Constance Coleman Richardson (1905 – 2002)
- Mar 8
- 1 min read

The Summer House, 1941, oil on Masonite, signed and dated lower right, signed, titled, and dated verso, 16 x 20 ¼ inches
$4500
Constance Coleman Richardson was a well-regarded Detroit-based painter. She achieved considerable critical recognition during the 1930s and 1940s for her paintings of the Midwest and West that celebrated the beauty of the American landscape. Unlike many of her contemporaries, Richardson employed classic fifteenth-century Flemish techniques. Her husband Edgar Preston Richardson served as Director of the Detroit Institute of Arts (DIA) for seventeen years. During that time, the artist had ample opportunity to engage with the DIA's Old Masters conservators. This training gave her American Scene paintings a clarity, precision and level of detail rarely found in American art of this period.
Richardson studied at Vassar and the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts. She showed widely at most major museums and exhibitions in the United States, including the Corcoran Gallery, Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts, Art Institute of Chicago, Museum of Modern Art, Detroit Art Institute, Carnegie Institute, Golden Gate International Exhibition, and the New York World’s Fair. Richardson was honored with a solo exhibition at the M. H. de Young Memorial Museum in San Francisco. She was represented by two of New York’s premiere galleries, MacBeth Gallery and Kennedy Galleries. Her works are held in the collections of major museums, including the Detroit Institute of Art, the John Herron Art Institute, and the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts. She is listed in Who was Who in American Art and other standard references.
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