English: Artist
Stanton MacDonald-Wright, 8 Jul 1890 - 22 Aug 1973
Sitter
Willard Huntington Wright, 1888 - 11 Apr 1939
Date
1913-1914
Type
Painting
Medium
Oil on canvas
Dimensions
Stretcher: 92.1 x 76.8 x 2.5cm (36 1/4 x 30 1/4 x 1")
Frame: 109.5 x 94 x 6.4cm (43 1/8 x 37 x 2 1/2")
Credit Line
National Portrait Gallery, Smithsonian Institution; this acquisition was made possible by a generous contribution from the James Smithson Society
Object number
NPG.86.7
Exhibition Label
Born Charlottesville, Virginia
Under the alias S. S. Van Dine, Willard Huntington Wright became famous for his detective fiction, beginning with The Benson Murder Case (1926), which sold out in a week. But earlier, he had helped advance new ideas in art, literature, and journalism. As an editor, he transformed Smart Set, a fashionable repository of light stories and verse, into a serious journal, publishing such writers as D. H. Lawrence and Theodore Dreiser. As an art critic, he championed advanced trends in the press and in his books Modern Painting (1915) and The Future of Painting (1923).
Wright’s brother, Stanton MacDonald-Wright, painted this portrait around 1913–14, just at the time the artist was introducing his abstract "synchromist" painting style, based on color theory. This portrait, however, emphasizes the bold hues and flat planes of color that MacDonald-Wright absorbed from French painting.
Provenance
The artist; (Luise Ross Gallery, New York); purchased 1986 NPG