The Diving Board II by Edgar Rupprecht

Oil painting of two women on the water

Oil painting of two women on the water

Name/Title

The Diving Board II by Edgar Rupprecht

Entry/Object ID

2021.30.02

Description

A man in a full body swimsuit with a white cap on his head sits on a diving board. Below a woman in yellow and green attire sits in a white rowboat. The background is filled with quick brush marks to indicate water. The tag on the gold frame reads "The Diving Board II" "Edgar Arthur Rupprecht" and "1889 - 1954" NOTE in the 2021.30 file is an envelope of press clippings, restoration report, high quality film positive, artist biography information and more that was compiled by Christine Schwartz.

Type of Painting

Easel

Artwork Details

Medium

Oil

Cataloged By

Winthers, Sally

Acquisition

Accession

2021.30

Source or Donor

Schwartz, Christine

Acquisition Method

Donation

Made/Created

Artist Information

Artist

Rupprecht, Edgar A. 1889-1954

Role

Artist

Dimensions

Dimension Description

image area

Height

19 in

Width

32 in

Location

Shelf

AC bay 07

Room

Art Conservation Room

Relationships

Related Person or Organization

Person or Organization

Rupprecht, Edgar A. 1889-1954, Ox-Bow/Summer School of Art

Exhibition

Curator’s Choice Exhibit

Interpretative Labels

Label

Edgar Rupprecht 1889 - 1954 The Diving Board II c.1922 | oil on canvas Notes: After growing up in Zanesville, Ohio, Rupprecht studied at the Art Institute of Chicago under Harry Wolcott, John Norton, and Karl Buehr. He later studied in Munich under Hans Hoffmann and taught at the Chicago Institute. A close friend of Frederick Fursman, Edgar became a regular fixture at the Ox-Bow Summer School of Painting. Edgar Rupprecht painted this study in preparation for one of the most important works of his early career, “The Diving Board”. The composition is a scene of casual interaction between a young woman in a rowboat and a swimmer seated on a diving board. The background is a lively pattern of fluid light-blue lines applied over a thin gray wash. *adapted from Wendy Greenhouse PhD, schwartzcollection.com Collection: Saugatuck Douglas History Center Gift of: M. Christine Schwartz Accession: 2021.30.02

General Notes

Note

Edgar Rupprecht 1889–1954 Study for The Diving Board, circa 1922 Oil on canvas, 23½ by 19½ inches Edgar Rupprecht painted this study in preparation for one of the most important works of his early career, The Diving Board (circa 1922; location unknown). Closely following the composition of the study, the finished painting pictures a scene of casual interaction between a young woman in a rowboat and a swimmer seated on a diving board. The swimmer’s back is to the viewer, a bystander to the conversation who looks down on the figures from the dock glimpsed at lower right. The final work clearly shows the girl’s smiling expression as she looks toward her companion. This emphasis on the figures’ implied interaction is absent in the study: here, her facial features are barely indicated and forms are simplified to broad strokes and strong color contrasts, with the sharply tipped-up perspective enhancing the effect of an abstract composition. The background is a lively pattern of fluid light-blue lines applied over a thin gray wash, capturing the water’s shifting play of broken surface reflections against murky depths. The quickly painted study was probably made on the spot to capture the essentials of color, light, and form. The Diving Board was shown in the Art Institute of Chicago’s 1923 “Chicago and Vicinity” exhibition, where it garnered the Marshall F. Holmes Prize of one hundred dollars for a work in “color design.” It was one of two paintings cited by the reviewer for The Catholic World as “happy subjects, happily treated and quite deserving of their awarded prizes.”i The Chicago Evening Post Magazine of the Art World reproduced the painting in 1925 and again in 1927, the last when it was part of an exhibition held on Municipal Pier (now Navy Pier), on Chicago’s lakefront, organized by the Commission for the Encouragement of Local Art. Rupprecht painted The Diving Board in rural Saugatuck, on the Michigan shore of Lake Michigan. There, along with Arthur K. Houlberg, he attended the Summer School of Painting at Saugatuck (now known as Ox-Bow) early in his artistic education. Rupprecht soon became an assistant to its principal teacher, Frederick Fursman, and eventually a leading faculty member at Saugatuck and at the Art Institute, with which the summer school was affiliated. The school was located between the Kalamazoo River and a lagoon near the Lake Michigan shore, offering abundant opportunities for summertime recreation as well as outdoor painting. Rupprecht made at least one other image that celebrates the leisurely vacation atmosphere of Saugatuck, The Summer Visitor (Union League Club of Chicago), which he painted in the wake of the success of The Diving Board, closely following its subject and composition. Wendy Greenhouse, PhD Donated by M. Christine Schwartz to the Saugatuck-Douglas History Center, Douglas, Michigan, in 2021 i Alice G. Hayde, “Exhibition by Artists of Chicago and Vicinity,” The Catholic World, Feb. 1923. Source: https://schwartzcollection.com/artwork/study-for-the-diving-board/

Create Date

July 2, 2021

Update Date

May 18, 2025