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Louis King Stone received formal art training
at the Art Academy of Cincinnati (1919-20), the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine
Arts summer sessions (1926), and the Art Students League in New York City (1926-27) with Boardman
Robinson and Thomas Hart Benton. While painting in Gloucester, Massachusetts
during the summer of 1927, Stone met artist Carolyn Hoag, whom he married later
that fall. Following their marriage, the Stones lived in Europe for five years,
spending most of their time in Southern France.
While abroad, Stone studied with Hans Hofmann in St. Tropez and later, at the
Hofmann School of Fine Arts in Munich, the
Academie Colorossi in Paris, and with André
L’hote at the artist’s summer school in Mirmande,
France. He also
lived and painted in Paul Cézanne’s former home/studio in Aix-en-Provence. Stone’s studies in Europe laid the foundation for his early non-objective
work. Stone returned to the United States
in 1933 and lived for a brief period in Woodstock,
New York before traveling to Florida
where Stone and painter James S. Morris co-founded the Stone-Morris School of
Fine Arts in Jacksonville.
In 1935, he settled in Lambertville,
New Jersey, a town near New Hope, Pennsylvania
that was home to an active artistic and intellectual community. Stone reunites
with close friend Charles Evans, and becomes a leading member of the recently
formed Independents, a modernist artist’s collective founded by Charles F.
Ramsey. Like other associations of American artists during this period (i.e.
the American Abstract Artists and the Transcendental Painting Group), the
Independents were struggling to gain recognition in a culture that was not
particularly receptive to abstract art.
Stone exhibited regularly with the Independents and worked
to establish the Cooperative Painting Project. Inspired by the performances of
improvisational jazz musicians, the Cooperative Painting Project held visual
“jam sessions,” where the three artists would work together on a single
painting, signing their finished artwork with the combined name “Ramstonev.”
Although Stone frequently collaborated and exchanged ideas with other members
of the Independents (including B.J.O. Nordfeldt, John Nevin, Lloyd “Bill” Ney,
and Elsie Driggs), his work from the mid-1930s and 1940s retains a distinctive
style that demonstrates a mastery of the modernist lessons he learned in
Europe, while asserting an innovative use of flat color to suggest three
dimensional space.
Stone once remarked that he wanted “to keep his colors
alive,” and consequently, his work contains visually complex color harmonies
that demonstrate his willingness to break the stylistic conventions of the School of Paris in favor of a more idiosyncratic
palette. In addition to his association with the Independents, Stone exhibited
in the New York Worlds Fair in New York City
(1939), as well as in regional museums and galleries throughout New Jersey, Pennsylvania
and New York.
He worked for the WPA easel project (from approximately 1935-1938), painting
canvases for murals in various public buildings throughout the United States.
Stone continued to paint and travel extensively with his family throughout
North America until his death in 1984 at the age of 82 at his home near Lambertville, NJ.
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