Jaime E Carret
Jaime E. Carret was active in New Jersey and New York and became known for his intimate and small scenes of the local coffee district as well as his landscapes. He was unable to attain entry to the National Academy of Design and instead studied painting less formally with a group of National Academy students led by Maurice Sterne and Van Dearing Perrine. They focused mainly on plein-air landscape studies throughout the countryside of New Jersey and New York City and eventually exhibited as a group at the Chicago Institute of Art in 1901. Professionally, Carret led a successful career as a coffee merchant in New York City. His work is quite well developed, characterized by a bold and heavy impasto utilizing a full range of spectrum in his palette, the loose brushstrokes lending dreamy impressionism to his scenes. His work was represented by Babcock Galleries and Touchstone Galleries in New York City.
Early 20th Century American Jaime E Carret
Wood, Giltwood, Paint
19th Century American Antique Jaime E Carret
Canvas, Giltwood, Paint
20th Century American Jaime E Carret
Canvas, Giltwood, Paint
Late 19th Century American Barbizon School Antique Jaime E Carret
Canvas, Wood, Paint
20th Century American Jaime E Carret
Paint
20th Century American Jaime E Carret
Canvas, Paint
19th Century French Barbizon School Antique Jaime E Carret
Wood, Paint
20th Century European Jaime E Carret
Canvas, Wood, Paint
19th Century Belgian Antique Jaime E Carret
Wood, Paint
19th Century American Barbizon School Antique Jaime E Carret
Canvas, Wood, Paint
19th Century American Romantic Antique Jaime E Carret
Canvas, Wood, Paint
19th Century American Antique Jaime E Carret
Canvas, Wood, Paint
20th Century American Jaime E Carret
Canvas, Giltwood, Paint
Early 20th Century American Jaime E Carret
Wood, Giltwood, Paint