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John W. Hardrick Sold at Auction Prices

Painter, b. 1891 - d. 1968

John Hardrick was born in Indianapolis to Shepard and Georgia Etta (West) Hardrick in 1891. He showed a talent for art as a young boy, and his work was brought to the attention of the owner of a local art store and framer, Herman Lieber, who helped the boy enroll in children's classes at the John Herron School of Art (interestingly, many of the frames one will find on his paintings today were made by Lieber and bear the label).

As a teenager, he began studying with important Hoosier Group impressionist painters, William Forsyth and Otto Stark. He worked at a foundry at night to put himself through John Herron (he executed a well known painting of this subject matter, illustrated in the catalog for the exhibition, A Shared Heritage, Art by Four African Americans (Hardrick, Scott, Woodruff, and Majors), IMA, Warkel and Taylor, p. 59).

In 1914, he was married to Georgia Ann Howard and held his first exhibition, which was successful. He shared a studio on Indiana Avenue with Hale Woodruff for some of that year, but increased financial pressures caused him to stop painting, and take a job in his family's trucking business.

When he resumed painting, he exhibited at the Art Institute of Chicago in 1927. One of his paintings, Little Brown Girl was purchased by a group of supportive black citizens and donated to the Herron Art Institute for their permanent collection. It currently hangs at the Indianapolis Museum of Art. He exhibited at the 2nd Annual Exhibition of Contemporary Negro Art in San Diego in 1928, and the catalog read: "In spite of acute poverty, this young man has the faculty of discerning beauty in everything, being able to face all his adversities with a smile that conceals the feeling within, at the same time he possesses a personality which strangely draws people to him." He also exhibited at the Hoosier Salon in 1929, 1931,and 1934, which were then held in Chicago at Marshall Field and Company. He won first prize for a portrait at the Indiana State Fair in 1934. He participated in the American Negro Exposition in Chicago, 1940.

The Civil Works Administration commissioned him to do a mural at the Crispus Attucks High School (the school where Irvena, the subject of this work, attended) in 1934, but it was rejected by the principal because it depicted black foundry workers, not doctors and lawyers.

Hardrick's health declined by 1941, and he worked as a cab driver. He would keep supplies in the trunk of his cab, and while waiting for fares, quickly paint local street scenes; later, he would also offer the paintings for sale from the trunk of his cab. (REF: Tom Davis, research for the Crown Hill Cemetery, Indianapolis)

Many of Hardrick's portraits were of well-to-do black women, who were not only married to successful men, but who were, themselves, entrepreneurs. ( A Shared Heritage, Art by Four African Americans, Warkel and Taylor, p. 47).

Hardrick's landscapes are derived from the many trips he took to Brown County, about fifty miles from Indianapolis. He traveled to the area at the peak of the autumn season, when the leaves were at the height of their color; during the summer when the sun was bright and hot; and in the winter when the ground was covered with snow. He did not sketch or paint during these visits . Instead, the artist took in the different scenes and committed them to memory. (REF: A Shared Heritage, Art by Four African Americans, IMA, Warkel and Taylor, p. 41).

He applied his paint very thickly, using a palette knife to create a tactile surface. He relied on a brush only to blend or add a shape, and use his thumb to mold the paint as if he were shaping a sculpture. (Ibid, p. 41)

Hardrick worked quickly, beginning at the top of the canvas and working down. He was more concerned with the atmosphere and expression of the landscape than the descriptive qualities, thus following in the tradition of earlier African American landscape painters, Bannister and Duncanson. His landscapes were romanticized versions of his memories of his visits to the country. He blended his own paint when possible, and has a very distinctive palette.

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    • John Wesley Hardrick (1891-1968)
      Nov. 09, 2024

      John Wesley Hardrick (1891-1968)

      Est: $1,500 - $3,000

      Autumn Path 16" x 20" oil on board, signed lower right. Recently conserved; recent frame.

      Jacksons Auction & Real Estate Company
    • John Wesley Hardrick (1891-1968)
      Nov. 09, 2024

      John Wesley Hardrick (1891-1968)

      Est: $2,000 - $4,000

      Hunting Dogs 18" x 24" oil on board, unsigned

      Jacksons Auction & Real Estate Company
    • John Wesley Hardrick, 1891-1968, Portrait of a Woman in a Blue Dress
      Sep. 14, 2024

      John Wesley Hardrick, 1891-1968, Portrait of a Woman in a Blue Dress

      Est: $4,000 - $6,000

      John Wesley Hardrick 1891-1968 Portrait of a Woman in a Blue Dress 1946 oil on board 28 x 22 inches signed and dated estate collection stamp verso Provenance: Collection of Rev. Joy L. Thornton, Indianapolis, IN. Literature: A Place of His Own: The Life and Art of John Wesley Hardrick (1891-1968), p. 45 (this catalog is posted on the BAA homepage)

      Black Art Auction
    • John Wesley Hardrick, 1891-1968, Houses along the Whitewater River, Indianapolis
      Sep. 14, 2024

      John Wesley Hardrick, 1891-1968, Houses along the Whitewater River, Indianapolis

      Est: $3,000 - $5,000

      John Wesley Hardrick 1891-1968 Houses along the Whitewater River, Indianapolis 1930 oil on board 18 x 24 inches estate collection stamp verso Provenance: Collection of Rev. Joy L. Thornton, Indianapolis, IN. Literature: A Place of His Own: The Life and Art of John Wesley Hardrick (1891-1968), p. 51 (this catalog is posted on the BAA homepage)

      Black Art Auction
    • John Wesley (J.W.) Hardrick (1891-1968)
      Jul. 07, 2024

      John Wesley (J.W.) Hardrick (1891-1968)

      Est: $400 - $800

      Autumn Road in Indiana 8" x 10", Pastel, Signed Lower Right

      Jacksons Auction & Real Estate Company
    • JOHN WESLEY HARDRICK, American 1891-1968, Path in the Woods, oil on board, 16 x 19 3/4 in. (40.6 x 50.2 cm.), Frame: 22 x 1 1/4 x 26 in. (55.9 x 3.2 x 66 cm.)
      Jun. 13, 2024

      JOHN WESLEY HARDRICK, American 1891-1968, Path in the Woods, oil on board, 16 x 19 3/4 in. (40.6 x 50.2 cm.), Frame: 22 x 1 1/4 x 26 in. (55.9 x 3.2 x 66 cm.)

      Est: $600 - $800

      JOHN WESLEY HARDRICK American, 1891-1968 Path in the Woods oil on board signed lower right " J.W. Hardrick"

      Shannon's
    • John Wesley Hardrick, 1891-1968, Peonies in a Blue Vase
      May. 18, 2024

      John Wesley Hardrick, 1891-1968, Peonies in a Blue Vase

      Est: $5,000 - $7,000

      John Wesley Hardrick 1891-1968 Peonies in a Blue Vase c. 1940 oil on board 24 x 32 inches signed Provenance: The Collection of Joy L. Thornton, Indianapolis Illustrated: A Place of His Own: The Life and Art of John Wesley Hardrick (1891-1968), p. 22

      Black Art Auction
    • John Wesley Hardrick, 1891-1968, A Winter Stream
      May. 18, 2024

      John Wesley Hardrick, 1891-1968, A Winter Stream

      Est: $2,000 - $3,000

      John Wesley Hardrick 1891-1968 A Winter Stream c. 1940 oil on board 8 x 10 inches estate/collection stamp verso Provenance: The Collection of Joy L. Thornton, Indianapolis Illustrated: A Place of His Own: The Life and Art of John Wesley Hardrick (1891-1968), p. 43

      Black Art Auction
    • JOHN W. HARDRICK, PEONIES, HOOSIER GROUP
      Jan. 04, 2024

      JOHN W. HARDRICK, PEONIES, HOOSIER GROUP

      Est: $1,000 - $3,000

      John W. Hardrick, Zinnias, Hoosier Group. Emmerich Manual High School Alumni. Provenance: Private Philadelphia Estate. Frame: 17" x 14.5" Scene: 13.5" x 10.5"

      Ashcroft and Moore
    • John Wesley Hardrick, 1891-1968, Bus in a Snow Storm (Indianapolis)
      Dec. 02, 2023

      John Wesley Hardrick, 1891-1968, Bus in a Snow Storm (Indianapolis)

      Est: $20,000 - $30,000

      John Wesley Hardrick 1891-1968 Bus in a Snow Storm (Indianapolis) c. 1935 Oil on board 20 x 24 inches Signed Illustrated and Exhibited: A Shared Heritage, Art by Four African Americans (Indianapolis Museum of Art), 1996. p. 58 Provenance: Collection of George and Terry Gray, Chicago, IL. Harriet G. Warkel writes in A Shared Heritage, Art by Four African Americans: "Bus in a Snow Storm" (fig. 36) depicts a group of people bracing themselves against the cold as they board a bus. Heavy snow obliterates the landscape, leaving no discernible landmarks. The artist renders figures using only a few strokes of the brush, and thus concentrates on gestures rather than features. Hardrick contrasts the blowing snow with the warm, yellow light emanating from the interior of the bus, a haven for the traveler on a cold, wintry day. The prominent figure is a black man, separated from the rest of the crowd, battling the blowing snow. He may be the artist's symbol of the African American's struggle against a hostile world. Hardrick rarely ventured into the realm of social realist art, but when he did paint in this genre, his statements were subtle not overt. " (p. 50) John Hardrick was born in Indianapolis to Shepard and Georgia Etta (West) Hardrick in 1891. He showed a talent for art as a young boy, and his work was brought to the attention of the owner of a local art store and framer, Herman Lieber, who helped the boy enroll in children’s classes at the John Herron School of Art (interestingly, many of the frames one will find on his paintings today were made by Lieber and bear the label). As a teenager, he began studying with important Hoosier Group impressionist painters, William Forsyth and Otto Stark. He worked at a foundry at night to put himself through John Herron. In 1914, he was married to Georgia Ann Howard and held his first exhibition, which was successful. He shared a studio on Indiana Avenue with Hale Woodruff for some of that year, but increased financial pressures caused him to stop painting, and take a job in his family’s trucking business. When he resumed painting, he exhibited at the Art Institute of Chicago in 1927. One of his paintings, Little Brown Girl was purchased by a group of supportive black citizens and donated to the Herron Art Institute for their permanent collection. It currently hangs at the Indianapolis Museum of Art. He exhibited at the 2nd Annual Exhibition of Contemporary Negro Art in San Diego in 1928, and the catalog read: “In spite of acute poverty, this young man has the faculty of discerning beauty in everything, being able to face all his adversities with a smile that conceals the feeling within, at the same time he possesses a personality which strangely draws people to him.” He also exhibited at the Hoosier Salon in 1929, 1931,and 1934, which were then held in Chicago at Marshall Field and Company. He won first prize for a portrait at the Indiana State Fair in 1934. He participated in the American Negro Exposition in Chicago, 1940. The Civil Works Administration commissioned him to do a mural at the Crispus Attucks High School (the school where Irvena, the subject of this work, attended) in 1934, but it was rejected by the principal because it depicted black foundry workers, not doctors and lawyers. Hardrick’s health declined by 1941, and he worked as a cab driver. He would keep supplies in the trunk of his cab, and while waiting for fares, quickly paint local street scenes; later, he would also offer the paintings for sale from the trunk of his cab. (REF: Tom Davis, research for the Crown Hill Cemetery, Indianapolis) He applied his paint very thickly, using a palette knife to create a tactile surface. He relied on a brush only to blend or add a shape, and use his thumb to mold the paint as if he were shaping a sculpture. (Ibid, p. 41) Hardrick worked quickly, beginning at the top of the canvas and working down. He was more concerned with the atmosphere and expression of the landscape than the descriptive qualities, thus following in the tradition of earlier African American landscape painters, Bannister and Duncanson. His landscapes were romanticized versions of his memories of his visits to the country. He blended his own paint when possible, and has a very distinctive palette.

      Black Art Auction
    • John Wesley Hardrick (American, 1891-1968) oil on board
      Dec. 02, 2023

      John Wesley Hardrick (American, 1891-1968) oil on board

      Est: $1,000 - $2,000

      John Wesley Hardrick (American, 1891-1968) Untitled oil on board31"h x 37"woverall: 36.5"h x 42.5"w

      Treadway Gallery
    • JOHN W. HARDRICK, PEONIES, HOOSIER GROUP
      Nov. 14, 2023

      JOHN W. HARDRICK, PEONIES, HOOSIER GROUP

      Est: $1,000 - $3,000

      John W. Hardrick, Zinnias, Hoosier Group. Emmerich Manual High School Alumni. Provenance: Private Philadelphia Estate. Frame: 17" x 14.5" Scene: 13.5" x 10.5"

      Ashcroft and Moore
    • John Wesley Hardrick (1891-1968)
      Oct. 28, 2023

      John Wesley Hardrick (1891-1968)

      Est: $300 - $600

      "Vivid Stream" 9" x 12" oil on board, unsigned. Recently conserved; recent leafed frame.

      Jacksons Auction & Real Estate Company
    • John Wesley Hardrick, Forest Pool
      Jul. 26, 2023

      John Wesley Hardrick, Forest Pool

      Est: $1,000 - $1,500

      John Wesley Hardrick Forest Pool oil on board 18 h x 21.875 w in (46 x 56 cm) Provenance: Spanierman, New York | Private Collection This work will ship from Lambertville, New Jersey.

      Toomey & Co. Auctioneers
    • John Wesley Hardrick, Indiana (1891 - 1968), Still Life with Peonies, 1945, oil on board, 22 1/2"H x 28 1/2"W (sight), 30 1/2"H x 37"W (frame)
      Apr. 29, 2023

      John Wesley Hardrick, Indiana (1891 - 1968), Still Life with Peonies, 1945, oil on board, 22 1/2"H x 28 1/2"W (sight), 30 1/2"H x 37"W (frame)

      Est: $1,000 - $2,000

      John Wesley Hardrick Indiana, (1891 - 1968) Still Life with Peonies, 1945 oil on board signed and dated lower right. Condition: on black light inspection it was noted that there are some old areas of edge inpaint to the board, all of which were clearly done professionally and are not visible nor are they outside the areas of the minor chips they address. This work displays beautifully, and has it's integrity completely intact. It is considered to be in very good condition without damage or repairs. Highly important African-American painter from Indianapolis. Hardrick studied at the John Herron Art Institute (Indianapolis), and exhibited at the 10th Annual Exhibition of Works by Indiana Artists in 1917, with fellow African-American painter, W.E. Scott. He shared a studio with Hale Woodruff for a time in the 1920s and exhibited with him in 1927 at the Art Institute of Chicago. He also was included in the Second Annual Exhibition of Contemporary Negro Art in San Diego (1929). He was awarded grants from the Harmon Foundation and worked as a WPA muralist in 1933-34.

      Ripley Auctions
    • John Wesley Hardrick, Indiana (1891 - 1968), floral still life, oil on board, 19 1/2"H x 23 1/2"W (sight), 24"H x 28"W (frame)
      Apr. 29, 2023

      John Wesley Hardrick, Indiana (1891 - 1968), floral still life, oil on board, 19 1/2"H x 23 1/2"W (sight), 24"H x 28"W (frame)

      Est: $1,000 - $2,000

      John Wesley Hardrick Indiana, (1891 - 1968) floral still life oil on board Signed lower left. Highly important African-American painter from Indianapolis. Hardrick studied at the John Herron Art Institute (Indianapolis), and exhibited at the 10th Annual Exhibition of Works by Indiana Artists in 1917, with fellow African-American painter, W.E. Scott. He shared a studio with Hale Woodruff for a time in the 1920s and exhibited with him in 1927 at the Art Institute of Chicago. He also was included in the Second Annual Exhibition of Contemporary Negro Art in San Diego (1929). He was awarded grants from the Harmon Foundation and worked as a WPA muralist in 1933-34.

      Ripley Auctions
    • John Hardriick Barns Landscape Oil On Board
      Jan. 07, 2023

      John Hardriick Barns Landscape Oil On Board

      Est: -

      Beautiful oil on board painting by listed Indiana artist John Wesley Hardrick (1891-1968). The painting features barns in a rural landscape. Signed in lower left. Sight measures approx. 9-1/2" across by 7-1/2" tall. Framed measures 14"across by 12" tall.

      Kraft Auction Service
    • John Hardriick Brown County Landscape Oil On Board
      Jan. 07, 2023

      John Hardriick Brown County Landscape Oil On Board

      Est: -

      Beautiful oil on board painting by listed Indiana artist John Wesley Hardrick (1891-1968). The painting features a Brown County, Indiana hills landscape. Unsigned. Sight measures approx. 9-1/2" across by 7-1/2" tall. Framed measures 14" across by 12" tall.

      Kraft Auction Service
    • John Wesley Hardrick, 1891-1968, River Landscape
      Nov. 19, 2022

      John Wesley Hardrick, 1891-1968, River Landscape

      Est: $6,000 - $8,000

      John Wesley Hardrick 1891-1968 River Landscape c. 1930 oil on board 22 x 30 inches unsigned, but guaranteed; accompanied by a letter of authentication from William E. Taylor, co-author of A Shared Heritage: Art by Four African Americans, 1996-1997, originating at the Indianapolis Museum of Art. John Hardrick was one of the featured artists. This is a top-tier example of the artist's landscape painting and he frequently did not sign his work. Many of his landscapes were painted "plein air" in Brown County, Indiana (south of Indianapolis) and then marketed by the artist himself very soon after completion.

      Black Art Auction
    • John Wesley Hardrick, 1891-1968, Brown County Hills
      Nov. 19, 2022

      John Wesley Hardrick, 1891-1968, Brown County Hills

      Est: $4,500 - $6,500

      John Wesley Hardrick 1891-1968 Brown County Hills c. 1930 oil on board 25-1/2 x 34 inches signed

      Black Art Auction
    • John Wesley Hardrick, 1891-1968, Bus in a Snow Storm (Indianapolis)
      Nov. 19, 2022

      John Wesley Hardrick, 1891-1968, Bus in a Snow Storm (Indianapolis)

      Est: $30,000 - $40,000

      John Wesley Hardrick 1891-1968 Bus in a Snow Storm (Indianapolis) c. 1935 Oil on board 20 x 24 inches Signed Illustrated and Exhibited: A Shared Heritage, Art by Four African Americans (Indianapolis Museum of Art), 1996. p. 58 Provenance: Collection of George and Terry Gray, Chicago, IL. Harriet G. Warkel writes in A Shared Heritage, Art by Four African Americans: "Bus in a Snow Storm" (fig. 36) depicts a group of people bracing themselves against the cold as they board a bus. Heavy snow obliterates the landscape, leaving no discernible landmarks. The artist renders figures using only a few strokes of the brush, and thus concentrates on gestures rather than features. Hardrick contrasts the blowing snow with the warm, yellow light emanating from the interior of the bus, a haven for the traveler on a cold, wintry day. The prominent figure is a black man, separated from the rest of the crowd, battling the blowing snow. He may be the artist's symbol of the African American's struggle against a hostile world. Hardrick rarely ventured into the realm of social realist art, but when he did paint in this genre, his statements were subtle not overt. " (p. 50) John Hardrick was born in Indianapolis to Shepard and Georgia Etta (West) Hardrick in 1891. He showed a talent for art as a young boy, and his work was brought to the attention of the owner of a local art store and framer, Herman Lieber, who helped the boy enroll in children's classes at the John Herron School of Art (interestingly, many of the frames one will find on his paintings today were made by Lieber and bear the label). As a teenager, he began studying with important Hoosier Group impressionist painters, William Forsyth and Otto Stark. He worked at a foundry at night to put himself through John Herron. In 1914, he was married to Georgia Ann Howard and held his first exhibition, which was successful. He shared a studio on Indiana Avenue with Hale Woodruff for some of that year, but increased financial pressures caused him to stop painting, and take a job in his family's trucking business. When he resumed painting, he exhibited at the Art Institute of Chicago in 1927. One of his paintings, Little Brown Girl was purchased by a group of supportive black citizens and donated to the Herron Art Institute for their permanent collection. It currently hangs at the Indianapolis Museum of Art. He exhibited at the 2nd Annual Exhibition of Contemporary Negro Art in San Diego in 1928, and the catalog read: "In spite of acute poverty, this young man has the faculty of discerning beauty in everything, being able to face all his adversities with a smile that conceals the feeling within, at the same time he possesses a personality which strangely draws people to him." He also exhibited at the Hoosier Salon in 1929, 1931,and 1934, which were then held in Chicago at Marshall Field and Company. He won first prize for a portrait at the Indiana State Fair in 1934. He participated in the American Negro Exposition in Chicago, 1940. The Civil Works Administration commissioned him to do a mural at the Crispus Attucks High School (the school where Irvena, the subject of this work, attended) in 1934, but it was rejected by the principal because it depicted black foundry workers, not doctors and lawyers. Hardrick's health declined by 1941, and he worked as a cab driver. He would keep supplies in the trunk of his cab, and while waiting for fares, quickly paint local street scenes; later, he would also offer the paintings for sale from the trunk of his cab. (REF: Tom Davis, research for the Crown Hill Cemetery, Indianapolis) He applied his paint very thickly, using a palette knife to create a tactile surface. He relied on a brush only to blend or add a shape, and use his thumb to mold the paint as if he were shaping a sculpture. (Ibid, p. 41) Hardrick worked quickly, beginning at the top of the canvas and working down. He was more concerned with the atmosphere and expression of the landscape than the descriptive qualities, thus following in the tradition of earlier African American landscape painters, Bannister and Duncanson. His landscapes were romanticized versions of his memories of his visits to the country. He blended his own paint when possible, and has a very distinctive palette.

      Black Art Auction
    • John Wesley Hardrick, 1891-1968, Beech Forest, Indiana
      Jun. 04, 2022

      John Wesley Hardrick, 1891-1968, Beech Forest, Indiana

      Est: $3,000 - $5,000

      John Wesley Hardrick 1891-1968 Beech Forest, Indiana c.1930-1940 oil on board 24 x 30 inches signed Provenance: the artist to Ms. Vivian Harrington by descent to her great nephew, Gordon Doyle, Muncie, IN. Ms. Harrington owned a coal yard and traded coal to the artist for paintings.

      Black Art Auction
    • John Wesley Hardrick, 1891-1968, Indiana River Landscape
      Jun. 04, 2022

      John Wesley Hardrick, 1891-1968, Indiana River Landscape

      Est: $6,000 - $8,000

      John Wesley Hardrick 1891-1968 Indiana River Landscape c. 1930-1940 Oil on board 42 x 30 inches Signed

      Black Art Auction
    • John Wesley Hardrick, 1891-1968, Still Life
      Jun. 04, 2022

      John Wesley Hardrick, 1891-1968, Still Life

      Est: $3,000 - $5,000

      John Wesley Hardrick 1891-1968 Still Life c. 1930s oil on board 20 x 24 inches signed original frame

      Black Art Auction
    • John Wesley Hardrick (1891-1968)
      Apr. 03, 2022

      John Wesley Hardrick (1891-1968)

      Est: $500 - $1,000

      "Winter Creek" 8" x 10" oil on board, signed lower right. The following biography is from the fineestateart.com website: John Hardrick was one of Indianapolis’ most successful African American artists. Despite financial hardship, his career as a landscape, figurative painter, and muralist was accomplished and nationally significant. Hardrick’s grandfather moved the family from Kentucky to Indianapolis on account of racial prejudice. John, thusly born in Indianapolis, showed promise as an artist from a young age. He eventually came to the attention of Herman Lieber who assisted in getting him enrolled in children’s classes at the Herron Art Institute. He later attended Manual High School where he studied under Otto Stark, garnered a significant number student awards, and gained significant distinction as an emerging young talent. He returned to Herron as a formal student in 1910, where he studied under William Forsyth. Hardrick was involved in various mural projects for Indianapolis schools, alongside his mentor and former teacher, Otto Stark. He participated in Hoosier Salon Exhibitions in the 1920’s and 1930’s, and gained national notoriety in part through his participation in the 2nd Annual Exhibition of Contemporary Negro Art in San Diego. Despite his national recognition, John Hardrick remained financially strapped his entire life. Nonetheless, he still found time to paint amidst raising a family, and laboring first as a foundry worker, then a truck driver, then, late in life, as a taxi driver. He was known to have stashed his easel, paint, and brushes in the trunk of the cab, retrieving them to quickly paint downtown Indianapolis during breaks in fares. John Hardrick’s works tend to be very colorful and lively. Works lacking signatures are not uncommon. To see this biography on our site, visit: https://fineestateart.com/artists/john_w_hardrick

      Jacksons Auction & Real Estate Company
    • John Wesley Hardrick, 1891-1968, Brown County, Indiana Landscape
      Mar. 12, 2022

      John Wesley Hardrick, 1891-1968, Brown County, Indiana Landscape

      Est: $1,000 - $2,000

      John Wesley Hardrick 1891-1968 Brown County, Indiana Landscape c. 1935 oil on board 14 x 18 inches signed Provenance: Private collection, Richmond, Virginia

      Black Art Auction
    • John Wesley Hardrick, Indiana (1891-1968), Autumn Landscape, Brown County Hills, oil on board, 7 1/2" x 9 1/2" (image), 14 1/2"H x 16 1/4"W (frame)
      Sep. 11, 2021

      John Wesley Hardrick, Indiana (1891-1968), Autumn Landscape, Brown County Hills, oil on board, 7 1/2" x 9 1/2" (image), 14 1/2"H x 16 1/4"W (frame)

      Est: $300 - $500

      John Wesley Hardrick Indiana, (1891-1968) Autumn Landscape, Brown County Hills oil on board No visible signature as framed. Highly important African-American painter from Indianapolis. Hardrick studied at the John Herron Art Institute (Indianapolis), and exhibited at the 10th Annual Exhibition of Works by Indiana Artists in 1917, with fellow African-American painter, W.E. Scott. He shared a studio with Hale Woodruff for a time in the 1920s and exhibited with him in 1927 at the Art Institute of Chicago. He also was included in the Second Annual Exhibition of Contemporary Negro Art in San Diego (1929). He was awarded grants from the Harmon Foundation and worked as a WPA muralist in 1933-34.

      Ripley Auctions
    • John Wesley Hardrick, Indiana (1891-1968), Autumn Landscape, Brown County Hills, oil on board, 7 3/4"H x 9 1/2"W (image), 14 1/2"H x 16"W (frame)
      Sep. 11, 2021

      John Wesley Hardrick, Indiana (1891-1968), Autumn Landscape, Brown County Hills, oil on board, 7 3/4"H x 9 1/2"W (image), 14 1/2"H x 16"W (frame)

      Est: $300 - $500

      John Wesley Hardrick Indiana, (1891-1968) Autumn Landscape, Brown County Hills oil on board No visible signature as framed. Highly important African-American painter from Indianapolis. Hardrick studied at the John Herron Art Institute (Indianapolis), and exhibited at the 10th Annual Exhibition of Works by Indiana Artists in 1917, with fellow African-American painter, W.E. Scott. He shared a studio with Hale Woodruff for a time in the 1920s and exhibited with him in 1927 at the Art Institute of Chicago. He also was included in the Second Annual Exhibition of Contemporary Negro Art in San Diego (1929). He was awarded grants from the Harmon Foundation and worked as a WPA muralist in 1933-34.

      Ripley Auctions
    • John Hardrick, Indiana (11891-1968), oil on canvas, 24 x 20 inches
      Jul. 24, 2021

      John Hardrick, Indiana (11891-1968), oil on canvas, 24 x 20 inches

      Est: $400 - $600

      John Hardrick Indiana, (11891-1968) oil on canvas signed lower right, gilt-framed.

      Link Auction Galleries
    • JOHN WESLEY HARDRICK, 1891-1968, RIVER LANDSCAPE
      Jul. 17, 2021

      JOHN WESLEY HARDRICK, 1891-1968, RIVER LANDSCAPE

      Est: $2,500 - $3,500

      c. 1930 oil on masonite 24 x 30 inches signed

      Black Art Auction
    • John W. Hardrick (1891-1968) Still Life Paintings
      Jun. 30, 2021

      John W. Hardrick (1891-1968) Still Life Paintings

      Est: $100 - $1,000

      John Wesley Hardrick (American,1891-1968). Pair of antique oil paintings on board. Depicting still life bouquets of Peonies in vases. Artist signature lower right. Housed in ornate wood frames. Work Size: 13 x 10 in. SHIPPING Hill Auction Gallery will offer in-house continental USA shipping for $95 plus insurance. Gallery will refer a local shipper for international buyers. Purchaser pick up available upon request. Got something to sell? Contact us at HillAuctionGallery.com.

      Hill Auction Gallery
    • John Wesley Hardrick, 1891-1968, Portrait of a Man
      May. 22, 2021

      John Wesley Hardrick, 1891-1968, Portrait of a Man

      Est: $2,000 - $3,000

      John Wesley Hardrick 1891-1968 Portrait of a Man c. 1940 oil on board 22 x 18 inches signed

      Black Art Auction
    • JOHN WESLEY HARDRICK (1891 - 1968) Untitled (Winter Landscape).
      Apr. 22, 2021

      JOHN WESLEY HARDRICK (1891 - 1968) Untitled (Winter Landscape).

      Est: $4,000 - $6,000

      JOHN WESLEY HARDRICK (1891 - 1968) Untitled (Winter Landscape). Oil on masonite board, 1937. 559x711 mm; 22x28 inches. Signed and dated in oil, lower left. Provenance: private collection, Louisiana. This winter river scene is an excellent example of the landscapes of John Wesley Hardrick. The Indianapolis artist spent his career in Indiana, painting lush landscapes, in addition to portraits and still lifes. Hardrick studied at the John Herron Art Institute until 1918, before fellow Indiana artists William Edouard Scott and Hale Woodruff enrolled. He later shared a studio with a young Woodruff in Indianapolis in 1924. Though Hardrick won the Harmon bronze (first place) medal in 1927, frequently exhibited at the Harmon Foundation, and was awarded a WPA mural commission, his work received little attention during his lifetime. Today, his paintings are in the collections of the Indianapolis Museum of Art, Indiana State Museum and Hampton University.

      Swann Auction Galleries
    • John Wesley (J.W.) Hardrick (1891-1968)
      Apr. 18, 2021

      John Wesley (J.W.) Hardrick (1891-1968)

      Est: $400 - $800

      Brown County Vista 16" x 20" oil on board, unsigned. Recently cleaned; original frame.

      Jacksons Auction & Real Estate Company
    • Painting, John Wesley Hardrick
      Dec. 13, 2020

      Painting, John Wesley Hardrick

      Est: $3,000 - $5,000

      John Wesley Hardrick (American, 1891-1968), Autumn Hills (Bedford, Indiana), oil on board, signed lower right, board: 22"h x 28"w, overall (with frame): 27.75"h x 33.5"w. Note: Hardrick was an influential African-American artist in Indiana

      Clars Auctions
    • John Wesley Hardrick, 1891-1968, Road through Brown County, Indiana, Oil on board, 24 x 36 inches
      Nov. 14, 2020

      John Wesley Hardrick, 1891-1968, Road through Brown County, Indiana, Oil on board, 24 x 36 inches

      Est: $5,000 - $7,000

      John Wesley Hardrick 1891-1968 Road through Brown County, Indiana Oil on board 1942 Signed and dated lower right Exhibited: 2007 Indiana State Museum (museum exhibition label verso) 30 x 42.5 inches (as framed) John Hardrick was born in Indianapolis to Shepard and Georgia Etta (West) Hardrick in 1891. He showed a talent for art as a young boy, and his work was brought to the attention of the owner of a local art store and framer, Herman Lieber, who helped the boy enroll in children’s classes at the John Herron School of Art (interestingly, many of the frames one will find on his paintings today were made by Lieber and bear the label). As a teenager, he began studying with important Hoosier Group impressionist painters, William Forsyth and Otto Stark. He worked at a foundry at night to put himself through John Herron (he executed a well known painting of this subject matter, illustrated in the catalog for the exhibition, A Shared Heritage, Art by Four African Americans (Hardrick, Scott, Woodruff, and Majors), IMA, Warkel and Taylor, p. 59). In 1914, he was married to Georgia Ann Howard and held his first exhibition, which was successful. He shared a studio on Indiana Avenue with Hale Woodruff for some of that year, but increased financial pressures caused him to stop painting, and take a job in his family’s trucking business. When he resumed painting, he exhibited at the Art Institute of Chicago in 1927. One of his paintings, Little Brown Girl was purchased by a group of supportive black citizens and donated to the Herron Art Institute for their permanent collection. It currently hangs at the Indianapolis Museum of Art. He exhibited at the 2nd Annual Exhibition of Contemporary Negro Art in San Diego in 1928, and the catalog read: “In spite of acute poverty, this young man has the faculty of discerning beauty in everything, being able to face all his adversities with a smile that conceals the feeling within, at the same time he possesses a personality which strangely draws people to him.” He also exhibited at the Hoosier Salon in 1929, 1931,and 1934, which were then held in Chicago at Marshall Field and Company. He won first prize for a portrait at the Indiana State Fair in 1934. He participated in the American Negro Exposition in Chicago, 1940. The Civil Works Administration commissioned him to do a mural at the Crispus Attucks High School (the school where Irvena, the subject of this work, attended) in 1934, but it was rejected by the principal because it depicted black foundry workers, not doctors and lawyers. Hardrick’s health declined by 1941, and he worked as a cab driver. He would keep supplies in the trunk of his cab, and while waiting for fares, quickly paint local street scenes; later, he would also offer the paintings for sale from the trunk of his cab. (REF: Tom Davis, research for the Crown Hill Cemetery, Indianapolis) Many of Hardrick’s portraits were of well-to-do black women, who were not only married to successful men, but who were, themselves, entrepreneurs. ( A Shared Heritage, Art by Four African Americans, Warkel and Taylor, p. 47). Hardrick’s landscapes are derived from the many trips he took to Brown County, about fifty miles from Indianapolis. He traveled to the area at the peak of the autumn season, when the leaves were at the height of their color; during the summer when the sun was bright and hot; and in the winter when the ground was covered with snow. He did not sketch or paint during these visits . Instead, the artist took in the different scenes and committed them to memory. (REF: A Shared Heritage, Art by Four African Americans, IMA, Warkel and Taylor, p. 41). He applied his paint very thickly, using a palette knife to create a tactile surface. He relied on a brush only to blend or add a shape, and use his thumb to mold the paint as if he were shaping a sculpture. (Ibid, p. 41) Hardrick worked quickly, beginning at the top of the canvas and working down. He was more concerned with the atmosphere and expression of the landscape than the descriptive qualities, thus following in the tradition of earlier African American landscape painters, Bannister and Duncanson. His landscapes were romanticized versions of his memories of his visits to the country. He blended his own paint when possible, and has a very distinctive palette. 24 x 36 inches

      Black Art Auction
    • John Wesley Hardrick, 1891-1968, Indianapolis Street Scene, Oil on board, 15 x 11.5 inches
      Nov. 14, 2020

      John Wesley Hardrick, 1891-1968, Indianapolis Street Scene, Oil on board, 15 x 11.5 inches

      Est: $8,000 - $12,000

      John Wesley Hardrick 1891-1968 Indianapolis Street Scene Oil on board c. 1940 Signed lower right A work nearly identical to this is in the collection of the Indiana Historical Society, which was included in the exhibition, A Shared Heritage, Art by Four African Americans (Indianapolis Museum of Art), 1996. John Hardrick was born in Indianapolis to Shepard and Georgia Etta (West) Hardrick in 1891. He showed a talent for art as a young boy, and his work was brought to the attention of the owner of a local art store and framer, Herman Lieber, who helped the boy enroll in children’s classes at the John Herron School of Art (interestingly, many of the frames one will find on his paintings today were made by Lieber and bear the label). As a teenager, he began studying with important Hoosier Group impressionist painters, William Forsyth and Otto Stark. He worked at a foundry at night to put himself through John Herron (he executed a well known painting of this subject matter, illustrated in the catalog for the exhibition, A Shared Heritage, Art by Four African Americans (Hardrick, Scott, Woodruff, and Majors), IMA, Warkel and Taylor, p. 59). In 1914, he was married to Georgia Ann Howard and held his first exhibition, which was successful. He shared a studio on Indiana Avenue with Hale Woodruff for some of that year, but increased financial pressures caused him to stop painting, and take a job in his family’s trucking business. When he resumed painting, he exhibited at the Art Institute of Chicago in 1927. One of his paintings, Little Brown Girl was purchased by a group of supportive black citizens and donated to the Herron Art Institute for their permanent collection. It currently hangs at the Indianapolis Museum of Art. He exhibited at the 2nd Annual Exhibition of Contemporary Negro Art in San Diego in 1928, and the catalog read: “In spite of acute poverty, this young man has the faculty of discerning beauty in everything, being able to face all his adversities with a smile that conceals the feeling within, at the same time he possesses a personality which strangely draws people to him.” He also exhibited at the Hoosier Salon in 1929, 1931,and 1934, which were then held in Chicago at Marshall Field and Company. He won first prize for a portrait at the Indiana State Fair in 1934. He participated in the American Negro Exposition in Chicago, 1940. The Civil Works Administration commissioned him to do a mural at the Crispus Attucks High School (the school where Irvena, the subject of this work, attended) in 1934, but it was rejected by the principal because it depicted black foundry workers, not doctors and lawyers. Hardrick’s health declined by 1941, and he worked as a cab driver. He would keep supplies in the trunk of his cab, and while waiting for fares, quickly paint local street scenes; later, he would also offer the paintings for sale from the trunk of his cab. (REF: Tom Davis, research for the Crown Hill Cemetery, Indianapolis) Many of Hardrick’s portraits were of well-to-do black women, who were not only married to successful men, but who were, themselves, entrepreneurs. ( A Shared Heritage, Art by Four African Americans, Warkel and Taylor, p. 47). Hardrick’s landscapes are derived from the many trips he took to Brown County, about fifty miles from Indianapolis. He traveled to the area at the peak of the autumn season, when the leaves were at the height of their color; during the summer when the sun was bright and hot; and in the winter when the ground was covered with snow. He did not sketch or paint during these visits . Instead, the artist took in the different scenes and committed them to memory. (REF: A Shared Heritage, Art by Four African Americans, IMA, Warkel and Taylor, p. 41). He applied his paint very thickly, using a palette knife to create a tactile surface. He relied on a brush only to blend or add a shape, and use his thumb to mold the paint as if he were shaping a sculpture. (Ibid, p. 41) Hardrick worked quickly, beginning at the top of the canvas and working down. He was more concerned with the atmosphere and expression of the landscape than the descriptive qualities, thus following in the tradition of earlier African American landscape painters, Bannister and Duncanson. His landscapes were romanticized versions of his memories of his visits to the country. He blended his own paint when possible, and has a very distinctive palette. 15 x 11.5 inches

      Black Art Auction
    • John Wesley Hardrick, 1891-1968, Beech Forest, Indiana, Oil on board, 22 x 32 inches
      May. 16, 2020

      John Wesley Hardrick, 1891-1968, Beech Forest, Indiana, Oil on board, 22 x 32 inches

      Est: $4,000 - $6,000

      John Wesley Hardrick 1891-1968 Beech Forest, Indiana Oil on board 1945 oil on board signed 22 x 32 inches

      Black Art Auction
    • John Wesley Hardrick, 1891-1968, Portrait of Irvena Harvey, Oil on Board, 45 x 36 inches
      May. 16, 2020

      John Wesley Hardrick, 1891-1968, Portrait of Irvena Harvey, Oil on Board, 45 x 36 inches

      Est: $8,000 - $12,000

      John Wesley Hardrick 1891-1968 Portrait of Irvena Harvey Oil on Board c. 1930 signed Provenance: The Collection of George Gray, Chicago, IL. Mr. Gray's mother was a close friend of Ms. Harvey. Ms. Harvey was voted "Most Attractive" by the 1929 senior class at Crispus Attucks High School, Indianapolis, IN. She was married to William Robert Ming, Jr., civil rights attorney and member of the litigation team for Brown v Board of Education. Irvena went on to graduate from Butler University in 1933 and worked as a social worker. She served as an assistant field secretary in the NAACP (The Crisis, April, 1945, p.112) 45 x 36 inches

      Black Art Auction
    • John Wesley Hardrick
      Nov. 24, 2019

      John Wesley Hardrick

      Est: $400 - $800

      Stream in the Forest 20" x 16", Oil on Canvas, Signed Lower Left

      Jacksons Auction & Real Estate Company
    • John Wesley (J.W.) Hardrick (1891-1968)
      Apr. 07, 2019

      John Wesley (J.W.) Hardrick (1891-1968)

      Est: $250 - $500

      Pastel Landscape 8" x 11", pastel, signed lower right. Nicely framed. Est. $250-$500

      Jacksons Auction & Real Estate Company
    • John Wesley (J.W.) Hardrick (1891-1968)
      Apr. 07, 2019

      John Wesley (J.W.) Hardrick (1891-1968)

      Est: $2,000 - $4,000

      Fall Creek 18" x 24", oil on board, signed lower right, 1947. Conserved; recent frame. Est. $2,000-$4,000

      Jacksons Auction & Real Estate Company
    • John Wesley (J.W.) Hardrick (1891-1968)
      Apr. 07, 2019

      John Wesley (J.W.) Hardrick (1891-1968)

      Est: $2,000 - $4,000

      Winter Homestead 18" x 24", oil on board, signed lower right, dated 1947. Conserved; recent frame. Est. $2,000-$4,000

      Jacksons Auction & Real Estate Company
    • John Wesley Hardrick (1891-1968)
      Apr. 02, 2017

      John Wesley Hardrick (1891-1968)

      Est: $4,000 - $8,000

      30"x36", Oil on Board, Signed Lower Right Road from Nashville

      Jacksons Auction & Real Estate Company
    • John Wesley Hardrick, (American, 1891-1968), Winter Landscape, oil on canvas laid down on board (original), 24" x 30"
      Mar. 18, 2017

      John Wesley Hardrick, (American, 1891-1968), Winter Landscape, oil on canvas laid down on board (original), 24" x 30"

      Est: $8,000 - $10,000

      John Wesley Hardrick (American, 1891-1968) Winter Landscape oil on canvas laid down on board (original) ca. 1935 signed 24" x 30"

      Ripley Auctions
    • John Wesley Hardrick, (American, 1891-1968), Indiana Landscape, oil on board, 26" x 36.5"
      Mar. 18, 2017

      John Wesley Hardrick, (American, 1891-1968), Indiana Landscape, oil on board, 26" x 36.5"

      Est: $10,000 - $20,000

      John Wesley Hardrick (American, 1891-1968) Indiana Landscape oil on board c. 1935 signed 26" x 36.5"

      Ripley Auctions
    • JOHN WESLEY HARDRICK (American, 1891-1968). STREAM IN FALL LANDSCAPE, signed lower right. Oil on board.
      Sep. 18, 2016

      JOHN WESLEY HARDRICK (American, 1891-1968). STREAM IN FALL LANDSCAPE, signed lower right. Oil on board.

      Est: $800 - $1,000

      JOHN WESLEY HARDRICK (American, 1891-1968). STREAM IN FALL LANDSCAPE, signed lower right. Oil on board - Framed, 20 in. x 24 in.

      Sloans & Kenyon
    • John Wesley Hardrick, (American; 1891-1968), Brown County Indiana landscape, oil on board, H 15 3/4" x W 19 3/4" image
      Nov. 21, 2015

      John Wesley Hardrick, (American; 1891-1968), Brown County Indiana landscape, oil on board, H 15 3/4" x W 19 3/4" image

      Est: $200 - $400

      John Wesley Hardrick (American; 1891-1968) Brown County Indiana landscape oil on board unsigned. H 15 3/4" x W 19 3/4" image

      Ripley Auctions
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