William Ballantine Dorsey

William Ballantine Dorsey (1942-2019) - Nocturnal Scene - Oil on Board P2975

Regular price $950.00

Beautifully conveying the atmosphere of one of summer's magical white nights, this sensitive painting casts a delicate spell. Measures 11" x 14".

Primarily self-taught, William Dorsey was best known as a California Landscape Painter.  His paintings were reminiscent of the California Impressionists with rich atmospheric perspective and depth. It is important to note that William had difficulty seeing distance due to an eye condition. He would create the illusion of depth with skillful painting techniques and his sophisticated use of color.  

Dorsey’s paintings were frequently available on the secondary market, in antique stores and auction houses, where they were often paired with early California painters such as Edgar Payne, William Wendt and Ray Strong. Dorsey would joke that when collectors met him, “They were always surprised that I am still alive.” 

Born in Washington DC, Dorsey developed a love for Alaska as a child when his father was stationed there with the Air Force from 1949 to 1951, the family moved to Ojai, CA in 1955.  Following his graduation from Nordhoff High School, Dorsey returned to Alaska in 1961, piloting a Piper Cub.  He made the trip in five days.  Considering he only had 50 hours of flight experience, it was an astonishing feat at the time. Dorsey loved the summer season in Alaska where the optimum light “would last for hours”.  Snowcapped Alaskan mountains were a reoccurring theme in the artist’s work.

Sharing his time between California and Alaska for over 30 years, Dorsey capitalized on all his skills to earn a living while developing his painting style.  He worked as an Alaskan bush pilot, a fisherman, a lumberjack, a boat builder and a song writer, writing songs under contract for Screen Gems-Columbia Music. Dorsey wrote songs for the Monkey’s, Tiny Tim, The Partridge Family, Bobbie Gentry and Michael Martin Murphey, among others.  

Dorsey preferred to work under natural light and would construct elaborate skylights to provide the optimum daylight painting conditions within his studio.  Often appearing as the quintessential artist, covered in paint from head to toe, Dorsey was a wonderful raconteur, sharing stories of his travels, his love for art and his impressive ancestry comprised of notable inventors and pioneers. 

William’s father, Herbert Dorsey Jr., was a Harvard-educated meteorologist who participated in the Byrd expedition to the Antarctic in the late 1930s. He was among the first exploration party to winter at the South Pole. An island was discovered by Herbert during his exploration that bears the Dorsey name. In addition, his father became the first American to drive a dog sled team over the Greenland ice cap in the 1940s. His maternal grandfather, diplomat Joseph Ballantine, was an associate of Cordell Hull, the secretary of state in the Roosevelt administration. His paternal grandfather physicist and inventor Herbert Dorsey created the fathometer, an instrument for measuring ocean depths and helped to develop long distance telephone service. His great-uncle, George Dorsey, was a world-renowned anthropologist and author. William was very proud of his family history and kept extensive archives, including some of the equipment his father used half a century ago during his historic expeditions. 

After spending over 50 years in Ojai, Dorsey and his wife Mary, moved to the Eastern Sierra in 2004, then to Palm Desert in 2010.  The natural landscape served as a constant stimulus to the painter. Whether he was painting the hills of Ojai, the California coastal regions, the desert or the mountains of Alaska, each painting was a record of the location executed in his distinctive impressionistic style.  When asked what inspired him to paint, Dorsey said without hesitation, “The wolf at the door is the muse that drives the paint.”


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