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Charles Bolsius

Charles William Bolsius (June 23, 1907 – March 23, 1983) was a Dutch-born American painter. He was born in 's-Hertogenbosch, the Netherlands, the youngest in an upper-middle-class bourgeoisie family. His father ran the regional Gas Works and Bolsius formally studied art in The Hague before emigrating to the United States and moving to New Mexico in the early 1930s. He quickly assimilated into the art communities of Albuquerque and Santa Fe showing with the significant artist of the period. Bolsius had artistically matured within Dutch - German Expressionism. His woodblock handprints, using subject matter from the American West, capitalized on flat, bold, stark patterns and rough-hewn effects that were hallmarks of the expressionist woodblock tradition. His heavy light-filled moody paintings with cloudy brooding skies combined expressionistic influences with expansive western landscapes and the optimism of American impressionism. His work was critically recognized and exhibited at major museums and galleries throughout New Mexico and Arizona.

Charles Bolsius
Born
Charles William Bolsius

June 23, 1907 (1907-06-23)
's-Hertogenbosch, Netherlands
DiedMarch 23, 1983(1983-03-23) (aged 75)
NationalityAmerican
EducationRoyal Academy of Art in the Hague
Known for
MovementExprestionism, Impresionism, Social Realism

Bolsius settled in Tucson in 1934. With his brother, Adrian "Pete" Bolsius, and sister-in-law Nan Bolsius the trio purchased the adobe ruins of the Fort Lowell Post Traders Store, (seven miles northeast of downtown Tucson) rebuilding it over the next decade into one of the great examples of Pueblo Revival architecture in Arizona.[1] Together they established the Fort Lowell Arts Colony. Bolsius is known for his paintings, woodblock prints, architectural design, and hand-carved Spanish colonial revival furniture and doors.[2]

Charles Bolsius, drawing, New Mexico Adobe

Early life and education edit

Charles Bolsius was born in 's-Hertogenbosch, Holland, to Caroline Maria Wilhelmei Bijvoet (1864–1935) and Petrus Nieduas Josephus Mariannus Bolsius (1859–1934). His family moved to the village of Voorburg in 1922.[3] In 1924, at the age of 17, Charles enrolled in art school. He spent five years at the Koninklijke Academie van Beeldende Kunsten Den Haag (Royal Academy of Art, The Hague).[4]

Bolsius's sophisticated artistic sensibility was influenced by German and Dutch expressionists including Leo Gestel, Jan Toorop, Kees van Dongen, and Emil Nolde. His known early work was primarily dramatic land- and cityscapes. His artistic ability and style developed within the school of Dutch and German Expressionism in the late 1920s and these stylistic threads would continue to permeate through and influence his entire artistic career. At 23 years old Bolsius left Holland and headed to the United States to stay with his Brother Adrian “Pete” Bolsius and his wife Nan Bolsius in Albuquerque.

 
Watercolor by Charles Bolsius

Career edit

The 23-year old Bolsius arrived at the port of San Pedro, Los Angeles California, on October 28, 1930. Arriving in the western United States, Bolsius's art began to embrace the scale and environmental tonality of the American West. He began painting the environment of New Mexico, and lived in Santa Fe, Albuquerque and in the Sandia Mountains in the village of San Antonito, Bernalillo County, New Mexico. During the early 1930s, he exhibited across the state and began receiving critical attention.

In the mid-1930s the Bolsius family moved to the San Francisco Bay Area before settling in Tucson, Arizona. On a sketching trip to the rural outskirts of Tucson in the farming community of Old Fort Lowell, Bolsius discovered the melting adobe ruins of the 1873 Fort Post Traders Store. He brought his brother and sister-in-law back to the site and after a lengthy discussion, the tree decided to make an offer and embark on re-constructing the dilapidated rambling building.[5]

The project received local and national attention, was published in journals, and newspapers and became a cultural hub. The project, named Las Saetas was recognized as an important example of Pueblo Revival architectural design and was photographed by numerous noted architectural photographers.

Bolsius continued to produce and show his art through the 1930s and 1940s, exhibiting in Arizona, New Mexico, Utah, and San Francisco. Bolsius served in WWII. Returning home from the European theater he worked with Nan on the reconstruction of the Fort Lowell Commissary naming the project El Cuartel Viejo The Old Barracks. After the completion of that project, he designed and built his own home, the Charles Bolsius House over a three decade period. Bolsius was a member of many Tucson art organizations. The architectural projects had created a vehicle to develop and hone a Spanish colonial revival wood carving skill that was rooted in the New Mexico WPA furniture movement. He began professionally producing doors and furniture in the 1940s which continued through the 1970s. His final building project was the burnt adobe, late Territorial Revival LeaChar House in the Tanque Verde, Arizona area east of Tucson. The final project included classic hand carved woodwork and doors. The screened Arizona Room was constructed of the dismantled gate that had original been created for Las Saetas.

His woodwork can be seen throughout the old Fort Lowell Historic District, Arizona State University Louise Lincoln Kerr House and Studio,[6] in homes in Tucson's Catalina Foothills (including the front door of 2540 East Camino La Zorrela), the Church Doors of Sasabe, Arizona (which were lent out to the film Lilies of the Field[7]) and the dining room table at Rancho De La Osa in Sasabe, Arizona.

Bolsius died in March 1983 in Tucson, Pima County, Arizona.[8]

Legacy edit

Bolsius's major architectural work and examples of his carved doors are clustered in the Old Fort Lowell Historic District in Tucson, Arizona. The rebuilt Fort Lowell Commissary that he named El Cuartel Viejo was purchased by the City of Tucson with major restoration anticipated in 2023-2024. The buildings will be open to the public as part of the cultural multi-million dollar redevelopment and historic imperative program for Fort Lowell Park.[9]

Although Bolsius showed widely in New Mexico and Arizona in the 1930 and 1940s he did not pressure rigorous promotion or sale of his art. As a result, his paintings are all privately owned and currently not part of any public permanent collection.

Art exhibitions edit

  • 1931, Sandia Park Store, Sandia Mountains, New Mexico
  • 1932, Museum of New Mexico, Annual Exhibition Painters and Sculptors of the Southwest, Santa Fe, New Mexico
  • 1932, Museum of New Mexico, Paintings by “Sheldon Parsons, Carl Bolsius, and Hubert Rogers,” Santa Fe, New Mexico
  • 1932, Santa Fe Museum, Exhibit of Bolsius's paintings and woodblocks, Santa Fe, New Mexico
  • 1932, Romero Gallery, Southwestern Artists, Albuquerque, New Mexico
  • 1933, The University of New Mexico, Art League of New Mexico, Group Show, Albuquerque, New Mexico
  • 1933, Romero Gallery, Albuquerque Society of Artists First Annual Exhibit, Albuquerque, New Mexico
  • 1934, Carlito Springs Dining Room, Tijeras Canyon, New Mexico
  • 1934, Museum of New Mexico, Annual Exhibition Painters and Sculptors of the Southwest, Santa Fe, New Mexico
  • 1934, Beach Auditorium, Santa Cruz Art League Statewide Art Exhibit, Santa Cruz, California
  • 1938, Tucson Fine Arts Association, Art Rental Association
  • 1939, The University of Arizona Art Department, The Paintings of Charles Bolsius, Tucson, Arizona
  • 1940, Women's Club Silver Tea Exhibition, Las Sientas, Tucson, Arizona
  • 1940, Temple Art Gallery, Tucson Fine Arts Association 4th Annual Old Pueblo Open Show, Tucson, Arizona
  • 1940, Studio Strange, Tucson, Arizona
  • 1940, Tucson Center of Arts and Crafts, Tucson, Arizona
  • 1941, Temple Art Gallery, Palette and Brush Show, Tucson, Arizona
  • 1941, Tucson Fine Arts Association, Tucson, Arizona
  • 1941, Temple Art Gallery, Exhibition of Southwestern Oils, Tucson, Arizona
  • 1942, Springville Annual National Art Exhibit, Springerville, Utah
  • 1943, Museum of New Mexico, Olive Rush, Helen Needham, Caroline Pickard, Charles Bolsius, J. H. Sharp, Santa Fe, New Mexico.
  • 1944, Aiea Hospital WWII Collection, Aiea Hospital at Pearl Harbor, Hawaii
  • 1946, Springville Annual National Art Exhibit, Springerville, Utah
  • 1947, Springville Annual National Art Exhibit, Springerville, Utah
  • 1947, Southern Arizona Bank And Trust Gallery, Tucson, Arizona
  • 1947, Gumps, San Francisco, California
  • 1949, Arizona State Fair, Art Exhibition, Phoenix, Arizona

Architectural works edit

Bolsius designed and built only a handful of architectural projects. He worked with architectural designer Veronica Hughart, who incorporated his doors and woodwork into her projects. Following is a list of some of Bolsius's most important works, which are located in Tucson unless otherwise noted.

  • Las Saetas, redesign and construction of Fort Lowell Post Traders Store, Old Fort Lowell (1934)
  • El Cuartel Viejo, redesign and construction of Fort Lowell Commissary, Old Fort Lowell (1942–1949)
  • The Charles Bolsius House, Old Fort Lowell (1949–1972)
  • LeaChar House, 1771 North King Street, Tanque Verde, Tucson, Arizona (1979)

Doors and woodwork edit

  • Sasabe Chapel, Sasabe, Arizona (1941)
  • Issadro O. Ochoa House / Louise M. Murray Casita, 5328 E Fort Lowell Road (Old Fort Lowell), Tucson, Arizona (1948)
  • Louise Lincoln Kerr House and Studio, 6110 N Scottsdale Rd, Scottsdale, Arizona (1948–1959)
  • Casita Mesquite, 4500 North Camino Del Obispo, Tucson Arizona (1956), Bolsius Doors (1970)
  • S. Bayard Colgate House, 4100 North Avenida Del Cazador, Flecha Caída Estates, Tucson, Arizona (1959)
  • Backus Otto House, 2540 East Camino La Zorrela, Tucson, Arizona (1959)
  • Casa Cheruy, 3031 North Craycaroft Road, (Old Fort Lowell), Tucson, Arizona, Veronica Hughart designed addition with Bolsius door (c. 1965)
  • Nora and Dr. James W. Pickrell Ranch, Nogales Arizona, Veronica Hughart designed (1965)
  • Kathryn L. and Horace B. Woodward House, 2841 North Orlando Avenue, Tucson, Arizona (1969)
  • Cross Farm, 5825 East Cloud Road, Tucson, Arizona, Veronica Hughart designed (1969)
  • Priscilla G. Timpkin Estate, 8451 East Cloud Road, Tucson, Arizona, Veronica Hughart designed (1969)
  • Winifred E. and Daniel R. Davies House, 4100 Avenida Del Cazador, Flecha Caída Estates, Tucson Arizona, (1959) Veronica Hughart designed, Bolsius doors (1972)
  • Episcopal Chapel of the Resurrection, 7110 South 12th Avenue, Tucson, Arizona (1972)

References edit

  1. ^ McKenney, J. Wilson. “Just an Old Army Canteen,” The Desert Magazine, El Centro California, May 1938, 23.
  2. ^ Wadsworth, Beula M. La Saetas, A Home Integrated with Creative Arts and Crafts. School Arts, Stanford University, Mar. 1944, 229.
  3. ^ Afdeling Erfgoed ’s-Hertogenbosch, ’s-Hertogenbosch Heritage Department, Municipal Archive, Charles Bolsius birth certificate, 1907.
  4. ^ Albuquerque Journal, “Showing at the University of Arizona of Albuquerque April 19, Society,” Apr. 17, 1932, 6.
  5. ^ Turner, Teresa, The People of Fort Lowell, Fort Lowell Historic District Board
  6. ^ . Archived from the original on 2017-07-10. Retrieved 2017-07-30.
  7. ^ "Facts about "Lilies of the Field" : Classic Movie Hub (CMH)". Classic Movie Hub – CMH. Retrieved 2022-01-08.
  8. ^ Arizona Daily Star, Bolsius dies; artist was 75, March 23, 1983.
  9. ^ https://tucsondelivers.tucsonaz.gov/pages/fortlowell

External links edit

  • CharlesBolsius.com
  • Work in Old Fort Lowell
  • Old Fort Lowell:
  • Biographical information, at AskArt.com website supporting art auctions

charles, bolsius, charles, william, bolsius, june, 1907, march, 1983, dutch, born, american, painter, born, hertogenbosch, netherlands, youngest, upper, middle, class, bourgeoisie, family, father, regional, works, bolsius, formally, studied, hague, before, emi. Charles William Bolsius June 23 1907 March 23 1983 was a Dutch born American painter He was born in s Hertogenbosch the Netherlands the youngest in an upper middle class bourgeoisie family His father ran the regional Gas Works and Bolsius formally studied art in The Hague before emigrating to the United States and moving to New Mexico in the early 1930s He quickly assimilated into the art communities of Albuquerque and Santa Fe showing with the significant artist of the period Bolsius had artistically matured within Dutch German Expressionism His woodblock handprints using subject matter from the American West capitalized on flat bold stark patterns and rough hewn effects that were hallmarks of the expressionist woodblock tradition His heavy light filled moody paintings with cloudy brooding skies combined expressionistic influences with expansive western landscapes and the optimism of American impressionism His work was critically recognized and exhibited at major museums and galleries throughout New Mexico and Arizona Charles BolsiusBornCharles William BolsiusJune 23 1907 1907 06 23 s Hertogenbosch NetherlandsDiedMarch 23 1983 1983 03 23 aged 75 Tucson ArizonaNationalityAmericanEducationRoyal Academy of Art in the HagueKnown forPaintingFurniture designPrintmakingWoodcarvingMovementExprestionism Impresionism Social RealismBolsius settled in Tucson in 1934 With his brother Adrian Pete Bolsius and sister in law Nan Bolsius the trio purchased the adobe ruins of the Fort Lowell Post Traders Store seven miles northeast of downtown Tucson rebuilding it over the next decade into one of the great examples of Pueblo Revival architecture in Arizona 1 Together they established the Fort Lowell Arts Colony Bolsius is known for his paintings woodblock prints architectural design and hand carved Spanish colonial revival furniture and doors 2 Charles Bolsius drawing New Mexico AdobeContents 1 Early life and education 2 Career 3 Legacy 4 Art exhibitions 5 Architectural works 6 Doors and woodwork 7 References 8 External linksEarly life and education editCharles Bolsius was born in s Hertogenbosch Holland to Caroline Maria Wilhelmei Bijvoet 1864 1935 and Petrus Nieduas Josephus Mariannus Bolsius 1859 1934 His family moved to the village of Voorburg in 1922 3 In 1924 at the age of 17 Charles enrolled in art school He spent five years at the Koninklijke Academie van Beeldende Kunsten Den Haag Royal Academy of Art The Hague 4 Bolsius s sophisticated artistic sensibility was influenced by German and Dutch expressionists including Leo Gestel Jan Toorop Kees van Dongen and Emil Nolde His known early work was primarily dramatic land and cityscapes His artistic ability and style developed within the school of Dutch and German Expressionism in the late 1920s and these stylistic threads would continue to permeate through and influence his entire artistic career At 23 years old Bolsius left Holland and headed to the United States to stay with his Brother Adrian Pete Bolsius and his wife Nan Bolsius in Albuquerque nbsp Watercolor by Charles BolsiusCareer editThe 23 year old Bolsius arrived at the port of San Pedro Los Angeles California on October 28 1930 Arriving in the western United States Bolsius s art began to embrace the scale and environmental tonality of the American West He began painting the environment of New Mexico and lived in Santa Fe Albuquerque and in the Sandia Mountains in the village of San Antonito Bernalillo County New Mexico During the early 1930s he exhibited across the state and began receiving critical attention In the mid 1930s the Bolsius family moved to the San Francisco Bay Area before settling in Tucson Arizona On a sketching trip to the rural outskirts of Tucson in the farming community of Old Fort Lowell Bolsius discovered the melting adobe ruins of the 1873 Fort Post Traders Store He brought his brother and sister in law back to the site and after a lengthy discussion the tree decided to make an offer and embark on re constructing the dilapidated rambling building 5 The project received local and national attention was published in journals and newspapers and became a cultural hub The project named Las Saetas was recognized as an important example of Pueblo Revival architectural design and was photographed by numerous noted architectural photographers Bolsius continued to produce and show his art through the 1930s and 1940s exhibiting in Arizona New Mexico Utah and San Francisco Bolsius served in WWII Returning home from the European theater he worked with Nan on the reconstruction of the Fort Lowell Commissary naming the project El Cuartel Viejo The Old Barracks After the completion of that project he designed and built his own home the Charles Bolsius House over a three decade period Bolsius was a member of many Tucson art organizations The architectural projects had created a vehicle to develop and hone a Spanish colonial revival wood carving skill that was rooted in the New Mexico WPA furniture movement He began professionally producing doors and furniture in the 1940s which continued through the 1970s His final building project was the burnt adobe late Territorial Revival LeaChar House in the Tanque Verde Arizona area east of Tucson The final project included classic hand carved woodwork and doors The screened Arizona Room was constructed of the dismantled gate that had original been created for Las Saetas His woodwork can be seen throughout the old Fort Lowell Historic District Arizona State University Louise Lincoln Kerr House and Studio 6 in homes in Tucson s Catalina Foothills including the front door of 2540 East Camino La Zorrela the Church Doors of Sasabe Arizona which were lent out to the film Lilies of the Field 7 and the dining room table at Rancho De La Osa in Sasabe Arizona Bolsius died in March 1983 in Tucson Pima County Arizona 8 Legacy editBolsius s major architectural work and examples of his carved doors are clustered in the Old Fort Lowell Historic District in Tucson Arizona The rebuilt Fort Lowell Commissary that he named El Cuartel Viejo was purchased by the City of Tucson with major restoration anticipated in 2023 2024 The buildings will be open to the public as part of the cultural multi million dollar redevelopment and historic imperative program for Fort Lowell Park 9 Although Bolsius showed widely in New Mexico and Arizona in the 1930 and 1940s he did not pressure rigorous promotion or sale of his art As a result his paintings are all privately owned and currently not part of any public permanent collection Art exhibitions edit1931 Sandia Park Store Sandia Mountains New Mexico 1932 Museum of New Mexico Annual Exhibition Painters and Sculptors of the Southwest Santa Fe New Mexico 1932 Museum of New Mexico Paintings by Sheldon Parsons Carl Bolsius and Hubert Rogers Santa Fe New Mexico 1932 Santa Fe Museum Exhibit of Bolsius s paintings and woodblocks Santa Fe New Mexico 1932 Romero Gallery Southwestern Artists Albuquerque New Mexico 1933 The University of New Mexico Art League of New Mexico Group Show Albuquerque New Mexico 1933 Romero Gallery Albuquerque Society of Artists First Annual Exhibit Albuquerque New Mexico 1934 Carlito Springs Dining Room Tijeras Canyon New Mexico 1934 Museum of New Mexico Annual Exhibition Painters and Sculptors of the Southwest Santa Fe New Mexico 1934 Beach Auditorium Santa Cruz Art League Statewide Art Exhibit Santa Cruz California 1938 Tucson Fine Arts Association Art Rental Association 1939 The University of Arizona Art Department The Paintings of Charles Bolsius Tucson Arizona 1940 Women s Club Silver Tea Exhibition Las Sientas Tucson Arizona 1940 Temple Art Gallery Tucson Fine Arts Association 4th Annual Old Pueblo Open Show Tucson Arizona 1940 Studio Strange Tucson Arizona 1940 Tucson Center of Arts and Crafts Tucson Arizona 1941 Temple Art Gallery Palette and Brush Show Tucson Arizona 1941 Tucson Fine Arts Association Tucson Arizona 1941 Temple Art Gallery Exhibition of Southwestern Oils Tucson Arizona 1942 Springville Annual National Art Exhibit Springerville Utah 1943 Museum of New Mexico Olive Rush Helen Needham Caroline Pickard Charles Bolsius J H Sharp Santa Fe New Mexico 1944 Aiea Hospital WWII Collection Aiea Hospital at Pearl Harbor Hawaii 1946 Springville Annual National Art Exhibit Springerville Utah 1947 Springville Annual National Art Exhibit Springerville Utah 1947 Southern Arizona Bank And Trust Gallery Tucson Arizona 1947 Gumps San Francisco California 1949 Arizona State Fair Art Exhibition Phoenix ArizonaArchitectural works editBolsius designed and built only a handful of architectural projects He worked with architectural designer Veronica Hughart who incorporated his doors and woodwork into her projects Following is a list of some of Bolsius s most important works which are located in Tucson unless otherwise noted Las Saetas redesign and construction of Fort Lowell Post Traders Store Old Fort Lowell 1934 El Cuartel Viejo redesign and construction of Fort Lowell Commissary Old Fort Lowell 1942 1949 The Charles Bolsius House Old Fort Lowell 1949 1972 LeaChar House 1771 North King Street Tanque Verde Tucson Arizona 1979 Doors and woodwork editSasabe Chapel Sasabe Arizona 1941 Issadro O Ochoa House Louise M Murray Casita 5328 E Fort Lowell Road Old Fort Lowell Tucson Arizona 1948 Louise Lincoln Kerr House and Studio 6110 N Scottsdale Rd Scottsdale Arizona 1948 1959 Casita Mesquite 4500 North Camino Del Obispo Tucson Arizona 1956 Bolsius Doors 1970 S Bayard Colgate House 4100 North Avenida Del Cazador Flecha Caida Estates Tucson Arizona 1959 Backus Otto House 2540 East Camino La Zorrela Tucson Arizona 1959 Casa Cheruy 3031 North Craycaroft Road Old Fort Lowell Tucson Arizona Veronica Hughart designed addition with Bolsius door c 1965 Nora and Dr James W Pickrell Ranch Nogales Arizona Veronica Hughart designed 1965 Kathryn L and Horace B Woodward House 2841 North Orlando Avenue Tucson Arizona 1969 Cross Farm 5825 East Cloud Road Tucson Arizona Veronica Hughart designed 1969 Priscilla G Timpkin Estate 8451 East Cloud Road Tucson Arizona Veronica Hughart designed 1969 Winifred E and Daniel R Davies House 4100 Avenida Del Cazador Flecha Caida Estates Tucson Arizona 1959 Veronica Hughart designed Bolsius doors 1972 Episcopal Chapel of the Resurrection 7110 South 12th Avenue Tucson Arizona 1972 References edit McKenney J Wilson Just an Old Army Canteen The Desert Magazine El Centro California May 1938 23 Wadsworth Beula M La Saetas A Home Integrated with Creative Arts and Crafts School Arts Stanford University Mar 1944 229 Afdeling Erfgoed s Hertogenbosch s Hertogenbosch Heritage Department Municipal Archive Charles Bolsius birth certificate 1907 Albuquerque Journal Showing at the University of Arizona of Albuquerque April 19 Society Apr 17 1932 6 Turner Teresa The People of Fort Lowell Fort Lowell Historic District Board About ASU KERR Archived from the original on 2017 07 10 Retrieved 2017 07 30 Facts about Lilies of the Field Classic Movie Hub CMH Classic Movie Hub CMH Retrieved 2022 01 08 Arizona Daily Star Bolsius dies artist was 75 March 23 1983 https tucsondelivers tucsonaz gov pages fortlowellExternal links editCharlesBolsius com Work in Old Fort Lowell Old Fort Lowell ASU Kerr House Biographical information at AskArt com website supporting art auctions Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Charles Bolsius amp oldid 1179129840, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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