Henry M. Rosenberg (known also as Henry Mortikar Rosenberg; February 28, 1858 – December 24, 1947) was a painter whose style varied from realism to tonalism, symbolism and impressionism,[1] as well as a printmaker and educator.[2] He was Principal of the Victoria School of Art and Design (now known as NSCAD) from 1898 to 1910. Rosenberg never stopped experimenting; absorbing realism, tonalism, impressionism, symbolism, and even post-impressionism.[3] Writers on the history of art in Nova Scotia call him the "grand old man of Nova Scotian art".[4]
Career
Rosenberg, a first generation Polish-American by birth, was born in New Brunswick, New Jersey,[2] and grew up in Chicago[1] where he first studied art.[5] He then travelled with his teacher Frank Duveneck and other students[6] to Munich (1878), Paris and Florence (1879), and Venice (1880), and studied informally with James McNeill Whistler, during the summer of 1880 in Venice. Whistler interested him in etching, as well as in tonal painting which Rosenberg echoed in paintings later.[2] Also during the five years Rosenberg was closely associated with John Singer Sargent and Arthur B. Davies.[6] Rosenberg also worked at Pont-Aven with Gauguin.[1] He exhibited at the Paris Salon in 1885.[2]
After five years abroad, he moved back to Chicago where he worked on the huge panorama of the Battle of Gettysburg and shared a studio with artist Warren Davis.[6] Then he moved to New York, where he opened a studio and associated with American impressionists known as "The Eight".[6] He contributed to the first exhibition at the Macbeth Gallery in New York opened by William Macbeth in 1892 to exhibit only American paintings, and in two subsequent exhibitions.[1] He also showed his work at the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts, the Boston Art Club, the Art Institute of Chicago and the Brooklyn Art Association.[2] During his time in New York, he worked at the artists' colony at Arkville, New York in the Catskills.[1] In 1896, he moved to Halifax, Nova Scotia,[1] where he became Principal of the Victoria School of Art and Design (now known as NSCAD) from 1898 to 1910.[2] In Halifax, Rosenberg offered private lessons in his studio, including two artists, Edith Smith and Una Gray.[3]
As principal, Rosenberg sought to improve the school as a training place for those concerned with the aesthetic value of art, not commercial art or applied graphic design. In 1903, he succeeded in moving the school to a larger, more well-known building, and in 1908 he became a charter member of the Nova Scotia Museum of Fine Arts (now the Art Gallery of Nova Scotia). In 1909, he married heiress Emily Scarfe and when her father, the town mayor, died,[6] the couple settled into Edgemere, a Victorian mansion in Dartmouth. He resigned as Principal in 1910.[5][2] After his resignation he continued to teach at the Victoria School of Art & Design as a special instructor in lithography and to paint in Halifax and Dartmouth, spending summers in Citronelle, Alabama,[6] until 1934 when his wife passed away and he retired to Citronelle.[2] He died in Citronelle, Alabama on the 24 December 1947.[2]
first exhibition at the Macbeth Gallery, New York, opened by William Macbeth to exhibit only American paintings (1892), and in two subsequent exhibitions;[1]
At the Cowley-Abbott Auction titled An Important Private Collection - Part II, June 8, 2023, lot #139, Girls Gathering Firewood (circa 1886), oil on canvas, signed and inscribed “Halifax” lower left, 20 x 24 ins ( 50.8 x 61 cms ), auction estimate: $6,000.00 - $8,000.00, realized a price of $26,400.00.[11]
^ abcdefghiA Dictionary of Canadian Artists, volumes 1-8 by Colin S. MacDonald, and volume 9 (online only), by Anne Newlands and Judith Parker National Gallery of Canada / Musée des beaux-arts du Canada