Leonard Ochtman (1854-1934)
Born in Zonnemain, Holland, Leonard Ochtman became a noted Tonalist and Impressionist landscape painter of sunsets, twilight and dawn scenes that conveyed silence and serenity. His work was highly sought-after in the early part of the 20th century when he did many award-winning oils and watercolors, but his reputation was eclipsed by the advent of modernism.
Ochtman came to America in 1866 with his parents, settling in Albany, New York. He became an apprentice in engraving, but as a painter was almost entirely self-taught. He drew and painted from nature and from what he saw in galleries. He attended the Art Students League in New York City during the winter of 1879, and then established a studio in Albany, New York. In 1880, he began exhibiting at the National Academy of Design, and in 1883 with the American Water Color Society. In 1886, he first went to Europe, and spent much time in Holland where he studied the atmospheric painting of Hague School painters including Jacob Maris and Anton Mauve. He painted in France, where he was influenced by the Tonalist work of Corot.
In 1887, he returned to New York City and opened a studio with Charles Warren Eaton. Shortly after, he married Nina Fonda, a student, and they settled in Cos Cob, Connecticut on the Mianus River whose changing scenery was often the subject of his landscapes. He and other painters such as J. Alden Weir, Childe Hassam and John Henry Twachtman founded what became known as the Cos Cob Colony, a center of Impressionist painting. In the 1890s and early 1900s, Ochtman was at the height of his career, and was described as the “Keats of landscape” (Lowrey) for his poetic studio landscapes, especially winter scenes bathed in light of dawn or dusk. He once told his daughter that he could paint snowscenes out of his head in the summer time.
In a publication, Palette and Bench, August 1909, he stated that he painted “all my pictures in the studio from memory or notes. They are arranged, composed; they represent no particular place, but give to the best of my ability the character, color, and atmospheric conditions of the country in which I live . . . after all, we want the effect of the day, hour or moment, the mood and not a transcript of the place.” (Lowrey) During the period of his greatest success, he sold many paintings, earned national awards, and gained patronage from prominent collectors including William T. Evans and George Hearn. He joined Birge Harrison at the Woodstock, New York Art Colony, serving as an instructor and was active in the Arts and Crafts Movement as a participant in the Byrdcliffe Arts Colony.
Information courtesy of Charlton Hall Auctions