The Whistler House Museum of Art will be CLOSED from
Sunday, December 22nd to
 Tuesday, January 7th, for the holiday season.

We will re-open on Wednesday, January 8th, 2025.

Happy Holidays to all and we will see you in the new year!

Art for Youth

Children wearing Whistler House Museum of Art aprons smile and pose during the Youth Summer Art Program.

Whistler Abroad

U.S. Ambassador to Spain and Andorra James Costos stands with Whistler House Museum of Art Executive Director and President Sara Bogosian.

Award Event

A staute of artist James McNeill Whistler next to text reading: James McNeill Whistler Distinguised Art Award 2022.
 

Historic Restoration

The newly restored Whistler House Museum of Art's historic kitchen, complete with a rectangular table, blue and white porcelain plates, and cast-iron stove.

Arshile Gorky

Detail of an untitled painting by Arshile Gorky, which features a white vase with pink flowers on a blue background.

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Lecture: Thursday, June 8th at 6:30 PM

The Whistler House Museum of Art (WHMA) is proud to host acclaimed artist and instructor Paul Ingbretson for a lecture, entitled "The Method is the School: Boston School Contrasted with the Academic," to accompany our newest exhibition, In the Light of the Past: The Students of Paul Ingbretson.

 

As a professional artist, teacher, and a modern-day exponent of the "Boston School," Paul Ingbretson shares his decades of experience with the WHMA. Ingbretson has organized his artistic approach around the values, work, analysis, and writings associated with the Boston School, as interpreted by the late R. H. Ives Gammell.

 

The Boston School began in the late 1800s, after several young artists from Boston traveled abroad to complete their education in Europe. Having already received the basics of art training in America, they studied with the salon style of "academic" art in Paris and Munich. There, they became fascinated with artists like Diego Velasquez and Claude Monet, who were focusing on form and color in painting above all else.

 

This sound instruction in drawing and painting from a young age, direct exposure to some of the finest painters in Europe at the time, and an introduction to impressionist color formed the basis of what would become the Boston School.

 


 

 

 

Paul Ingbretson is a top tier professional artist, teacher, and leading modern-day exponent of what became known as the "Boston School" of American art. His background includes several years at the Art Students League of New York alongside many of their top artists. Ingbretson ultimately organized his artistic approach around the values, work, analysis, and writings associated with the "Boston School," as interpreted by the late R. H. Ives Gammell. Paul is equally adept and talented in painting portraits, interiors, still lifes, and landscapes, and teaches privately in Lawrence, Massachusetts and Haverhill, New Hampshire. He was a long serving president of the prestigious Guild of Boston Artists, which was initially formed at the beginning of the 20th Century by the artists responsible for the evolution of the "Boston School."

 

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