Charles Wrenn

Charles Wrenn (1880-1952) – Mexican Market Scene – Mixed Media on Paper

Regular price $650.00

A gorgeous study of a market, probably near Lake Chapala, where Wrenn spent a time living and painting. Beautifully drawn, and then taken to another level with his use of white highlights (he'd studied the Renaissance masters, that's for sure).

Art measures 9” x 12”. Frame measures 17” x 21”. Gouache, ink and watercolor on paper. Signed. Excellent condition

A portrait and landscape painter and illustrator, Charles L Wrenn was born in Cincinnati, OH in 1880.

He moved to New York City around 1900 and lived at 206 East 17th Street in Manhattan. He was a student of William Merritt Chase. He also studied at The Art Students League.

In 1908 he married Helen B. Wrenn, of NYC, and they moved to 364 West 23rd Street. His art studio was located at 9 East Tenth Street.

From 1911 to 1917 his first assignments were interior story illustrations for The Red Book Magazine, People's Home Journal, and The Housewife. He also painted cover illustrations for the pulp magazine Breezy Stories.

In 1918, at age thirty-eight, he was not accepted for military service in WWI, so he went to France for one year as a citizen volunteer for the Red Cross as a stretcher bearer. His passport describes him as five-foot-ten, blue eyes, grey hair, dark complexion, thin face, with a Roman nose, a scar on his right thumb and a mole on his back.

After the Great War ended in 1919 he traveled to study art in Morocco, Italy, France, Spain, Portugal, Gibralter, Tunis, Egypt, and Great Britain. He returned to the U.S. in September of 1920.

From 1920 to 1936 he sold freelance pulp magazine covers to The Danger Trail, People's Magazine, Ranch Romances, Three Star Magazine, and War Stories. He also drew interior story illustrations for Clues.

In 1936 he moved to Wilson Point, South Norwalk, in Fairfield, Connecticut, where he painted portraits and landscapes for the remainder of his life.

During WWII his 1942 draft registration card identifies him as sixty-two years old, five-foot-ten, 150 pounds, ruddy complexion, blue eyes and gray hair.

Charles Wrenn died in Connecticut at age seventy-two in 1952.
His landscape subjects included the Catskill Mountains, California, and Walpi Mesa in Arizona.

He was a member of The Society of Illustrators.


More from this collection