granddaughter of the Duke of Cambridge;
Mrs. Raymond White, Lady Chetwynde; and Madame
Nordica, Isabel Irving and Evelyn Nesbitt of the
theater. His male portraits were of such
personalities as the Duke of Cambridge, the Earl of
Yarmouth, Richard Henning and Henry Clay Pierce.
From about 1915, Blenner turned to still-life
studies of flowers, and he continued to reap awards
for these and other works--the last in 1932. His
florals reflect his superb training. However, his
own sense of textures and his superior use of
pigment in the service of light create not only
unlabored representations, but revelations of the
flowers' essence.
Blenner was a member of several prominent art clubs
and organizations including, the American Federation
of Artists, the Greenwich Academy of Fine Arts, the
Greenwich Art Association, the New Haven Paint and
Clay Club, the Newport Art Association, Rhode
Island, the Salmagundi Club, New York City, and the
Washington Arts Club, Washington, D.C. His works can
be found in the permanent collection of many
American Art Museums.
Blenner died in New Haven, Connecticut in 1952.
Written and submitted July 2004 by Brad M. Aron who
credits various reference books, including 300 Years
of American Art by Michael Zellman, Who Was Who in
American Art by Peter Falk, and Mantle Fieldings
Dictionary of American Painters, Glenn Opitz,
editor.