Bucks County Intermediate Unit No.22

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Charles Evans

Biography

Achievements

Print Evans pages


Featured Artists
Baum
Blakeslee
Crilley
Evans
Gruber

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Leith-Ross
Meltzer
Ney
Nunamaker
Petrilock
Schucker
Speight

Vanka
Yost

 

Charles Evans

       
 

 

 

BIOGRAPHY

Education and Training
Colgate University, Hamilton, New York
Art Student's League, New York
Parsons School of Design, New York
Académie Moderne, Paris, France
Studied in St. Tropez and Munich under Hans Hofmann, 1929
Spent one year at Cézanne's studio in Aix-en-Provence, 1930

Teachers and Influences
Fernand Léger
Hans Hofmann

Connection to Bucks County
While still in his twenties, Evans and his wife, Eleanor Noteware, bought New Hope's old silk mill in 1931 which had been a favorite subject from 1910 to 1920 of the painter, Robert Spencer. Evans met C.F. Ramsey, the leader of the New Group, a secessionist group of modernist artists, which later became the Independents. Evans was one of the original members along with Henry Baker, Charles Child, Ralston Crawford, Robert Hogue, Peter Keenan, R.A.D. Miller, John Nevin, C. F. Ramsey, Richard Rogers, and Faye Swengel. Through his involvement with the Independents, Evans most likely met other artists who later joined or exhibited with this group: Adolph Blondheim, Chester Gash, Frederick Harer, Carl Lundborg, Lloyd Ney, Isamu Noguchi, Maxwell Simpson, and Richard Wedderspoon. Evans also encouraged Louis Stone to move to the area in 1935. And the three, Evans, Ramsey and Stone, began the

   
 
   

Cooperative Painting Project, an attempt to work collectively on a visual arts product not unlike the processes in jazz improvisation. They were occasionally joined by journalist William Chapman, poet Stanley Kunitz, and carpenter Karl Roos. After moving to Lambertville in 1935, Lee Gatch joined Evans, Stone and Ramsey for weekly discussions at Ledger's Inn.

In 1948 Evans co-founded the New Hope Gazette with Walter M. Teller. The same year he created set designs for St. John Terrell's Lambertville Music Circus. Through his theater and design interests, Evans worked with Elmer Case, James Hamilton, Carl Karhuma, and Emile Laugier. Evans remained quite involved in the New Hope community until the 1950s and in 1970 he sold his home in New Hope and retired to Martha's Vineyard, Massachusetts.

Colleagues and Affiliations
Charles Evans had met Louis Stone while they were both studying under Hans Hofmann in St. Tropez and Munich in 1929. Evans suggested that Stone move to New Hope. Evans was also a colleague of members of the "Independents": Peter Keenan, Robert Hogue, R.A.D. Miller, Henry Baker, Ralston Crawford, C.F. Ramsey, John Nevin, Charles Child, Richard Rogers, and Faye Swengel.

 
                       
                       
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