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Samantha Littlefield Huntley

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Samantha Littlefield Huntley (1865–1949) was a portrait artist who lived and worked in the Eastern United States and Italy during the early part of the 20th Century.

Portion of St. Louis Post-Dispatch page of November 28, 1909, featuring a headline and an imaginative sketch and part of an article, both by Marguerite Martyn, concerning her interview with artist Samantha Huntley.

Personal life

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Samantha Littlefield was born either in West Troy, New York, or Watervliet, New York, on or about May 16, 1865,[1][2] to Edgar Littlefield (1836–1923) and Abigail Fidelia Tilley (1846-1904). She had a sister, Grace Littlefield Dunham.

She was married to Frank Hall Huntley.[3] They had a son, Grant Huntley (1887–1953), who was a civil engineer[4] and became a professor at Union College.[5]

According to her passport applications in 1905 and 1907, she stood 5 feet, 4-1/2 inches, and had brown hair with blue eyes. She had a full face with "rather dark" complexion and a "rather decided" chin. Her witness on both occasions was Abigail M. Littlefield.[1][2]

In 1912, she was living in Albany, New York,[6] and in 1913 and 1915 she was in Rome, Italy.[7][8]

Huntley died in Manhattan, New York, at the age of 84 on June 20, 1949. She was buried in Albany Rural Cemetery, Menands, New York.

Education

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Huntley studied with artists Jules Lefebvre and Eugène Grasset in Paris, France.[4][6]

While with Lefebvre, she noticed that her instructor, in line with the "innate politeness of the French masters," was giving her "pretty compliments" instead of accurate criticism.[4]

I found it amounted to sex discrimination, such a matter of custom and a habit so fixed that it was with the greatest difficulty I made Jules Lefebvre understand that I had come all the way to Paris to have my faults pointed out, not my perfections.

When at last he did understand, the good man did me the honor to ask me to come to his studio every week with my work for criticism. Then we became such good friends that today, as he writes to me, I don't feel any different than if he were my own grandfather.[4]

Professional life

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In 1907, she was an art teacher living at 60 Maple Avenue, Troy, New York.[2] She taught in the Emma Willard School in Buffalo, New York, for "a number of years."[5]

Huntley replied to a 1909 question asked by St. Louis Post-Dispatch journalist Marguerite Martyn as to the reason for a then-current compliment to a woman artist that "she paints just like a man!"[4]

You must remember that the artistic emancipation of woman is not more than 25 years old. The Julian [cq] academies were the first established to benefit women. It is only within twelve years that women have been admitted to the Beaux Arts to study upon equal terms with men. . . . It is my belief that actually the few women who pursue the study of art today are painting better than the majority of men in the profession."[4]

John Vanderpoel by Samantha Huntley[9]

In March 1910, Huntley was in Madison, Wisconsin, where she was painting, then she returned to St. Louis, Missouri, to do some more portraits. She was noted as "a master draughtsman, and one of the most celebrated portrait painters of the day."[10]

In December 1911 twelve of her oil portraits were on display at the Detroit Institute of Arts, three of the subjects being from the Detroit area. They represented DIA director A.H. Griffith and Mrs. Charles L. Palms and Isabel Palms. Another represented John J. Glennon, Catholic archbishop of St. Louis.[11][12]

She later had studios in Albany, New York; Rochester, New York, and Madison, Wisconsin.[5]

In 1923, she was exhibited among a collection by "much-noted American artists" of paintings of "well known citizens" of Madison, Wisconsin.[13] By 1935, her portrait of artist John Vanderpoel was hanging in a "place of honor in [the] Vanderpoel memorial in Ridge park," Chicago.[14] Other notable people she painted were Wisconsin Senator William F. Vilas and New York Governors Frank W. Higgins and Martin H. Glynn.[6]

Hadley portrait case

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Governor Hadley

A group of supporters of Missouri Governor Herbert Spencer Hadley decided that the Republican Party would pay for a portrait of him. Mrs. Huntley was commissioned to do the work, which was to hang in the state Capitol building[7] or in the Executive Mansion.[6][15]

Hadley had retained attorney Louis Henry by January 1912. "It appears that the governor's lower lip is fuller than it believed it ought to be and he instructed the artist to remedy it. . . . When the committee charged that the mouth did not look like the governor's, Mrs. Huntley explained that the governor ordered it" to be painted that way. The painting was in storage.[16]

Mrs. Huntley sued Colonel Schoenberg, Sheriff Louis Nolte, General Frank Rumbold and U.S. District Attorney Charles A. Houts, who had suggested the picture be painted. Houts was served with a subpoena at the Great Northern Hotel in Chicago on June 18.[17] Hadley and Nolte were also summonsed into the Cook County, Illinois, Circuit Court to show cause why they should not be compelled to pay $1,500 for the portrait.[18] All were in Chicago for the 1912 Republican National Convention.[6] Only a thousand dollars was received in donations, and she did not receive any of it, a petition by Mrs. Hadley to the Circuit Court asserted.[18]

On June 21, 1912, the St. Louis Post-Dispatch printed excerpts from many letters that Mrs. Huntley had written to a friend in St. Louis while the artist was in Jefferson City to work on the portrait. Hadley was often too busy to pose, Mrs. Huntley wrote, going as long as two weeks without a session. He dictated letters and chewed gum while she tried to paint him. He smoked cigars, which distorted his face and made him difficult to see. He insisted that he be painted wearing a blue tie with white polka dots because that was the style he always wore. They agreed on a solid color tie,[6][19] but it was later written that the portrait was rejected because the dots were omitted.[19] [20] There was also a disagreement over the shape of the governor's mouth, according to Mrs. Huntley. The St. Louis Star said, "After placing several different mouths on the picture[,] Hadley and his political supporters declared that it did not look much like him," so they refused to pay the artist.[18] In 1913, a committee of the State Legislature refused to pay her bill of $1,185[15] because it did not look like the governor.[6]

By May 1913, Mrs. Huntley had brought suit for $1,185 against Houts and three other members of the Missouri State Legislature who had refused to pay her bill because the portrait had been changed after its completion. According to Mrs. Huntley, Hadley had ordered her to "modify the hard expression."[7]

After trial, in October 1915 a jury awarded her damages of $900.[21]

Earthquake relief

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In January 1915, she led a relief expedition to Avezzano, Italy, where an earthquake had leveled the town. She brought tents and food, and she helped care for survivors in the women's hospital and a girls' school.[8][22]

References

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  1. ^ a b Passport application, June 1, 1905
  2. ^ a b c Passport application, June 27, 1907
  3. ^ Daughters of the American Revolution, Lineage Book, 1914, volume 113>
  4. ^ a b c d e f Marguerite Martyn, "Marguerite Martyn Finds One Woman Who Can Paint Pictures Just as Cleverly as Any Man Can," St. Louis Post-Dispatch, November 28, 1909, image 23
  5. ^ a b c "Earthquake Heroine Well Known Artist," Buffalo Evening News, New York, January 19, 1915, image 15]
  6. ^ a b c d e f g "Inside Story of Failure of Hadley Portrait Told in Letters of Woman Artist Who Painted It," St. Louis Post-Dispatch, June 21, 1912, image 13
  7. ^ a b c "Hadley Is Sued by an Artist," The Milan News, Kansas, May 8, 1913, image 3
  8. ^ a b "Avezzano Is Now Tomb of the Dead," The Evening Republican, Columbus, Indiana, January 18, 1915, page 1
  9. ^ "Beverly Labors for Beauty and Finds Treasure," Chicago Tribune, July 28, 1935, image 10
  10. ^ "Art Notes," St. Louis Star, March 6, 1910, image 14
  11. ^ "Mrs. Samantha L. Huntley," Bulletin of the Detroit Museum of Art, Vol. 6, No. 1, January 1912, pages 11-12
  12. ^ "Eastern Artist Exhibits Portraits," Detroit Free Press, December 14, 1911, image 4
  13. ^ "Christmas Exhibit," The Capital Times, Madison, Wisconsin, December 24, 1923, image 12
  14. ^ "Beverly Labors for Beauty and Finds Treasure," Chicago Tribune, July 26, 1935, image 10
  15. ^ a b "Hadley Demanded Tie Like Teddy's, Painter of Portrait Asserts," The St. Louis Star, April 17, 1913, image 5
  16. ^ "Lower Lip Too Prominent," The Chanute Daily Tribune, Kansas, January 22, 1912, page 5
  17. ^ "Houts Must Tell of Hadley Picture," The St. Louis Star, June 18, 1912, image 2
  18. ^ a b c "Hadley's Wish to Look 'Swell' Spoils Picture," The St. Louis Star, June 19, 1912, image 5
  19. ^ a b "Hadley Polka Dot Tie Banished by Artist," St. Louis Post-Dispatch, August 11, 1911, image 1
  20. ^ "Governor Hadley's Necktie," Nebraska State Journal, April 18, 1913, image 6
  21. ^ "$900 for Hadley Picture," Chicago Tribune, October 28, 1915, image 13
  22. ^ Alice Rohe, United Press, The Daily Gate City, Keokuk, Iowa, January 18, 1915, image 1