Julius Garibaldi (Gari) Melchers (August 11, 1860 – November 30, 1932) was an American artist. He was one of the leading American proponents of naturalism.

He won a 1932 Gold medal from the American Academy of Arts and Letters.

Biography

The son of German-born American sculptor Julius Theodore Melchers, Gari Melchers was a native of Detroit, Michigan, who at seventeen studied art at the Kunstakademie Düsseldorf under von Gebhardt and is associated with the Düsseldorf school of painting. After three years he went to Paris, where he worked at the Académie Julian, and the Ecole des Beaux Arts, where he studied under Jules Joseph Lefebvre and Gustave Boulanger. Attracted by the pictorial side of Holland, he settled at Egmond. In 1882, Melchers presented The Letter, painted the previous year in Brittany, at the Paris Salon; this first presentation by a young artist was well received. In 1884, he founded an art colony at Egmond aan Zee in the Netherlands with American artist George Hitchcock. His first important Dutch picture, The Sermon, brought him favorable attention at the Paris Salon of 1886.

In 1903, he married Corinne Lawton Mackall, a Baltimore painter born in 1880, who studied at the Maryland Institute Practical School for the Mechanic Arts and at the Académie Colarossi. was 20 years younger than her husband and often modeled for her husband.

In 1904, he was named an Officer in the French Legion of Honor. In 1909, he was appointed Professor of Art at the Grand Ducal Saxony School of Art in Weimar, Germany. In 1915, he returned to New York City to open a studio at Abraham Archibald Anderson's Bryant Park Studios building. From 1920 to 1928, he served as the president of the New Society of Artists. He was a member of the Virginia Fine Arts Commission and a trustee of the Corcoran Gallery of Art. He served as chairman of the Art Committee of the Smithsonian American Art Museum. He was an early member of the American Academy of Arts and Letters.

Throughout his career, whether abroad or in his commercial headquarters in New York City or his country retreat at Belmont in Falmouth, Virginia, the artist maintained a fascination with northern light.

He spent his final years at Belmont Estate in Falmouth, Virginia, near Fredericksburg.

He died there on November 30, 1932.

The panels Peace and War were commissioned for the World's Columbian Exposition in Chicago of 1893. His work was also part of the painting event in the art competition at the 1932 Summer Olympics.

His painting Winter was stolen in Germany by the Nazis in 1933 and discovered at the Arkell Museum in Canajoharie, New York in 2019.

Gari Melchers Home & Studio holds the largest collection of Melchers’ art with 1,677 paintings and drawings. Melchers’ paintings are also in museum collections worldwide.

<gallery widths="154px" heights="200px" class="center" caption="Selected works">

File:Gari Melchers - Marriage.jpg|Marriage, 1893

File:Gari Melchers - The Bride (c.1907).jpg|The Bride, ca. 1907

File:Gari Melchers - Joan of Arc.jpg|Joan of Arc (unknown date)

File:Gari Melchers - The Sermon (1886).jpg|The Sermon, 1886

<!-- Arranging the Tulips, before 1928 -->

</gallery>

<gallery widths="154px" heights="200px" class="center" caption="">

Image:Gari-Melchers-War-Highsmith.jpeg|Mural of War, 1896.

Image:Gari-Melchers-Peace-Highsmith.jpeg|Mural of Peace, 1896

</gallery>

Museum

The 18th-century Belmont estate was the country home and studio of prominent portraitist, muralist, and American Impressionist painter Gari Melchers (1860-1932). The house contains Gari and Corinne Melchers’ original furnishings and personal art collection, the studio houses over 1600 works by Melchers, and the 27-acre grounds feature restored formal gardens and miles of walking trails. The site, Gari Melchers Home & Studio, is now an American Association of Museums' Accredited museum and cultural center.

The mission of Gari Melchers Home and Studio is to display to the public on a regular basis the art works and furnishings that make up the Belmont collections; to maintain and preserve the collections and physical facilities of the estate in order that they will be available to the public for use by this and future generations; and to interpret the collections in a manner that will serve local educational institutions and the general public as a resource for studying the full range of works of a major American artist together with the tools of his trade in the locale in which he worked. The purpose of Gari Melchers Home and Studio is also to serve as an art center for the people of the Fredericksburg area.

Further reading/viewing

  • Gari Melchers: American Master 1860-1932, by Joanna Catron, July 13, 2020
  • True and Clear, video, Gari Melchers Home & Studio
  • Gari Melchers Home and Studio's YouTube channel

Notes

References

  • Gari Melchers Home and Studio