Home Arts and Leisure Maxfield Parrish, A Mechanic Who Painted Fantastically

Maxfield Parrish, A Mechanic Who Painted Fantastically

He was inspired by the landscapes of Vermont and New Hampshire

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The landscape of Vermont and New Hampshire inspired Maxfield Parrish in 1922 to create the lush, romantic painting  Daybreak.

Daybreak became the most popular art print of the 20th century. One in four U.S. households owned a print of the neoclassical landscape with two beautiful nymphs in the foreground.

Daybreak

Daybreak, by Maxfield Parrish

Parrish’s spectacularly imaginative art made him famous and allowed him to live comfortably with his family in the Cornish Art Colony. There he entertained President Woodrow Wilson, actress Ethel Barrymore and journalist Walter Lippman.  Norman Rockwell idolized him from across the Connecticut River in Vermont. Calendars he illustrated as advertisements sold by the millions. And a shade of cobalt blue was even named after him.

Maxfield Parrish

Maxfield Parrish didn’t understand his own popularity — or at least claimed not to.

“I am hopelessly commonplace, I don’t know what people see in me!” he once said.

His methodical, almost mechanical, way of painting produced brilliant effects of color and light. He adapted the new process printing technique to methods used by the old masters. He started with a monochrome underpainting and then layered on transparent glazes. And between each layer, he applied varnish.

“This method is very simple, very ancient, very laborious, and by no means original with me,” he said. He called himself  ‘a mechanic who paints.’

Maxfield Parrish

Ecstasy

Ecstasy

Maxfield Parrish was born July 25, 1870, in Philadelphia, to artist Stephen Parrish and Elizabeth Bancroft Parrish. His parents named him Frederick, but he later adopted his maternal grandmother’s maiden name.

From childhood he wanted to be an artist, and his parents encouraged him. When he turned 10, his father took him on a tour of European art museums. They sketched together in Europe and in New Hampshire, Massachusetts and Philadelphia.

After graduating from the Pennsylvania College of Arts, he and his father shared a studio in the Annisquam village of Gloucester, Mass.

He studied art for another year at the Drexel Institute of Art, Science and Industry, then embarked on a wildly successful career.

Golden Age

During the Golden Age of American illustration, artists produced a prodigious amount of fresh, exciting pictures for books and magazines. There was little difference between commercial and fine art during the period, roughly lasting from 1880-1920.  It was triggered by innovations in mass color printing and led by such Brandywine artists as Howard Pyle and N.C. Wyeth.

Successful illustrators achieved celebrity in their day, their names household words.

Maxfield Parrish belonged to that group. He illustrated greeting cards, advertisements and children’s books, including Arabian Nights and Poems of Childhood. His work arrived in the mailboxes of millions of homes, appearing on the cover of Harper’s Bazaar, Colliers and Scribners Magazine. His paintings for full-color calendars for Edison-Mazda Lamps sold in the hundreds of thousands, sometimes the millions. People often framed them at the end of the year.

By 1910, he was so successful he was earning more than $100,000 a year in a time when a home could be bought for $2,000.

Cornish

Maxfield Parrish

Maxfield Parrish as a young man.

Maxfield Parrish was only 28 in 1898 when he and his new wife, Lydia Austin, could afford to build a house in Plainfield, N.H.

Plainfield belonged to the Cornish Art Colony, and his father .had already moved there. He urged the young couple to join him. Maxfield Parrish built a house across the river from his father and called it The Oaks. He lived there until his death on March 30, 1966.

The Cornish Art Colony flourished from 1895 to about 1925. Led by August Saint-Gaudens, it included artists, sculptors, writers, politicians and entertainers. They lived in the towns of Plainfield and Cornish in New Hampshire, and across the Connecticut River in Windsor, Vt. Residents included President Woodrow Wilson, artist Frederic Remington, dancer Isadora Duncan, actress Marie Dressler, sculptor Daniel Chester French and literary editor Maxwell Perkins.

The Lantern Bearers, 1908

The Lantern Bearers, 1908

In 1922 Maxfield Parrish finished what he called ‘the great painting’: Daybreak. He used  three models: Kitty Owen, William Jennings Bryan’s granddaughter; his daughter Jean; and Susan Lewin, his young nanny.

The painting achieved staggering success. Still in print, Daybreak outsold Andy Warhol’s Campbell’s Soup Cans and Da Vinci’s Last Supper.

Parrish eventually moved out of The Oaks and into the studio with Susan Lewin. His wife began to take long trips with their four children. The arrangement scandalized Plainfield, but Parrish and Lewin claimed to have only a Platonic friendship.

Meanwhile the public demanded more images of lissome nymphs and androgynous youths in sumptuous landscapes and fantastical scenes. And so Maxfield Parrish obligingly churned them out.

No More Girls on Rocks

In 1931, Maxfield Parrish told The Associated Press, “I’m done with girls on rocks.” He abandoned illustration for landscape painting, which was more satisfying, but less lucrative.

He hadn’t finished with Susan Lewin, though. Their arrangement continued for 55 years until Lydia Parrish died in 1960. Maxfield Parrish was 90, Susan Lewin was 71, and they could finally marry. He declined, and she left him to marry someone else.

The Mill Pond

The Mill Pond

Parrish continued to paint landscapes and murals until his death. His clients included the Vanderbilts, Whitneys, Astors, Du Ponts and Hearsts. In 2006, actor Mel Gibson’s wife Robyn bought Daybreak at Christie’s for $7.6 million.

The ‘mechanic who paints’ had an abiding love for machinery. He built a shop beneath his studio and filled it with machines. With them, he created model scenes, props and lighting effects for his paintings. One of his sons, Stephen, became an airline mechanic. Another son, Maxfield Parrish, Jr., helped create the self-developing camera at Edwin Land’s Polaroid Corporation. Daughter Jean became an artist.

Daybreak continues to influence popular culture.  Variations were used on a Moody Blues’ album cover, in a Michael Jackson music video, a Bloom County cartoon collection and the movie poster for The Princess Bride.

maxfield-parrish-1920

Parrish around 1920.

A Maxfield Parrish enthusiast bought The Oaks. He then rebuilt it after it burned. It was put up for sale in its entirety for $1.15 million in 2017.

You can visit the center of the Cornish Art Colony, St. Gaudens National Historic Site, a National Park Service site.

This story about Maxfield Parrish was updated in 2023.

11 comments

Molly Landrigan March 30, 2014 - 12:28 pm

I think that the curtain in the
Plainfield Town Hall was painted by him. I’m not sure if it’s still there or not.

New England Historical Society March 30, 2014 - 12:43 pm

^Molly, you are correct. We’re not sure it’s still there, either. Does anyone know?

Patricia Hovey March 30, 2014 - 1:57 pm

My favorite artist

John B. Nute March 30, 2014 - 4:49 pm

There was at the craftsbury vt library a bunch of original paintings done by parrish but that was in the eighties

Mary Lois Dougherty March 30, 2014 - 5:13 pm

I have a print of this on my wall

Deb Jankowski March 30, 2014 - 6:02 pm

Very nice.

Laurie Neely March 30, 2014 - 7:27 pm

Parrish’s light was fascinating.

6 Places That Became a Summer White House - New England Historical Society August 20, 2016 - 7:02 am

[…] Harlakenden sat on a bluff overlooking the Connecticut River. Cornish was the center of an art colony of about 100 artists, writers and politicians from about 1895 to the end of World War I. It stretched from Windsor, Vt., to Plainfield, N.H. Augustus Saint-Gaudens was the central figure in the colony, which included Ethel Barrymore, Frederic Remington, Daniel Chester French, Isadora Duncan, Maxwell Perkins and Maxfield Parrish. […]

Robin Lee August 6, 2017 - 7:39 am

I have a huge Maxfield Parrish story for you. I am trying to get a movie out there about Maxfield Parrish and more so about devoted model, servant and friend, his model, Sue lewin.
As you may already know, the Maxfield Parrish estate art studio and living quarters was senselessly destroyed in the 1990s. I was there filming the sad demise, I own the last rare documentary film footage and evidence of that historic studio. I also own many fine artifacts, and more.
I am always looking for help, support, advice and of course a major film producer. This is a New England story and it is going global.
This will bring great attention to New England where these masterpieces were created. LOOK UP,,,
maxfieldparrishmotif.com
maxfieldparrishmovie.com
( The Game of Nerds Origins of Star Wars the Case for Maxfield Parrish ).

That charged article is out of the UK, it is being followed by thousands every week and is now all over the world – genius – a whole new highly intelligent force of Maxfield Parrish followers has emerged and they are powerful.
Thank u, Robin Lee

Robin H. Lee August 21, 2017 - 1:58 pm

Check out this Maxfield Parrish story, the iconic and historic Parrish art studio has been destroyed.
maxfieldparrishmotif.com
maxfieldparrishmovie.com
Help us get this information discovered, it is relevant and very important.
Thank u, Robin Lee

Six More Artist Homes In New England - New England Historical Society March 30, 2019 - 7:38 am

[…] Augustus Saint-Gaudens was the center of the Cornish colony, which included about 100 artists, writers and politicians from about 1895 to the end of World War I. It stretched from Windsor, Vt., to Plainfield, N.H. President Woodrow Wilson rented a summer White House there, among such artistic luminaries as Ethel Barrymore, Frederic Remington, Daniel Chester French, Isadora Duncan, Maxwell Perkins and Maxfield Parrish. […]

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