Warren Sheppard 
Sunset Shoreline
⚈ Sold
American (1858-1937)

Oil on Canvas Dated 1877
14⅛ x 24 Inches 23½ x 33½ Inches Framed
Signed LR: Warren Sheppard 77  
   

Warren Sheppard 
 
American (1858-1937)
 
Sunset Shoreline
⚈ Sold

Oil on Canvas Dated 1877
14⅛ x 24 Inches 23½ x 33½ Inches Framed
Signed LR: Warren Sheppard 77  
   

Inspired by the success artist contemporaries such as Francis A. Silva and Alfred T. Bricher found painting luminist scenes, Warren Sheppard sets out to capture the serene essence of a fading day within this painting of the American East Coast. He physically glistens the wet sand with soft reflective color before and after the beached hull compressed by age and the unrelenting surf. At sea a schooner catches the late wind and sets a course back to port. It is peaceful yet lonely scene, and a solid atmospheric composition that uses light and color to project its content. This is a very early work by the artist, we feel, of a favorite beach in his home state.

The subtle interplay of colors works in this instance as the deep gray-green ocean rises in a short wave break, most likely along the outer New Jersey shore. The horizon glows with a warmth of rose, and the clouds are driven from the sky. The entirety is simply worked into the composition in a very tight, natural order.

Sheppard has worked layers of elements into the picture with an interesting horizontal, left to right presentation. The horizon divides the realms and yet is countered by the dark hulk. The shore break splits the swell while its rhythm carries perfectly through the reflection cast across it. Everything reads left to right until the sky once again draws the eye back around to revisit and inspect the overall fine work. The emotional center draws not from the bones of the ship, but from the visit to the shore itself.