Paul Sawyier was born at Table Rock in Madison County,
Ohio on March 23, 1865, on his Grandfather Sawyier's farm. When he was
five years old his parents, Dr. Nathaniel and Ellen Wingate Sawyier, moved
with their four children to Frankfort, Kentucky. The family moved in with
Ellen's mother, Mrs. Penelope Anderson Wingate, who lived on Broadway
across from the L&N Railroad Depot.
Paul Sawyier's artistic talent became apparent during his
early years. His father had an art tutor come to the Sawyier home for Paul
and his sister, Natalie. At the age of 19, Sawyier studied portraiture
under Thomas S. Noble at the Cincinnati Art Academy. Sawyier went to New
York City four years later for further training at the Art Student's
league. He studied under William Merritt Chase and was able to observe the
famous portrait painter John Singer Sargent. In 1890, Sawyier studied for
a year under Frank Duveneck in Covington, Kentucky who was at the height
of his national fame as an oil portrait painter. Chase and Duveneck were
friends and had painted together in Europe.
After his studies were completed in New York and
Covington, Sawyier returned to Frankfort. He made a living primarily by
painting portraits of members of well to do families in the community. He
also started to paint scenes of the Elkhorn Creek and Kentucky River.
In 1887, at the age of 22, Sawyier met Mary "Mayme" Bull
(1865-1914) of Frankfort and they became formally engaged. Because of a
mutual desire to take care of their ailing parents and Sawyier's struggle
to financially survive as an artist, they never married. Sawyier sisters
burned all correspondence between Mayme and Paul after his death
destroying all intimate details of their relationship.
In 1893, Sawyier went to the Chicago World's Fair
Colombian Exhibition where some of his works were in the Stale of Kentucky
display. It was at this exhibition that Impressionism was formally
introduced in the United States and Sawyier was influenced to become an
"American Impressionist".
By 1901, Sawyier's parents were both in ill health.
Paul's sisters had married and his brother had moved to Mississippi. Paul
took charge of caring for his parents and they moved into the old
parsonage of the First Baptist Church.
After the death of his mother in 1908 and with his father
in a Louisville nursing home, Sawyier decided to fulfill his dream of
living on a houseboat and paint scenes of the Kentucky River. He spent the
next five years on the river, mainly between Shakertown and Camp Nelson.
It has been estimated that C.F. Brower & Company of Lexington, sold
over 500 of Sawyier's watercolors between 1908 and 1910.
Sawyier moved to Brooklyn, New York in 1913 trying to
find a new market. While living with his sister, Lillian, he spent two
years painting scenes in the beautiful parks of the area. It was also
during this time that Sawyier, for unknown reasons, changed his
signature.
In 1915, Sawyier moved from Brooklyn to the Catskill
Mountains. He initially lived in High Mount, New York, painting in both
oils and watercolors. While concentrating on scenes of the Catskills,
Sawyier would also work from photographs and paint Frankfort and Kentucky
River scenes. He often sent these back to buyers in Kentucky.
After a time Sawyier moved a short distance to
Fleischmanns, New York to live with the Phillip F. Schaefer family. Mr.
Schaefer was a local merchant and amateur painter. Sawyier died of a heart
attack in the Schaefer home on November 8, 1917 at the age of 52. He was
buried in the nearby Covesville, New York Cemetery. In 1923, Sawyier's
cousin, Judge Russell W. McReary brought Sawyier's body back to Frankfort.
He was buried in the Sawyier-Wingate family plot in the Frankfort City
Cemetery.
During the period from 1887 to 1917 it is estimated that
Paul Sawyier painted over 3,000 originals. He primarily painted scenes of
the Elkhorn Creek, Kentucky River and Frankfort in watercolors. Most of
his portraits estimated to be about 100 were in either oil or pastel.
Sawyier painted about 200 oils almost all after moving to New York. Many
thumbnail sketches have been found but most of his oils were larger,
either about 13x16 or 20x24 in size. Today about 1,500 to Sawyier's
originals have been found or accounted for.
Of Sawyier's three sisters and brother, only Lillian had
children; however, her twin sons never married or had children. Therefore,
there are no direct descendants of the Nathaniel and Ellen Wingate Sawyier
family and it is a mystery what happened to the family's original
paintings.
Since 1940, Sawyier exhibits have been held at Eastern
Kentucky University, Maysville Museum, Georgetown College, University of
Kentucky, Kentucky Historical Society, Paul Sawyier Galleries, Inc. and
twice at the J.B. Speed Museum and Shakertown Village. Four volumes have
been written about Sawyier's life and works. These books are all based on
the research of historian Dr.W.R.Jillson, who in the late 1930's, talked
with surviving Sawyier family members and any individuals who personally
knew Paul Sawyier.
Since 1968, over 300 Limited Sawyier's original paintings have been
reproduced as limited edition art prints.
PAUL SAWYIER GALLERIES, INC. -- 3445-D Versailles Road - Frankfort,
Kentucky 40601 -(502) 695-5589