OIL PAINTING OF SAILING SHIP SIGNED T. BAILEY
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OIL PAINTING OF SAILING SHIP SIGNED T. BAILEY, SOME IMPERFECTIONS, 28 X 39 Fictitious marine painter. Numerous marine paintings bearing this signature emerged from Boston and Winthrop, MA, between 1910 -38. T. Bailey was a pseudonym invented by Morris Hambro (1860-1938), a London-born sign-painter and salesman who came to the U.S. in 1865 and began peddling the Bailey paintings after 1910. The typical work showed a tall ship on the high seas, its sails unfurled. Hambro created the fictive artist and sold the paintings door to door, mostly to businesses, traveling from Boston to Worcester, to New Bedford, to Portland (ME), to Cape Cod, and to Fall River. Hambro was extremely successful in his endeavor; one gallery in Boston (the Addition Gallery) reportedly bought the paintings "by the dozen." A number of names have been suggested as the actual painter or painters of the marines: Vivian Forsythe Porter, Max Berman (who was married to Hambro's niece), Sears Thompson, J. G. Cloudman, Mae Bennet Brown, Melbourne C. Hardwick; and, in particular, William Frederick Paskell. It is believed that Hambro bought the works from the artists for $15 to $20, added Bailey's signature, and then sold the paintings for up to $50 a piece. Whether the artists themselves even knew about Hambro"s strategy is unknown. ART PRICE
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OIL PAINTING OF SAILING SHIP SIGNED T. BAILEY
Estimate $100 - $200
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