Howard Pyle
Thursday, December 24, 2009

Christmas Morn by Howard Pyle, 1903

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A number of Howard Pyle's major works are surprisingly under-documented. For example, his painting "Christmas Morn" which was ...
3 comments:
Tuesday, December 22, 2009

Howard Pyle’s Santa Claus, 1883

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We don’t usually associate Howard Pyle with Santa Claus, but Harper’s Young People for December 18, 1883, features Pyle’s only known publi...
Saturday, December 19, 2009

A Perfect Christmas, 1881

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One of the remarkable things about Howard Pyle the craftsman - or, in this case, the draughtsman - was his skillful use of so many differen...
Thursday, December 17, 2009

December 17, 1906

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A detail from "The Landing of Carteret" by Howard Pyle After resigning from McClure's Magazine in the summer of 1906, Howa...
Wednesday, December 16, 2009

Pyle's Post-Publication Changes, Part 1

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Illustrators, have you ever wanted to alter a picture after it was published? I know I have - too many times - but I've always stopped m...
Tuesday, December 15, 2009

Assassination of William of Orange, 1900

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In looking over the majority of my Howard Pyle posts, I see that I’ve been unconsciously featuring his “modern day” illustrations. Maybe it...
1 comment:
Sunday, December 13, 2009

December 13, 1909

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A thank you letter from Howard Pyle to Thomas Casilear Cole (July 23, 1888 Staatsburgh, New York - March 1976 New York City), later a portra...

A Child Sunburned in December 1881

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As I mentioned in an earlier post , it’s nice, if rare, to put an exact creation date on a work by Howard Pyle. In so many cases, we only kn...
Friday, December 11, 2009

The Suicide, 1905

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I remember when I first saw this picture: I was about 14, in the basement of the Argosy Bookstore in Manhattan, desperately leafing through...
2 comments:
Thursday, December 10, 2009

The Professor in His Boat, 1893

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Look out, Thomas Eakins! Howard Pyle’s “The Professor in His Boat” - an 8 x 12" black and white oil painted in 1893 and printed (at a m...
3 comments:
Wednesday, December 9, 2009

Pyle Students at 1616 Rodney Street, 1906

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Here is a photograph of Clifford Warren Ashley - wearing a smock - and Henry Jarvis Peck in their studio at 1616 Rodney Street, Wilmington, ...
Tuesday, December 8, 2009

A Pyle Student's Letter Home, Part 2

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A transcription of Henry J. Peck's letter to his family: Wilmington, Delaware, Dec. 8. 1901 Dear Father + Mother, Sister + Brother:...
1 comment:

A Pyle Student’s Letter Home, Part 1

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In early December 1901, a young artist named Henry Jarvis Peck arrived in Wilmington to study illustration under Howard Pyle. Peck was bor...

December 8, 1894

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"True value of illustrative work is originality - Do what you see, not what another man sees - Don’t be schooly " Howard Pyle at ...
1 comment:
Monday, December 7, 2009

On This Day in Howard Pyle History?

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On December 7, 1900, Howard Pyle had a special guest at his studio on Franklin Street in Wilmington, Delaware. Yes, none other than Professo...
Sunday, December 6, 2009

The Fox, the Monkey, and the Pig

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Howard Pyle most likely wrote and illustrated the following fable in November or December 1876 and it appeared in the September 1878 issue o...

Bliss on November 28, 1876

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It’s nice - and all too rare - to put an exact creation date on a Howard Pyle illustration. On November 28, 1876, Pyle, then living in New ...
1 comment:
Friday, December 4, 2009

December 4, 1903

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“...In discussing ‘American Art’ at the Art Institute yesterday afternoon Howard Pyle, the illustrator, urged American artists to be America...
Thursday, December 3, 2009

Robert Louis Stevenson's Howard Pyle Scheme

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It’s a shame that Howard Pyle never got the chance to fully illustrate a Robert Louis Stevenson tale; they were - at least subjectively - ki...
Wednesday, December 2, 2009

Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Pyle

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Robert Louis Stevenson died 115 years ago today, so here is Howard Pyle’s sole illustration for Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde . ...

“A Study”

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“A Study” in charcoal with white highlights on paper (19 x 31.5") by Howard Pyle was exhibited at the Second Exhibition of the Los Ange...
3 comments:
Tuesday, December 1, 2009

A Bit of Politics in the Olden Times, 1880

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Howard Pyle’s “Politics in the Olden Times - General Jackson, President-elect, on His Way to Washington” (13.3 x 9.1") was engraved on ...

The Chase of the Tide, 1901

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When it comes to pictures, I am particularly fond of oblong compositions - especially oblong horizontal compositions. Is it from watching s...
2 comments:

Good for the Soul, 1898

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Howard Pyle’s headpiece for “Good for the Soul” by Margaret Deland (part of her series of Old Chester Tales ) printed in Harper’s Monthly ...
Monday, November 30, 2009

Mark Twain on Howard Pyle

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Today is Mark Twain's 174th birthday - enough of a reason to talk briefly about his (or Samuel L. Clemens's) connection to Howard Py...
1 comment:

Lafayette’s Headquarters, 1898

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I like to identify real-life objects or settings that Howard Pyle incorporated into his pictures: the boots that show up again and again in ...
2 comments:
Sunday, November 29, 2009

Just One More Turkey, 1894

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As it’s still Thanksgiving weekend, I figured I would post yet another Howard Pyle illustration featuring a turkey (be warned: there are m...

Men of Iron Halftone, 1891

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As a footnote to my post about Howard Pyle’s black and white oil painting for Men of Iron , I present the illustration as it appeared in ...
Saturday, November 28, 2009

Howard Pyle in Black and White, 1883

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Although it’s always bittersweet when an original Howard Pyle comes up for sale (due to my pathological desire to possess anything he crea...
Thursday, November 26, 2009

A Very Pyle Thanksgiving, 1899

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“As you are not going home to your Thanksgiving dinner, Mrs Pyle and I would like you very much to come down and eat a piece of turkey with ...
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Ian Schoenherr
"Yahn Show-en-hare" is an illustrator, a genealogist, and a researcher and collector of all things regarding Howard Pyle (1853-1911) and John Schoenherr (1935-2010)
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