Description: 1930's watercolor/gouache painting on board by listed Illinois/Connecticut artist Harve Stein (1904-1996). Signed lower right. Antique frame. Framed without glass. Light scratches, expected patina/toning consistent with age. Painting overall good vintage condition. Frame has wear from years of storage. See photos for details. Painting is 12.5x17 inches. Framed 16x20.5 inches. SEE MY OTHER LISTINGS! HARVE STEIN (1904-1996) Harve (Herve) Stein was born Harvey C. Stein on April 23, 1904 in Chicago, Illinois. His father, Frank Stein, was born 1866 in Germany. He immigrated to America in 1885 and settled in Chicago, where he worked as a machinist in a tool shop. His mother, Emma Stein, was born 1871 in Illinois of German ancestry. His parents met in Chicago and married in 1893. They had three children. He was the youngest. His older brother Edward was born in 1894 and his older brother Frank was born in 1897. They lived at 3306 Herndon Street. He did not serve in the Great War, at which time he was a Chicago high school student. In 1923 he graduate high school, after which he studied at at the Art Institute of Chicago. In 1927 he married Hope Stein, who was also born in 1904 in Chicago. They moved to New York City, where they lived at 229 East 79th Street, in Manhattan's Yorkville district, where the residents were predominantly German. In 1927 he illustrated stories inScribner's Magazineand theSunday MagazineofThe New York Herald Tribune. He studied with Harvey Dunn at the Grand Central School of Art. The classes were conducted under a tall skylighted ceiling on the top floor of the actual train terminal on 42nd Street and Park Avenue. In 1931 he illustrated fiction stories for several nationwide magazines, such asThe Delineator, Woman's World, The American Girl, The Farmer'sWife, andLiberty. In 1933 he illustrated Louisa May Alcott'sLittle WomenandLittle Menfor Garden City Publications. In a public lecture at the time he is quoted as saying, "Illustration is as much a fine art as any other form of painting. In fact, illustrating requires much more knowledge of specific types and settings than other kinds of art. Moreover, it requires a literary sense for the illustrator can make the story more vivid and appealing to the reader. Illustrating is very difficult to do, because you have a limited time in which to select your models, brush up your expertise on the historical period and complete your painting. An illustrator's knowledge of historical periods must be very accurate. Furthermore he must have a grasp of settings, types, subjects, costumes, and architecture at his finger tips. One of the most difficult challenges facing an illustrator is when he is required to draw a picture of a girl whom the author only describes as 'the most beautiful girl he has ever seen.' What was the author's idea of the most beautiful girl, and what is the reader's idea of the most beautiful girl? That is for the illustrator to decide. The success of the whole story may depend upon the artist's conception of the most beautiful girl!" During the 1930s he drew pen and ink story illustrations for pulp magazines, such as Blue Book, Double Action Stories, and Love Book. He did not serve in the military during WWII. During the war years he drew pen and ink story illustrations for the pulp magazineArgosy. In 1944 he was the Founding Chairman of the Commercial Illustration Department at the Rhode Island School of Design in Providence. In 1946 he moved to 59 High Street in Groton, Connecticut. In 1947 he became a painting teacher at the New London Art Students League, in Connecticut. In the fall of 1951 he was a visiting lecturer in the Art Department at Connecticut College. Harve Stein died in Stonington, CT, at the age of ninety-two on November 30, 1996. David Saunders 2011
Price: 950 USD
Location: Spring Valley, California
End Time: 2024-11-21T19:39:42.000Z
Shipping Cost: N/A USD
Product Images
Item Specifics
All returns accepted: ReturnsNotAccepted
Artist: Harve Stein (1904-1996)
Unit of Sale: Single Piece
Size: Medium
Signed: Yes
Period: Art Deco (1920-1940)
Material: Artist board
Item Length: 17 in
Region of Origin: Connecticut, USA
Framing: Framed
Subject: Landscape, Figures
Type: Painting
Year of Production: 1930
Original/Licensed Reproduction: Original
Item Height: 12.5 in
Theme: Art, Americana, People
Style: Impressionism, Illustration Art, Vintage, Regionalism
Features: One of a Kind (OOAK)
Production Technique: Watercolor Painting
Country/Region of Manufacture: United States
Culture: American
Handmade: Yes
Time Period Produced: 1925-1949