Ralph Albert Blakelock (October 15, 1847 – August 9, 1919) was a romanticist American painter known primarily for his landscape paintings related to the Tonalism movement.

thumb|Moonlight, c. 1883–1889, [[High Museum, Atlanta, Georgia]]

Biography

Ralph Blakelock was born in New York City on October 15, 1847, the son of Caroline Olinarg (Carry) and Ralph B. Blakelock, who was born in England. His father was a successful physician. For financial assistance, he began selling his paintings, including 30 to 40 to vaudeville performer Lew Bloom between 1889 and 1892. His depression manifested in schizophrenic delusions in which he believed himself immensely wealthy – perhaps a compensation for his long struggle to provide for his family. In 1899, he suffered his final breakdown and spent almost the entire remaining twenty years of his life in mental institutions.

In 1916, one of Blakelock's landscapes sold at auction for $20,000, setting a record for a painting by a living American artist. It was this impressive price that captured the imagination of Sadie Filbert, who had reinvented herself as the socially prominent Beatrice Van Rensselaer Adams so that she could swindle the wealthy by persuading them to donate to charitable causes that would, in fact, serve to enrich herself. She founded and milked the Blakelock Fund, which was supposed to support the impecunious artist and his needy brood. She informed Harrison Smith, then a young reporter with the New York Tribune, of Blakelock's whereabouts, and he went to see Blakelock in the asylum. He found him largely lucid, although under the delusion that an imagined "diamond of the Emperor of Brazil" had been stolen from him. Smith explained to the asylum director who Blakelock was, and managed to arrange to bring Blakelock and the director to Manhattan, where a major gallery retrospective of Blakelock's work was taking place. Blakelock was awed by the changes in the city in the two decades since he had last seen it, and thrilled to see the recognition his work had received. Smith scored himself a major news story. (In a 1945 account, Smith added that Blakelock had quietly informed him that several of the paintings were forgeries, but Smith chose not to put that in his story because of the question of how far he could rely on the word of the less than fully sane Blakelock.) These events led to Blakelock's release from the asylum, in the "care" of Sadie Filbert, alias Beatrice Van Rensselaer Adams, who milked him for all he was worth.

He continued painting until his death at the age of 71 on August 9, 1919.

Work

Blakelock taught himself to paint through trial and error, and continued to use improvisation as an artistic method throughout his life.

Artworks

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|1885||Moonlight, oil on canvas ||200px ||Brooklyn Museum, Brooklyn, New York City ||This painting is referred to in Paul Auster's novel Moon Palace

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|1886||Moonlight (c. 1886–95), oil on canvas ||view ||Corcoran Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C. ||

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|1885||Moonlight, Indian Encampment (c. 1885–89), oil on canvas||view ||Smithsonian American Art Museum, Washington, D.C. ||

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Notes

Sources

  • Davidson, Abraham. Ralph Albert Blakelock, Penn State University Press, 1996.
  • Geske, Norman. Ralph Albert Blakelock: The Great Mad Genius, Questroyal Fine Art, Inc. 2005.
  • Vincent, Glyn. The Unknown Night: the madness and genius of R. A. Blakelock, an American painter, Grove Press 2002, .
  • Ralph Albert Blakelock: The Great Mad Genius Returns, catalog for the 2016 exhibition at Questroyal Fine Art, New York
  • Ralph Blakelock: The Artist and the Archives at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln
  • "Ralph Blakelock, Mad Artist, Dies", New York Times obituary
  • Catalog page for Ralph Albert Blakelock by Abraham Davidson
  • Blakelock works at the Utah Museum of Fine Arts
  • Blakelock works at the Figge Art Museum
  • Blakelock works at the Sheldon Museum of Art
  • Blakelock at Artcyclopedia