Wallace Nutting
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Wallace Nutting (November 17, 1861 – July 19, 1941) was an American minister, photographer, artist, and antiquarian, who is most famous for his landscape photos of New England. He also was an accomplished author, lecturer, furniture maker, antiques expert and collector. His atmospheric photographs helped spur the Colonial Revival style.
Early lifeEdit
He was born in Rock Bottom, Massachusetts (a village straddling Stow and Hudson), on Sunday, November 17, 1861, the second child of Albion and Elizabeth Nutting.<ref name=RoGallery>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> His father was killed in the Civil War.<ref name=Denenberg />
The family was descended from John Nutting, who came from England in 1639 and was killed by Indians during a raid against Groton, Massachusetts. The Indians severed John Nutting's head and put it on a pole to discourage others from settling in the area.<ref name=NuttingGenealogy36>Template:Cite book</ref>
Education and personal lifeEdit
Wallace Nutting graduated from high school in Augusta, Maine.<ref name=Brown>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> He studied at Phillips Exeter Academy, Harvard University, Hartford Theological Seminary and Union Theological Seminary. He graduated from Harvard with the class of 1887. Nutting earned a Doctor of Divinity degree from Whitman College in 1893.<ref name=RoGallery /> He received an honorary doctor of Humanities from Washington & Jefferson College in 1938.<ref name=RoGallery /><ref>Template:Cite book</ref>
On June 5, 1888 he married Mariet Griswold in Buckland, Massachusetts. They had no children.<ref name=RoGallery />
Nutting began his career as a Congregational minister in several towns including Minneapolis, Seattle, and Providence<ref name=Denenberg>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> and Fryeburg, Maine,<ref name=RoGallery /> but he was forced to retire at age 43 because of poor health.<ref name=RoGallery /> He suffered from neurasthenia, and turned to bicycling as a means of relaxation and improving his health.<ref name=Denenberg />
While in Providence, he read scripture at the funeral for Gorham Manufacturing Company Superintendent Charles Henry Baker at the Central Congregational Church.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>
WorkEdit
PhotographyEdit
It was on these bicycle rides in the countryside that Nutting started taking photographs.<ref name=RoGallery /> In 1904 he opened the Wallace Nutting Art Prints Studio on East 23rd Street in New York. After a year he moved his business to a farm in Southbury, Connecticut. He called this place "Nuttinghame". In 1912 he moved the photography studio to Framingham, Massachusetts, in a home he called "Nuttingholme".<ref name=RoGallery /> That year he published a catalog of prints that was 97 pages and included about 900 images.<ref name=Denenberg /> By 1915, Nutting claimed to be earning $1,000 per day.<ref name=Denenberg />
Nutting's photographs ranged in subject and price to suit a variety of tastes. His catalog included pastoral scenes such as views of abbeys, cathedrals, bridges, mountains, flowers, and winding roads.<ref name=Denenberg /> One of his most common themes was "Colonials", which were photos of women in traditional 18th-Century roles.<ref name=Denenberg /> These were traditional pictures of femininity, usually pictured indoors in front of a chest, chair, or looking glass.<ref name=Denenberg /> His prints sold from $1.25 to $20.<ref name=Denenberg />
Nutting authored several books about the scenic beauties of New England, the United Kingdom, and Ireland. In the peak of his business he employed about two-hundred colorists. By his own account, Wallace Nutting sold ten million pictures. Wallace Nutting's colorists painted the photographs which he took. These colorists would sometimes sign Wallace Nutting's name on the photos which is why the signatures vary.
FurnitureEdit
Nutting had a collection of furniture which he used as props in his "Colonial" photography. This experience led him to start a business manufacturing and selling reproduction furniture.<ref name=Denenberg /> His expertise in this field led him to author a guidebook to American Windsor furniture in 1917. By 1918 his mail-order catalog offered dozens of Windsor chairs in several historic styles.<ref name=Denenberg />
Death and legacyEdit
Wallace Nutting died at his home at 24 Vernon St., Framingham, Massachusetts on Saturday, July 19, 1941, at age 79. His body was transported to Augusta, Maine for burial.
Nutting's residence in Portsmouth, New Hampshire is also known as the Wentworth-Gardner House. A Wallace Nutting Society exists for the study of his work.
Today, Nutting's furniture and photographs are widely collected.<ref name=Denenberg />
GalleryEdit
- The Coming Out of Rosa by Wallace Nutting, c. 1900-1910, hand-colored photograph - Fitchburg Art Museum - DSC08936.JPG
- A Summer Stream by Wallace Nutting, c. 1915, hand-colored silver photograph - Fitchburg Art Museum - DSC08940.JPG
See alsoEdit
Houses owned and the subject of Nutting's preservation activities:
NotesEdit
External linksEdit
- Template:Internet Archive author
- Wallace Nutting's Windsor Handbook
- The Wallace Nutting Center
- The Winterthur Library Overview of an archival collection on Wallace Nutting.