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Mary Benjamin Rogers Sold at Auction Prices

b. 1878 - d. 1956

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    • Mary Benjamin Rogers Still Life w/ Pheasant ca. 1920s
      Nov. 15, 2024

      Mary Benjamin Rogers Still Life w/ Pheasant ca. 1920s

      Est: $1,200 - $1,800

      Mary Benjamin Rogers (American, 1878-1956). Still Life with Pheasant oil on wood panel, ca. 1920s to 1930s. Signature at lower right. A large still life painting by Mary Benjamin Rogers, who was the first wife of Standard Oil heir Henry Huddleston Rogers Jr. (note "LOANED by H.H. Rogers" on the verso of this painting) as well as the mother to extravagant fashion icon Millicent Rogers who would later become a major supporter of Southwest art and culture as well as a champion for Native American civil rights. The composition of this painting features a pheasant at the center surrounded by a wonderful variety of fruits and vegetables - two ears of corn, an onion, an artichoke, an eggplant, an apple, a bunch of radishes, squash and more. All rest upon a table before a framed painting or window. This theme is rather unusual as Rogers usually painted flowers, seduced by the romantic notion of a flower in bloom. Size: 30" L x 35.875" W (76.2 cm x 91.1 cm) About the Artist: Mary Benjamin Rogers began painting in France under Edouard Vuillard (1868-1940) and later studied with Jon Corbino (1905-1964) and Bernard Boutet de Monvel (1881-1949). Her first exhibition was at an amateur art show in Paris in the 1930s. She would continue to show her work throughout the 1940s. She was the first wife of Standard Oil Company heir Henry Huddleston Rogers Jr. They married in 1901 and were a New York society couple until they divorced in 1929. Her grandfather was Parke Benjamin, an important 19th century New York poet, journalist, and editor. While Mary Benjamin Rogers aimed to live discretely, her daughter, fashion icon Millicent Rogers (1902-1953) was a press magnet who provided many racy stories for the society pages before moving to Taos, New Mexico and becoming a major champion southwest Native American art and culture. Please Note: Inscriptions on the verso of this painting include "LOANED by H.H. Rogers" and "NOT for SALE" and "Exibition" (crossed out) and "MRS BENJAMIN ROGERS / 140 W 57 ST. / N.Y.C." Provenance: private Boulder, Colorado, USA collection All items legal to buy/sell under U.S. Statute covering cultural patrimony Code 2600, CHAPTER 14, and are guaranteed to be as described or your money back. A Certificate of Authenticity will accompany all winning bids. We ship worldwide and handle all shipping in-house for your convenience. #189756

      Artemis Gallery
    • Mary Benjamin Rogers
      Sep. 20, 2024

      Mary Benjamin Rogers

      Est: $300 - $500

      Mary Benjamin Rogers (New York, 1878-1956) FLORAL STILL LIFE oil on canvas, framed, unsigned H32" W27" Provenance: Millicent Rogers, thence by descent

      Charlton Hall
    • Mary Benjamin Rogers
      Sep. 20, 2024

      Mary Benjamin Rogers

      Est: $300 - $500

      Mary Benjamin Rogers (New York, 1878-1956) LANDSCAPE WITH POND oil on canvas, framed, unsigned H18" W24" Provenance: Millicent Rogers, thence by descent

      Charlton Hall
    • Mary Benjamin Rogers
      Feb. 23, 2018

      Mary Benjamin Rogers

      Est: $100 - $200

      Mary Benjamin Rogers (New York, 1878-1956) PETUNIAS oil on canvas, signed & titled, unframed, exhibition label on verso H12" W10" Provenance: Mary Benjamin Rogers Thence by descent Exhibitions: de Young Museum, San Francisco (No. 38) Other Notes: Mary Benjamin Rogers (1878-1956), Mrs. Benjamin Rogers, as she was known, was the first wife of Standard Oil heir Henry H. Rogers Jr., and mother of fashion icon Millicent Rogers. She began painting in France under the watchful eye of Edouard Vuillard (1868-1940), and later studied with Jon Corbino (1905-1964), and friend Bernard Boutet de Monvel (1881-1949). Rogers's love of flowers is revealed in her paintings; the romantic ideal of the blossom creeps into almost all of her canvases. Her first exhibition was held in the 1930s in Paris at the amateur art show arranged by Miss Elsa Maxwell. She continued on to exhibit paintings into the late 1940s at various galleries and institutions including the Wildenstein Galleries in New York, San Francisco's de Young Museum, the Pasadena Art Institute, Southern Vermont Artists, as well as the Santa Barbara Museum of Art.

      Charlton Hall
    • Mary Benjamin Rogers
      Feb. 23, 2018

      Mary Benjamin Rogers

      Est: $200 - $300

      Mary Benjamin Rogers (New York, 1878-1956) WILD FLOWERS IN POTTERY PITCHER oil on canvasboard, unsigned, framed H11 1/2" W9" Provenance: Mary Benjamin Rogers Thence by descent Other Notes: Mary Benjamin Rogers (1878-1956), Mrs. Benjamin Rogers, as she was known, was the first wife of Standard Oil heir Henry H. Rogers Jr., and mother of fashion icon Millicent Rogers. She began painting in France under the watchful eye of Edouard Vuillard (1868-1940), and later studied with Jon Corbino (1905-1964), and friend Bernard Boutet de Monvel (1881-1949). Rogers's love of flowers is revealed in her paintings; the romantic ideal of the blossom creeps into almost all of her canvases. Her first exhibition was held in the 1930s in Paris at the amateur art show arranged by Miss Elsa Maxwell. She continued on to exhibit paintings into the late 1940s at various galleries and institutions including the Wildenstein Galleries in New York, San Francisco's de Young Museum, the Pasadena Art Institute, Southern Vermont Artists, as well as the Santa Barbara Museum of Art.

      Charlton Hall
    • Mary Benjamin Rogers
      Feb. 23, 2018

      Mary Benjamin Rogers

      Est: $200 - $300

      Mary Benjamin Rogers (New York, 1878-1956) PLACE DE LA CONCORDE, PARIS oil on canvasboard, unsigned, framed H16" W13" Provenance: Mary Benjamin Rogers Thence by descent Other Notes: Mary Benjamin Rogers (1878-1956), Mrs. Benjamin Rogers, as she was known, was the first wife of Standard Oil heir Henry H. Rogers Jr., and mother of fashion icon Millicent Rogers. She began painting in France under the watchful eye of Edouard Vuillard (1868-1940), and later studied with Jon Corbino (1905-1964), and friend Bernard Boutet de Monvel (1881-1949). Rogers's love of flowers is revealed in her paintings; the romantic ideal of the blossom creeps into almost all of her canvases. Her first exhibition was held in the 1930s in Paris at the amateur art show arranged by Miss Elsa Maxwell. She continued on to exhibit paintings into the late 1940s at various galleries and institutions including the Wildenstein Galleries in New York, San Francisco's de Young Museum, the Pasadena Art Institute, Southern Vermont Artists, as well as the Santa Barbara Museum of Art.

      Charlton Hall
    • Mary Benjamin Rogers
      Feb. 23, 2018

      Mary Benjamin Rogers

      Est: $100 - $200

      Mary Benjamin Rogers (New York, 1878-1956) POSIES IN BOHEMIAN VASE oil on canvas, signed & titled, unframed H12" W9" Provenance: Mary Benjamin Rogers Thence by descent Other Notes: Mary Benjamin Rogers (1878-1956), Mrs. Benjamin Rogers, as she was known, was the first wife of Standard Oil heir Henry H. Rogers Jr., and mother of fashion icon Millicent Rogers. She began painting in France under the watchful eye of Edouard Vuillard (1868-1940), and later studied with Jon Corbino (1905-1964), and friend Bernard Boutet de Monvel (1881-1949). Rogers's love of flowers is revealed in her paintings; the romantic ideal of the blossom creeps into almost all of her canvases. Her first exhibition was held in the 1930s in Paris at the amateur art show arranged by Miss Elsa Maxwell. She continued on to exhibit paintings into the late 1940s at various galleries and institutions including the Wildenstein Galleries in New York, San Francisco's de Young Museum, the Pasadena Art Institute, Southern Vermont Artists, as well as the Santa Barbara Museum of Art.

      Charlton Hall
    • Mary Benjamin Rogers
      Feb. 23, 2018

      Mary Benjamin Rogers

      Est: $200 - $400

      Mary Benjamin Rogers (New York, 1878-1956) FLOWER IN VASE AGAINST MOUNTAINOUS LANDSCAPE oil on canvas, signed twice, framed H15 1/2" W16" Provenance: Mary Benjamin Rogers Thence by descent Other Notes: Mary Benjamin Rogers (1878-1956), Mrs. Benjamin Rogers, as she was known, was the first wife of Standard Oil heir Henry H. Rogers Jr., and mother of fashion icon Millicent Rogers. She began painting in France under the watchful eye of Edouard Vuillard (1868-1940), and later studied with Jon Corbino (1905-1964), and friend Bernard Boutet de Monvel (1881-1949). Rogers's love of flowers is revealed in her paintings; the romantic ideal of the blossom creeps into almost all of her canvases. Her first exhibition was held in the 1930s in Paris at the amateur art show arranged by Miss Elsa Maxwell. She continued on to exhibit paintings into the late 1940s at various galleries and institutions including the Wildenstein Galleries in New York, San Francisco's de Young Museum, the Pasadena Art Institute, Southern Vermont Artists, as well as the Santa Barbara Museum of Art.

      Charlton Hall
    • Mary Benjamin Rogers
      Feb. 23, 2018

      Mary Benjamin Rogers

      Est: $200 - $400

      Mary Benjamin Rogers (New York, 1878-1956) EXOTICE FLOWERS IN OPALINE GLASS VASE oil on canvas, signed, framed H16" W12" Provenance: Mary Benjamin Rogers Thence by descent Other Notes: Mary Benjamin Rogers (1878-1956), Mrs. Benjamin Rogers, as she was known, was the first wife of Standard Oil heir Henry H. Rogers Jr., and mother of fashion icon Millicent Rogers. She began painting in France under the watchful eye of Edouard Vuillard (1868-1940), and later studied with Jon Corbino (1905-1964), and friend Bernard Boutet de Monvel (1881-1949). Rogers's love of flowers is revealed in her paintings; the romantic ideal of the blossom creeps into almost all of her canvases. Her first exhibition was held in the 1930s in Paris at the amateur art show arranged by Miss Elsa Maxwell. She continued on to exhibit paintings into the late 1940s at various galleries and institutions including the Wildenstein Galleries in New York, San Francisco's de Young Museum, the Pasadena Art Institute, Southern Vermont Artists, as well as the Santa Barbara Museum of Art.

      Charlton Hall
    • Mary Benjamin Rogers
      Feb. 23, 2018

      Mary Benjamin Rogers

      Est: $300 - $400

      Mary Benjamin Rogers (New York, 1878-1956) BOUQUET OF SPRING FLOWER oil on canvas, framed, unsigned H24" W28" Provenance: Mary Benjamin Rogers Thence by descent Other Notes: Mary Benjamin Rogers (1878-1956), Mrs. Benjamin Rogers, as she was known, was the first wife of Standard Oil heir Henry H. Rogers Jr., and mother of fashion icon Millicent Rogers. She began painting in France under the watchful eye of Edouard Vuillard (1868-1940), and later studied with Jon Corbino (1905-1964), and friend Bernard Boutet de Monvel (1881-1949). Rogers's love of flowers is revealed in her paintings; the romantic ideal of the blossom creeps into almost all of her canvases. Her first exhibition was held in the 1930s in Paris at the amateur art show arranged by Miss Elsa Maxwell. She continued on to exhibit paintings into the late 1940s at various galleries and institutions including the Wildenstein Galleries in New York, San Francisco's de Young Museum, the Pasadena Art Institute, Southern Vermont Artists, as well as the Santa Barbara Museum of Art.

      Charlton Hall
    • Mary Benjamin Rogers
      Feb. 23, 2018

      Mary Benjamin Rogers

      Est: $300 - $400

      Mary Benjamin Rogers (New York, 1878-1956) SPRING LANDSCAPE WITH COTTAGE oil on masonite, framed, unsigned H23" W24" Provenance: Mary Benjamin Rogers Thence by descent Other Notes: Mary Benjamin Rogers (1878-1956), Mrs. Benjamin Rogers, as she was known, was the first wife of Standard Oil heir Henry H. Rogers Jr., and mother of fashion icon Millicent Rogers. She began painting in France under the watchful eye of Edouard Vuillard (1868-1940), and later studied with Jon Corbino (1905-1964), and friend Bernard Boutet de Monvel (1881-1949). Rogers's love of flowers is revealed in her paintings; the romantic ideal of the blossom creeps into almost all of her canvases. Her first exhibition was held in the 1930s in Paris at the amateur art show arranged by Miss Elsa Maxwell. She continued on to exhibit paintings into the late 1940s at various galleries and institutions including the Wildenstein Galleries in New York, San Francisco's de Young Museum, the Pasadena Art Institute, Southern Vermont Artists, as well as the Santa Barbara Museum of Art.

      Charlton Hall
    • Mary Benjamin Rogers
      Feb. 23, 2018

      Mary Benjamin Rogers

      Est: $300 - $500

      Mary Benjamin Rogers (New York, 1878-1956) LANDSCAPE (In Bed with Grandmere) oil on canvas, framed, signed, exhibition label on verso H18" W24" Provenance: Mary Benjamin Rogers Thence by descent Exhibitions: de Young Museum, San Francisco (No. 30) Other Notes: Mary Benjamin Rogers (1878-1956), Mrs. Benjamin Rogers, as she was known, was the first wife of Standard Oil heir Henry H. Rogers Jr., and mother of fashion icon Millicent Rogers. She began painting in France under the watchful eye of Edouard Vuillard (1868-1940), and later studied with Jon Corbino (1905-1964), and friend Bernard Boutet de Monvel (1881-1949). Rogers's love of flowers is revealed in her paintings; the romantic ideal of the blossom creeps into almost all of her canvases. Her first exhibition was held in the 1930s in Paris at the amateur art show arranged by Miss Elsa Maxwell. She continued on to exhibit paintings into the late 1940s at various galleries and institutions including the Wildenstein Galleries in New York, San Francisco's de Young Museum, the Pasadena Art Institute, Southern Vermont Artists, as well as the Santa Barbara Museum of Art.

      Charlton Hall
    • Mary Benjamin Rogers
      Feb. 23, 2018

      Mary Benjamin Rogers

      Est: $300 - $500

      Mary Benjamin Rogers (New York, 1878-1956) LEANING WILLOW (BENDING WILLOW, MAINE) oil on canvas, framed, signed, exhibition label on verso H17 1/2" W25 1/4" Provenance: Mary Benjamin Rogers Thence by descent Exhibitions: Wildenstein & Co, Inc, New York (Nov.-Dec. 1947, No. 27) de Young Museum, San Francisco (No. 25) Other Notes: Mary Benjamin Rogers (1878-1956), Mrs. Benjamin Rogers, as she was known, was the first wife of Standard Oil heir Henry H. Rogers Jr., and mother of fashion icon Millicent Rogers. She began painting in France under the watchful eye of Edouard Vuillard (1868-1940), and later studied with Jon Corbino (1905-1964), and friend Bernard Boutet de Monvel (1881-1949). Rogers's love of flowers is revealed in her paintings; the romantic ideal of the blossom creeps into almost all of her canvases. Her first exhibition was held in the 1930s in Paris at the amateur art show arranged by Miss Elsa Maxwell. She continued on to exhibit paintings into the late 1940s at various galleries and institutions including the Wildenstein Galleries in New York, San Francisco's de Young Museum, the Pasadena Art Institute, Southern Vermont Artists, as well as the Santa Barbara Museum of Art.

      Charlton Hall
    • Mary Benjamin Rogers
      Feb. 23, 2018

      Mary Benjamin Rogers

      Est: $300 - $500

      Mary Benjamin Rogers (New York, 1878-1956) FLOWER IN POTTERY JAR oil on canvas, signed, framed H19" W12" Provenance: Mary Benjamin Rogers Thence by descent Other Notes: Mary Benjamin Rogers (1878-1956), Mrs. Benjamin Rogers, as she was known, was the first wife of Standard Oil heir Henry H. Rogers Jr., and mother of fashion icon Millicent Rogers. She began painting in France under the watchful eye of Edouard Vuillard (1868-1940), and later studied with Jon Corbino (1905-1964), and friend Bernard Boutet de Monvel (1881-1949). Rogers's love of flowers is revealed in her paintings; the romantic ideal of the blossom creeps into almost all of her canvases. Her first exhibition was held in the 1930s in Paris at the amateur art show arranged by Miss Elsa Maxwell. She continued on to exhibit paintings into the late 1940s at various galleries and institutions including the Wildenstein Galleries in New York, San Francisco's de Young Museum, the Pasadena Art Institute, Southern Vermont Artists, as well as the Santa Barbara Museum of Art.

      Charlton Hall
    • Mary Benjamin Rogers
      Feb. 23, 2018

      Mary Benjamin Rogers

      Est: $300 - $500

      Mary Benjamin Rogers (New York, 1878-1956) FRANCIS AND EDWARD ON THE WATCH oil on canvas, framed, unsigned, exhibition label on verso H19" W12 1/2" Provenance: Mary Benjamin Rogers Thence by descent Exhibitions: de Young Museum, San Francisco (No. 9) Other Notes: Mary Benjamin Rogers (1878-1956), Mrs. Benjamin Rogers, as she was known, was the first wife of Standard Oil heir Henry H. Rogers Jr., and mother of fashion icon Millicent Rogers. She began painting in France under the watchful eye of Edouard Vuillard (1868-1940), and later studied with Jon Corbino (1905-1964), and friend Bernard Boutet de Monvel (1881-1949). Rogers's love of flowers is revealed in her paintings; the romantic ideal of the blossom creeps into almost all of her canvases. Her first exhibition was held in the 1930s in Paris at the amateur art show arranged by Miss Elsa Maxwell. She continued on to exhibit paintings into the late 1940s at various galleries and institutions including the Wildenstein Galleries in New York, San Francisco's de Young Museum, the Pasadena Art Institute, Southern Vermont Artists, as well as the Santa Barbara Museum of Art.

      Charlton Hall
    • Mary Benjamin Rogers
      Feb. 23, 2018

      Mary Benjamin Rogers

      Est: $300 - $500

      Mary Benjamin Rogers (New York, 1878-1956) LITTLE FARM HOUSE, DORSET, VERMONT oil on masonite, framed, unsigned, exhibition labels on verso H12 1/2" W16 1/2" Provenance: Mary Benjamin Rogers Thence by descent Exhibitions: Wildenstein & Co, Inc, New York (No. 31) de Young Museum, San Francisco (May 1948, No. 23) Other Notes: Mary Benjamin Rogers (1878-1956), Mrs. Benjamin Rogers, as she was known, was the first wife of Standard Oil heir Henry H. Rogers Jr., and mother of fashion icon Millicent Rogers. She began painting in France under the watchful eye of Edouard Vuillard (1868-1940), and later studied with Jon Corbino (1905-1964), and friend Bernard Boutet de Monvel (1881-1949). Rogers's love of flowers is revealed in her paintings; the romantic ideal of the blossom creeps into almost all of her canvases. Her first exhibition was held in the 1930s in Paris at the amateur art show arranged by Miss Elsa Maxwell. She continued on to exhibit paintings into the late 1940s at various galleries and institutions including the Wildenstein Galleries in New York, San Francisco's de Young Museum, the Pasadena Art Institute, Southern Vermont Artists, as well as the Santa Barbara Museum of Art.

      Charlton Hall
    • Mary Benjamin Rogers
      Feb. 23, 2018

      Mary Benjamin Rogers

      Est: $400 - $600

      Mary Benjamin Rogers (New York, 1878-1956) MOONLIGHT MUSIC oil on canvas, framed, signed, exhibition label on verso H24" W20" Provenance: Mary Benjamin Rogers Thence by descent Exhibitions: Wildenstein & Co, Inc, New York (Nov.-Dec. 1947, No. 9) de Young Museum, San Francisco (May 1948, No. 19) Other Notes: Mary Benjamin Rogers (1878-1956), Mrs. Benjamin Rogers, as she was known, was the first wife of Standard Oil heir Henry H. Rogers Jr., and mother of fashion icon Millicent Rogers. She began painting in France under the watchful eye of Edouard Vuillard (1868-1940), and later studied with Jon Corbino (1905-1964), and friend Bernard Boutet de Monvel (1881-1949). Rogers's love of flowers is revealed in her paintings; the romantic ideal of the blossom creeps into almost all of her canvases. Her first exhibition was held in the 1930s in Paris at the amateur art show arranged by Miss Elsa Maxwell. She continued on to exhibit paintings into the late 1940s at various galleries and institutions including the Wildenstein Galleries in New York, San Francisco's de Young Museum, the Pasadena Art Institute, Southern Vermont Artists, as well as the Santa Barbara Museum of Art.

      Charlton Hall
    • Mary Benjamin Rogers, in Ben Budura signed frame
      Feb. 23, 2018

      Mary Benjamin Rogers, in Ben Budura signed frame

      Est: $400 - $600

      Mary Benjamin Rogers, in Ben Budura signed frame (New York, 1878-1956) LANDSCAPE WITH TREES oil on canvasboard, signed, framed incised: BB, 46 (Bernard Badura, 1896-1986) canvas H14" W16", and frame size H17 5/8" W19 5/8" Provenance: Mary Benjamin Rogers Thence by descent Other Notes: Mary Benjamin Rogers (1878-1956), Mrs. Benjamin Rogers, as she was known, was the first wife of Standard Oil heir Henry H. Rogers Jr., and mother of fashion icon Millicent Rogers. She began painting in France under the watchful eye of Edouard Vuillard (1868-1940), and later studied with Jon Corbino (1905-1964), and friend Bernard Boutet de Monvel (1881-1949). Rogers's love of flowers is revealed in her paintings; the romantic ideal of the blossom creeps into almost all of her canvases. Her first exhibition was held in the 1930s in Paris at the amateur art show arranged by Miss Elsa Maxwell. She continued on to exhibit paintings into the late 1940s at various galleries and institutions including the Wildenstein Galleries in New York, San Francisco's de Young Museum, the Pasadena Art Institute, Southern Vermont Artists, as well as the Santa Barbara Museum of Art.

      Charlton Hall
    • Mary Benjamin Rogers
      Feb. 23, 2018

      Mary Benjamin Rogers

      Est: $400 - $600

      Mary Benjamin Rogers (New York, 1878-1956) PITCHER OF GARDEN FLOWERS oil on canvas, framed, signed, exhibition label on verso H24" W18" Provenance: Mary Benjamin Rogers Thence by descent Exhibitions: Society of the Four Arts, Palm Beach (Dec.-Jan., 1951) de Young Museum, San Francisco (No. 3) Other Notes: Mary Benjamin Rogers (1878-1956), Mrs. Benjamin Rogers, as she was known, was the first wife of Standard Oil heir Henry H. Rogers Jr., and mother of fashion icon Millicent Rogers. She began painting in France under the watchful eye of Edouard Vuillard (1868-1940), and later studied with Jon Corbino (1905-1964), and friend Bernard Boutet de Monvel (1881-1949). Rogers's love of flowers is revealed in her paintings; the romantic ideal of the blossom creeps into almost all of her canvases. Her first exhibition was held in the 1930s in Paris at the amateur art show arranged by Miss Elsa Maxwell. She continued on to exhibit paintings into the late 1940s at various galleries and institutions including the Wildenstein Galleries in New York, San Francisco's de Young Museum, the Pasadena Art Institute, Southern Vermont Artists, as well as the Santa Barbara Museum of Art.

      Charlton Hall
    • Mary Benjamin Rogers
      Feb. 23, 2018

      Mary Benjamin Rogers

      Est: $400 - $600

      Mary Benjamin Rogers (New York, 1878-1956) LITTLE BOUQUET oil on canvas, framed, signed, exhibition label on verso H18" W19" Provenance: Mary Benjamin Rogers Thence by descent Exhibitions: de Young Museum, San Francisco (No. 31) Other Notes: Mary Benjamin Rogers (1878-1956), Mrs. Benjamin Rogers, as she was known, was the first wife of Standard Oil heir Henry H. Rogers Jr., and mother of fashion icon Millicent Rogers. She began painting in France under the watchful eye of Edouard Vuillard (1868-1940), and later studied with Jon Corbino (1905-1964), and friend Bernard Boutet de Monvel (1881-1949). Rogers's love of flowers is revealed in her paintings; the romantic ideal of the blossom creeps into almost all of her canvases. Her first exhibition was held in the 1930s in Paris at the amateur art show arranged by Miss Elsa Maxwell. She continued on to exhibit paintings into the late 1940s at various galleries and institutions including the Wildenstein Galleries in New York, San Francisco's de Young Museum, the Pasadena Art Institute, Southern Vermont Artists, as well as the Santa Barbara Museum of Art.

      Charlton Hall
    • Mary Benjamin Rogers, in Ben Budura signed frame
      Feb. 23, 2018

      Mary Benjamin Rogers, in Ben Budura signed frame

      Est: $400 - $700

      Mary Benjamin Rogers, in Ben Budura signed frame (New York, 1878-1956) LANDSCAPE, BUCKS COUNTY, PENN oil on canvas, signed, framed incised: FRAME BY BADURA, NEW HOPE (Bernard Badura, 1896-1986) H18" W24" Provenance: Mary Benjamin Rogers Thence by descent Other Notes: Mary Benjamin Rogers (1878-1956), Mrs. Benjamin Rogers, as she was known, was the first wife of Standard Oil heir Henry H. Rogers Jr., and mother of fashion icon Millicent Rogers. She began painting in France under the watchful eye of Edouard Vuillard (1868-1940), and later studied with Jon Corbino (1905-1964), and friend Bernard Boutet de Monvel (1881-1949). Rogers's love of flowers is revealed in her paintings; the romantic ideal of the blossom creeps into almost all of her canvases. Her first exhibition was held in the 1930s in Paris at the amateur art show arranged by Miss Elsa Maxwell. She continued on to exhibit paintings into the late 1940s at various galleries and institutions including the Wildenstein Galleries in New York, San Francisco's de Young Museum, the Pasadena Art Institute, Southern Vermont Artists, as well as the Santa Barbara Museum of Art.

      Charlton Hall
    • Mary Benjamin Rogers
      Feb. 23, 2018

      Mary Benjamin Rogers

      Est: $800 - $1,200

      Mary Benjamin Rogers (New York, 1878-1956) FLOWERS IN MAY, CALIFORNIA oil on canvas, framed, unsigned, exhibition labels on verso H32 1/2" W32 1/2" Provenance: Mary Benjamin Rogers Thence by descent Exhibitions: Wildenstein & Co, Inc, New York (Nov.-Dec. 1947, No. 13) de Young Museum, San Francisco (May 1948, No. 12) Other Notes: Mary Benjamin Rogers (1878-1956), Mrs. Benjamin Rogers, as she was known, was the first wife of Standard Oil heir Henry H. Rogers Jr., and mother of fashion icon Millicent Rogers. She began painting in France under the watchful eye of Edouard Vuillard (1868-1940), and later studied with Jon Corbino (1905-1964), and friend Bernard Boutet de Monvel (1881-1949). Rogers's love of flowers is revealed in her paintings; the romantic ideal of the blossom creeps into almost all of her canvases. Her first exhibition was held in the 1930s in Paris at the amateur art show arranged by Miss Elsa Maxwell. She continued on to exhibit paintings into the late 1940s at various galleries and institutions including the Wildenstein Galleries in New York, San Francisco's de Young Museum, the Pasadena Art Institute, Southern Vermont Artists, as well as the Santa Barbara Museum of Art.

      Charlton Hall
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