Sunday, May 12, 2019

Henry Strater, The Ogunquit Art Colony, The Ogunquit Musuem of American Art

We recently posted a bit about Professor Quirk's efforts to bring art to the Lehigh University community through an annual exhibition. (We are amazed that Lehigh's Museum has not yet put on a retrospective of his work given his importance to the institution's development.) In this post we will highlight one of the painters who had a work in the 17th exhibition- Henry Strato, and how his life overlapped with Quirk's in several interesting ways. 

Interestingly, Henry Strater's profile has parallels to Waldo Pierce in that both were painters who spent time in Maine, had large families and were close to Ernest Hemingway.  

Henry Strater came of age in the Lost Generation after the first World War.  He attended Princeton, where he met F. Scott Fitzgerald;serving as the inspiration for the character Burne Halliday in F. Scott Fitzgerald's novel "This Side of Paradise."
"I was the model for Burne Halliday, I regret to say," Strater once said. "Why? Well, I was pretty much of a wild Indian."
He later went to Paris in the 1920s to study at the Academy Grande Chaumiere and with Edouard Vuillard. There his path crossed with Ernest Hemingway, beginning a life long relationship that would include fishing and a few portraits. 
Portrait of Ernest Hemingway by Henry H. Strater
A Strater portrait of Ernest Hemingway later was used for the cover of Carlos Baker's biography of the Nobel-winning writer.
He also illustrated the controversial "Cantos" of poet Ezra Pound.

Island Lillies by Henry H. Strater

Happy Birthday Adam by Henry H. Strater

Strater was a versatile painter  and his portraits, watercolors and other realistic works are or have been displayed at the Philadelphia Museum of Art, the City Art Museum of St. Louis, the Detroit Institute of Arts. Lehigh University Art Gallery and the Ogunquit (Maine) Museum of American Art, a small museum he built in the art colony where he had spent his summers since 1925. You can learn more about the Ogunquir Art Colony through the book "A Century of Color" by Louise Tagard.
Henry Strator painting in Ogunquit Maine

Born in Louisville, Ky., he died at 91 in Palm Beach, Florida in 1987.
The interesting parallels with Quirk are many. First, both had homes in coastal Maine (Ogunquit and Saco) and Arizona (Verde Valley and Prescott). Both painted and would effectively create art museums that would continue as their legacies. Both studied art in Paris and would paint a variety of subjects including maritime scenes.  We don't know the details of their relationship, but it is fair to assume that they knew each other; to what degree we do not know. 

Tuesday, May 7, 2019

Francis Quirk Brings Art to The Lehigh Valley Through the Annual Exhibition of American Contemporary Paintings


Over time our feeling has grown that Quirk's legacy extends beyond his work as a painter which first drew him to our attention. Then, we saw how his reach extended to his students, such as Helen Bacon Hoffman.  But perhaps equally important is his work in bringing arts to the Lehigh Valley.

In addition to bringing prominent artists and emerging trends into the campus galleries, he organized an Annual Exhibition of American Contemporary Paintings that was supported by Lehigh University alumni Ralph Wilson and his wife. (You can learn more about Ralph Wilson here.

Quirk reached out to six galleries for works including the following:
  • East Hampton 
  • Forum
  • Frank Rehn
  • Kraushaar
  • Midtown
  • Ogunquit
Over time many of these have closed.  We have tried unsuccessfully to find the Ogunquit and East Hampton Galleries.  Frank Rehn's papers are archived and include communications with Quirk that we have not yet focused on. 

At the exhibitions an opening reception was held with hostesses from the community. The exhibited paintings were for sale including one by Professor Quirk. 

The visitors to the exhibition were invited to vote for a favorite painting. This painting would be purchased and added to the permanent collection of Lehigh University




Presenting Artists


  • Elyot Henderson
  • Raymond Mintz
  • James Penney
  • Charles Coiner
  • Robert Eric Moore
  • Henry Strater
  • Joe Lasker
  • Johyn Heliker
  • John Guerin
  • Andree Ruellen
  • Karl Schrag
  • George Picken
  • Cornelus Ruthenberg
  • Kenneth Callahan
  • Jason Schoener
  • James Lechay
  • Ruth Gikow
  • William Thon
  • Jerome Witkin
  • Elsie Manville
  • Tanos Ghikas
  • Raphael Soyer
  • Max Weber
  • Peppino Mangravite
  • Harmon Neill
  • Manuel Ayaso
  • David Lavine
  • Patience Haley
  • Ralph Dubin
  • Francis J. Quirk
  • Roy Moyer
  • Kenneth Evett
  • Balcombe Greene
  • Robert La Hoten
  • Wallace H. Smith
  • Lenore Laine
  • Chris Ritter
  • Seri Berg
  • John Hartell
  • Carolyn Cross
  • Zona

Quirk was helping to boost the careers of these artists by giving them exposure,  an exhibition line on their resumes, a potential museum holding and a potential sale. 

While we have only scratched the surface of the list, we can see a few names that were prominent in the Ogunquit Art Colony including Henry Strater and Elyot Henderson. Henry Strater would be instrumental in the founding of the Ogunquit Museum of American Art.  You can learn more about Strater through this Esquire profile found here

We do have high quality images of this pamphlet and are seeking to master posting them in a better format. 







Friday, May 3, 2019

Francis Quirk's Final Resting Place- Laurel Hill Cemetery in Saco Maine

Through a line in a newspaper obituary we had long believed that Francis Quirk was buried at Laurel Hill Cemetery in Saco, Maine. However, we were unable to confirm that in our searches through gravestone sites and cemetery directories. 

We also had heard apocryphal stories surrounding his actual internment that left us a bit uncertain to what actually transpired. 

However, a relative has graciously provided this photo of Francis and Anna Quirk's tombstone at Laurel Hill Cemetery in Saco, Maine

The Latin(?) phrase below "Ars longa vita brevist est" did not translate well in google translate, so we would welcome feedback from our erudite readership as to the actual meaning. 

Francis Quirk Painter tombstone, Saco Maine
Tombstone for Artist Francis Quirk and his wife Anna in Saco Maine. 

Sunday, April 28, 2019

Pastel Portrait of Francis Quirk's Daughter Ada-Lee

Ada-Lee Quirk is the only surviving child of Francis Quirk. She recently reached out to us and has graciously provided an image of a pastel portrait of herself at age 11. 

Image of pastel portrait of Ada-Lee Quirk  as an 11 year old  by Francis Quirk
Pastel Portrait of Ada-Lee Quirk at age 11 by Francis Quirk
Ada-Lee also has several other works, so we are excited and anxiously hoping to see more images coming before too long. 

Also, a collector in Pennsylvania has graciously sent us personal letters and catalogs from a few exhibitions that Quirk was involved in. We are just beginning to dig into them. These will provide more information about him, his work and his efforts to bring arts to the Lehigh Valley region. 

Monday, April 22, 2019

Francis Quirk Watercolor Painting Emerges in Florida

Recently, a friend of this effort provided an image of a Francis Quirk painting that was previously unknown to us. The watercolor is hanging in a Florida home it depicts an early springtime scene with bare trees, but plantings in bloom. We do not know the exact location or date of the work. 

But one elements of Quirk's style is the depiction of the leafless tree at the right of the painting. It appears to mirror portions of the lumberjack painting we highlighted in this earlier post

Given that Quirk was in Pennsylvania during most of his springtimes, we suspect it was painted while he was either teaching at Ogontz College or Lehigh University.


Artist Francis J. Quirk,  Watercolor early spring, Francis Quirk, Pennsylvania
Early Springtime Watercolor by Francis J. Quirk

Friday, October 5, 2018

Canadian Family Heirloom is a Quirk Maritime Painting

We recently heard from a gentleman in Montreal Canada who was fortunate to marry into the co-ownership of a Francis Quirk Maritime painting. He discovered it in storage with other cherished items in his home. It was originally purchased in Pennsylvania and we are seeking information on the executive and his wife who originally displayed it prominently in their home.

Pennsylvania Painters Francis Quirk  maritime watercolor boat sailboat
Maritime painting by Francis J. Quirk

The watercolor is dated 1939, so it was executed when Quirk was 32, teaching at Ogontz College and still seeking to establish himself as a commercial artist.  He had a fondness for painting boats that would last throughout his lifetime and when retiring he stated that he looked forward to returning to Maine to paint. This painting could have been executed in any number of locations including Maine, Cape Cod Massachusetts or even from memory in Pennsylvania.

The owner of the image finds it striking and lifelike as he stated "you can almost hear the waves rippling off the bow." Clearly Quirk's talent for realistic display shows through in the detailed rigging and the way the sails are almost tangibly filled with air. 


Quirk, Francis Quirk, Francis J. Quirk, Artist Maine, Artist Pennsylvania
Maritime watercolor painting by Francis J. Quirk as in frame
And of course Professor Quirk leaves nothing to chance with his signature. A Francis Quirk signature is never ambiguous. 

Signature of Francis J. Quirk



Saturday, September 15, 2018

Quirk Watercolor of Boats in a Harbor

This is the third and final post on the recent influx of images graciously provided by a collector of Francis Quirk's art. 

This rather loosely painted watercolor image features a man in a dory containing a lobster trap in the foreground, a fishing trawler as the dominant image and a background of wharf buildings beneath an overcast sky.  It was painted in 1937. The content reflects the time when fishing vessels were migrating from sail to engine power and lobster traps were still made of wood. 


image of fishing vessels in Maine Harbor, Quirk
1937 Watercolor Painting of Fishing Boats in Harbor by Francis Quirk

We do not know the location of the port. It probably was near Quirk's Maine home in Kinney Shores, so it could be Kennebunkport or Saco.  We have seen a building similar to the one at the right of the painting in another Quirk watercolor. while both are gray with an ascending exterior stairway, the roofs and fenestration are different. That painting is shown below.