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A Selection of Works by Arthur Prince Spear
Additional artwork by this artist may be available. Please contact our sales staff for more information.
The Signs of the Zodiac
Oil on canvas, 44 x 34 inches
Signed lower left, 1933
Price Upon Request
Featured Painting:
Arthur Prince Spear was trained at some of the
most prestigious institutions of his time,
including the Art Students League of New York
and the Académie Julian of Paris. Under the
guidance of instructors such as Jean Paul
Laurens, Spear developed an impressionist-
inspired style which he brought back with him to
the United States in 1907. He joined the Fenway
Studios building in Boston, and executed soft,
loosely painted landscapes and genre scenes
until 1915. At this point his style underwent a
drastic transformation, and he began painting
the subjects for which he is best known:
mythological nudes, imaginary landscapes
and underwater scenes. It is not clear why
Spear made this transition, but his focus on
escapism distinguished his work from the more
traditional, realist tendencies of his Boston
School contemporaries. Created during this
period of imaginative works, The Signs of the
Zodiac was exhibited at both the
Pennsylvania Academy and the National Academy in
1934, and also at the Museum of Fine Arts,
Boston. The free-floating figures and
astrological symbols are clearly recognizable as
a result of his academic training, but are
rendered with the vigorous brushwork and rich
palette he applied to his fantasy subjects. The
painting also serves as a backdrop in the
artist’s only known self-portrait, painted in
1942, as illustrated in Arthur P. Spear Jr.’s
book on his father.
To supplement his income, Spear taught life
drawing at the Fenway School of Illustration,
and in his own studio during the 1930s, which
was then located in his Brookline home. Spear
enjoyed great success as both artist and
teacher, and was awarded a medal at the Pan-
American Exposition of 1915 and a prize at the
National Academy in 1922. In addition to the
Pennsylvania Academy and the National Academy,
where he became an Associate member in 1920,
Spear exhibited at the Corcoran Gallery in
Washington, DC, and locally at the Copley
Gallery, the Guild of Boston Artists, the Boston
Museum of Fine Arts and Vose Galleries, with
exhibitions of pastels and oils in 1924 and
1925, respectively.
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