Home

About Us

Exhibition Calendar

Artists in Inventory

Gallery Shop

Contact Us

Directions

Fletcher Martin (1904-1979)
32 Page Catalog Available Upon Request

1. He Watches For You
1942, watercolor
11 1⁄2 x 8 3⁄4

2. Left Jab
c.1950, reed pen and brown ink on paper
19 x 24

3. Boxers
c.1952, reed pen and black ink on paper
18 x 24

4. Bullfight
c.1956, conte crayon on paper
18 x 24
5. Billy the Kid
c.1950, gouache on paper
18 x 24
6. Bon Voyage
c.1936, lithograph
19 x 16


7. Strikebreakers
c.1940, gouache on paper
22 x 17
8. Sea Song
c.1950’s, lithograph
11 1⁄2 x 18 1⁄2
9. Gay Head
c.1950’s, gouache on paper
20 x 15

 

 

 

10. Church Service
1943, watercolor
13 3⁄4 x 19
11. Bagnall Dam
1946, sepia pen and ink on paper
12 x 18
12. Women at Beach
c.1960’s, reed pen and ink on paper
18 x 24

13. Horses
c.1950, graphite and
ink wash on paper
18 1⁄4 x 28
14. Untitled (Abstract Sun)
c.1960’s, watercolor
24 x 18 1⁄4
15. Fighters
1958, graphite on paper
23 x 18

16. Subway Sleepers, London
1944, oil on canvas
24 x 26
17. Reclining Nude
1978, oil on canvas
18 x 24
18. The Girl He Left Behind
Spanish Civil War
1937, oil on canvas
23 x 29

19. Day of the Dead, Mexico
1956, oil on canvas
30 x 40
20. Glamour Girl
1948, lithograph
15 x 11

21. Nude with Fan
1977, oil on rag paper
24 x 40


22. Two Fighter Planes
signed "For Reggie from Fletch", 1947, watercolor
7 x 9
23. Nude with Towel
1939, gouache on board
24 x 20
24. Girl with Green Chair
1962, oil on board
33 x 21

25. Race Horses
c.1950, pen and ink on paper
8 1/2 x 11
26. Abstraction
c.1950’s, pen, conte crayon,
pastel on paper
27 x 19
27. Acrobats
c.1960’s, pen, ink and
watercolor on paper
24 x 18

28. Veiled Woman
Casablanca, 1943, sepia pen and ink on paper
29. Girl with Pigtails
c.1940’s, graphite on paper
16 x 11
30. Mississippi Service Club
1941, watercolor
12 x 16

31. Cat
c.1960’s, pen and ink on paper
17 x 14
32. Bullfight
c.1960’s, ink wash on paper
22 x 30
33. Woman with Fan and Handkerchief
1964, reed pen and ink on paper
23 x 18

34. Girl with Green Flowered Hat
c.1960’s, watercolor
22 x 15
35. Vase of Flowers
c.1960’s, watercolor
24 x 18
36. Abstraction
c.1950’s, brush and ink on paper
30 x 22

37. Summer Girl
1934, lithograph
11 x 10
38. Summer Girl
1934, gouache
15 x 12
39. Woman and Baby
c.1960’s, graphite on paper
20 x 16

40. Study for “The Brothers”
1951, reed pen and ink on paper
23 x 19
41. Showers
1933, woodblock print
1st Fletcher Martin show
12 x 9
42. Fawn and Serpent
1933, woodblock print
1st Fletcher Martin show
8 1⁄2 x 12

43. Shizuko
1933, woodblock print
1st Fletcher Martin show
10 x 9
44. Hand Study
c.1950, pen and ink
14 x 11

45. Girl with Hat from Rear
1977, conte crayon
14 x 11


46. Sketch for Soccer Players
1977, reed pen and ink
17 x 14
47. Study for Life Magazine Cover,
Army Nurse
1943, graphite on paper
14 x 10
48. Uncle Sam Needs Your Old Aluminum
1941, color print
14 x 10

49. Baseball Study
1958, reed pen and ink on paper
17 x 15
50. Yellow, Orange and Black Abstract
1958, watercolor
15 x 11
51. Golden Gate Bridge
1958, watercolor
12 x 18

52. Yellow, Green, Red and Black Abstraction
1958, watercolor
15 x 11
53. George Washington Bridge
c.1950, watercolor
11 x 14
54. Iowa Landscape with Pig
1941, sepia pen and ink on paper
10 x 14

55. Iowa Landscape
1941, sepia pen and ink on paper
10 x 14
56. Standing Nude (Rear)
c.1940’s, graphite on paper
18 x 12
57. Football Players
(Study for Lithograph)
c.1950, graphite on paper
14 x 17

58. Herd Girl
1943, sepia pen and ink
10 x 8
59. German Plane,
1943, sepia pen and ink on paper
8 x 10
60. Tracer Fire
(Balcony of Aletti Hotel)
sepia pen and ink on paper
8 x 10

61. German Prison Camp,
North Africa
(appears in Life Magazine)
sepia pen & ink on paper
8 x 10
62. German Tank
1943, graphite on paper
8 x 10
63. Fighter Training Center
1943, sepia pen and ink on paper
5 x 8

64. West Side Highway at
Albany Street
1950, sepia pen and ink on paper
11 x 14
65. Triborough Bridge to Queens
1950, sepia pen and ink on paper
11 x 14
66. West Side Highway at Pier 34
1950, sepia pen and ink
11 x 14

67. Man Swinging Ax
c.1950, ink and watercolor on paper
15 x 11
68. Tree Workers
1948, gouache on board
16 x 15
69. Shoveling Miner
c.1950, reed pen and ink
18 x 12

70. Nude with Hands in Lap
c.1950’s, pen and ink
12 x 9
71. Lumber Machine
1954, gouache on paper
15 x 20
72. Lumber Machine
1954, pen and ink
9 x 12

73. Sunbathers
1936, lithograph
21 x 16
74. Reclining Man with Hand to Head
1938, pencil on yellow trace paper
14 x 22
75. Hill 609
1943, sepia pen and ink on paper
11 x 14



76. Nightscape
c.1935, oil on canvas
20 x 24
77. Evening Landscape
c.1950, oil on masonite
20 x 24
78. Boat Basin
1958, oil on canvas
20 x 24



79. Abstraction
c.1950, watercolor and
gouache on paper
18 x 24
80. Black and White Abstraction
c.1950, watercolor and enamel paint
18 x 24
81. Abstraction
c.1950, watercolor
22 x 30



82. Abstraction
c.1950, ink wash on paper
17 x 22
83. Barn Near Prairie Village
c.1940, watercolor
15 x 21
84. Two Man Saw
1948, gouache on paper
10 x 7



85. Study for Tree Workers
1948, pen and ink on paper
86. Fallers
1948, pen and ink on paper
9 x 5
87. Bullfighter
c.1960, watercolor
19 x 23



88. Cowboy and Girl and
Bucking Horse
1952, pen, ink and gouache
on paper
20 x 15
89. Stormy Weather
c.1942, lithograph
19 x 12 1⁄2
90. His Swing Did Not Hit
c.1950, watercolor
9 x 12



91. Baseball Study
c.1940, pen on paper
9 x 12
92. Nashville Girl
1977, pastel on paper
24 x 18
93. Girls at Beach
ink on paper
13 1⁄2 x 10



94. Girls at Beach
Artist Proof, lithograph
14 x 9 1⁄2
95. Girl With Hat and Flowers in Chair
c.1960’s, ink and watercolor
14 x 11
96. Girls at Beach with Hats
lithograph
14 x 11

97. Girl Combing Hair
c.1960, oil on canvas
16 x 14

Fletcher Martin - Personal Background Information

Fletcher Martin was remarkable in his time and would be so now. He grew up poor in isolated, rural areas of America with no cultural opportunities, never seeing formal art until he was in his late teens or early twenties. He did not graduate from high school. Many artists started this way but Martin is unique in that he launched an art career during the Depression at the age of thirty, and it is as if he had sent up a rocket. His first exhibit, a show of woodcuts in 1933 at the Dalzell Hatfield Galleries in Los Angeles, was followed in 1934 by a one man show at the Fine Arts Gallery of San Diego. The show was an instant success, creating momentum that would ensure his future.

In seven short years Fletcher Martin had a one man show in the Los Angeles Country Museum of Art, created the North Hollywood High School auditorium mural (a WPA Art Project), won a competition for a mural in the Federal Building in San Pedro, California, and began teaching at The Art Center School in Los Angeles. During the same period the Museum of Modern Art in New York purchased his painting Trouble in Frisco for its permanent collection, and the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York purchased his painting, Juliet.

Martin was born in Palisade, Colorado in 1904. His father moved the family every few years, buying up small newspapers throughout Colorado, Idaho, and Washington. The whole family worked on the papers and Martin learned everything about printing; useful as a trade but even more so for an artist. He escaped home at fifteen, supporting himself as a migrant worker, traveling the rails on boxcars across Washington and Oregon. To his credit, instead of feeling that life had treated him badly he immersed himself in the adventure and began a long process of self-education in what he termed “Osmosis University.”

The years in Osmosis University saw him serve in the Navy as a signalman, take up boxing, begin drawing and painting to entertain his shipmates, and work as a printer. He also befriended artists and intellectuals of the day such as the famous Mexican muralist David Siqueiros, William Saroyan, Nathaniel West, and Budd Schulberg. By the time he graduated he had no pretensions- he did the work that art demands wherever he found himself. His first love was painting, but he also set type on posters, created frescoes, and designed bas-relief sculpture panels for a county courthouse. Later in life he illustrated a number of editions of books that included Jack London’s The Sea Wolf and Upton Sinclair’s The Jungle, Sports Illustrated had him document the second Rocky Marciano-Ezzard Charles fight, and he even documented the production of newsprint for Fortune magazine.

In 1943 Martin accepted a Life assignment to work in North Africa and Tunisia as a World War II artist-war correspondent. In 1944 he was also sent to cover Normandy and spent time during heavy V2 bombings in London. Drawings and prints from this period are included in this exhibit, as well as an unusual and somber painting, The Subway Sleepers, thought to be drawn from the 150 foot deep shelter under the Cumberland Hotel in London.

During his lifetime Martin held prestigious positions as artist-in-residence at universities and exhibited in many one man shows. His war drawing, The Scream, would be added to the Metropolitan’s collection, and Cherry Twice would become part of The Whitney Museum of American Art collection in New York. The commissions and prizes piled up and the self-taught painter became a National Academician who once moved with his family in a covered wagon on the plains, was commissioned by NADA, only four years before his death, to document the launch of Apollo-Soyuz test and the Viking probe preparation at Cape Kennedy.

Holdings:
Metropolitan Museum; Museum of Modern Art; Whitney Museum of American Art; Library of Congress; Rockhill Nelson Gallery in Kansas City; Los Angeles Museum; Florida Gulf Coast Art Center; Cranbrook Museum; Davenport Museum; Denver Museum; Carleton College in Minnesota; Houston Museum; State University of Iowa; Tweed Gallery; International Business Machines; Addison Gallery of American Art; Brandeis University; Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts; San Francisco Museum; Albany Institute of History and Art; Los Angeles County Fair Association; Witte Memorial Museum; Butler Institute of American ; University of Maine.

Awards and Prizes:
1935: First Los Angeles Museum Prize; 1937, 1938,1939 United States Government Section of Fine Art Awards for Murals in San Pedro, California, La Mesa, Texas; Kellogg, Idaho; 1939 Second Los Angeles Prize; 1947 Lippincott Prize at Pennsylvania Academy; 1949 Altman Prize at National Academy; 1953 Clark Prize at National Academy; 1951 Merit Award at Art Directors Club of Chicago; 1953 Gold Medal at Philadelphia Art Directors Club; 1955 The Art Directors Club Gold Medal.

Exhibited at all important national exhibitions:
Carnegie; Corcoran; Metropolitan Museum; National Academy; Pennsylvania Academy; Americans 1942 at Museum of Modern Art; Venice Biennale; Touring exhibitions in England, France, Italy, South Africa, and Central and South America; Twenty-five one-man shows in museums and galleries in the United States.

Teaching Appointments and Assignments:
Art Center School in Los Angeles; Artist in Residence at University of Iowa; Director of Painting at Kansas City Art Institute; Art Students League; University of Florida, Visiting Professor of Art; Mills College; Albany Institute of History and Art; Claremont College; University of Minnesota ; Castle Hill Foundation at Ipswich Massachusetts; San Antonio Art Institute; Northern Michigan College; Washington State University; Institute de Arte Cozumel, Mexico; Member guiding faculty, Famous Artists Schools.

Fletcher Gallery . 40 Mill Hill Road . Woodstock, NY 12498
Tel: 845-679-4411 . Fax: 845-679-1008 . Hours: Thurs-Sun 12-6pm
E-mail: info@fletchergallery.com