Considered a foremost
exponent of pure French Impressionism, Joseph Raphael spent much
of his career in Europe although California lays a strong claim
to him. He was both a painter and etcher and was born in Jackson,
California in 1869.
At age eighteen, `Raphael
began a ten-year study period at the School of Design in San Francisco
under Arthur Mathews and Douglas Tilden. In 1902 he furthered
his art studies in Paris at Ecole des Beaux-Arts and Academie
Julian under Laurens. Europe remained his home for the next thirty-seven
years, spending most of his time in Holland, France, and Belgium
while his San Francisco agent exhibited his paintings regularly
in local shows.
With World War II approaching,
he moved to San Francisco in 1939 and maintained a studio at 345
Sutter Street until his death on December 11, 1950.
His early works were
influenced by Dutch genre painting, but his proximity to the French
Impressionists soon lightened his palette. Internationally known,
he was one of the foremost advocates of Impressionism in California.
He was primarily an oil painter, and his oeuvre also includes
watercolors, etching, pen and ink drawings, and woodcuts.
He had a family of
five children and often used them as models in settings of flower
and vegetable gardens. He was a member of the San Francisco Art
Association and the California Society of Etchers. |