Wednesday, November 10, 2021

Mel Stark Painting to Auction

Earlier we had written a post about Mel Stark centered around his exhibition at Lehigh. Through Live Auctioneers, we learned that a painting of his is coming up for auction on January 22, 2022.  Winter Brook is an oil on canvas that is unsigned, but carries a statement from his daughter. The auctioneers estimate is $1700-$2200 from Florida's Broward Auction Gallery. 


Winter Brook by Mel Stark

Winter Brook by Mel Stark (unframed)


Interestingly, the catalog bio with the painting was quite enlightening. We share it here in its entirety as it provides a bit more insight into Mr. Stark as a person that goes beyond our initial post. 


BIOGRAPHY:
A leading figure in eastern Pennsylvania, Mel Stark was a plein-air painter and teacher who, with his good friend, Walter Baum, was devoted to enriching the cultural life of the Allentown area. He was also a key painter at the artists colony in Rockport, Massachusetts and in his later years, painted at Longboat Key Art Center in Florida. He taught at the Kline-Baum Art School, and Cedar Crest and Muhlenberg Colleges in Allentown, and was committed to the tradition of impressionist landscape painting. However, his reputation waned in the 1960s, when the public lost interest in impressionism and focused more on modernist movements. He was born in Honesdale, Pennsylvania, and earned a degree from Stroudsburg State College in Physical Education, but he had already started painting and subsequently abandoned Physical Education. He later studied art at the University of Pennsylvania, Syracuse University, and the Philadelphia Museum School. Major influences on him were landscape painters Cullen Yates, Walter Baum, and Anthony Thieme. He studied privately with Yates in New York, and Yates encouraged Stark to go to Paris, which he did but hung around the cafes with artists rather than attending any academy. In 1926, he returned to Allentown and worked for several years as a physical education teacher, but then came into contact with Baum with whom he studied art and then ended up being a teacher at the Baum School of Art. He married Ann Gomery with whom he had two children, and they moved into a farmhouse in Zionsville near Allentown. In addition to having an art career, he was an active promoter of the Allentown Art Museum, which he served as both trustee and director.