Skip to main content

Lillian Jackson Heath Art

American, 1864-1961
Lillian Heath was one of the Jolly Daubers at the turn of the 19th-century and as a young student, married the senior artist and instructor, Frank Heath in Santa Cruz, California. Artists Frank and Lillian [Heath] by Margaret Koch [transcribed from Santa Cruz Public Library website]….Frank L. Heath courted Lillian Dake Storey during painting trips around Santa Cruz County back in the 1890s. Those were the years when Lillian was riding a saddle horse daily from Santa Cruz to the Powdermill where she taught school. Today [1974] the Powdermill is Paradise Park. Frank's actual proposal of marriage was delivered at Rocky Falls, a beautiful scenic place on Carbonero Creek. There he had constructed a painting platform with a perfect view of the rushing waters, and it was there that he asked Lillian in that formal day and age, to be his bride. Frank was nearly 40 years old at the time, and Lillian was about 32. She had always been interested in art and had talent to a large degree. She took a year's leave of absence from teaching school to travel alone to New York where she visited relatives and stayed to study china painting and the painting of miniatures which is an art in itself. ‘When I returned from New York I enrolled in the art classes of a Santa Cruz artist who was making a name for himself,’ she once said with a smile. The artist was Frank L. Heath, and that was the start of their romance. At the Heath home on Third Street, Beach Hill, Frank added a wing with a large studio workroom downstairs and several bedrooms upstairs. That was his wedding gift to his bride. ‘The Studio’ had a fireplace and big bay windows that looked out over the town of Santa Cruz and back to the mountains they both loved and painted many times. Lillian painted a set of tiles for the fireplace; they showed darting swallows in the clouds above a stream where song birds perched on tulles and water lilies floated. In 1897 Lillian and Frank were married in the First Methodist Church and they moved into the home on Beach Hill, a house she continued to live in for 64 years. Frank founded the Jolly Daubers, a local group he instructed and led on many an excursion around the county. ‘He would rent a horse and carryall,’ Lillian reminisced in recent years. ‘The livery stable would send it around early in the morning to pick up each member of the art class. Then we'd go to Felton or Scotts Valley or up the coast to spend a day painting.’ Would-be artists scrambled aboard the horse-drawn bus with lunches and painting equipment. The ladies wore large sunhats to protect their fragile complexions. They also carried parasols and small folding canvas seats. Wood seats in the ‘bus’ ran the full length of both sides.
(Biography provided by Robert Azensky Fine Art)
to
1
2
1
2
1
1
Overall Height
to
Overall Width
to
2
2
2
1
1
1
2
1
1
2
6,820
3,108
2,517
1,218
2
1
1
1
1
Artist: Lillian Jackson Heath
Mid Century Sierra Mountain Lake Landscape
By Lillian Jackson Heath
Located in Soquel, CA
Sweeping mid-century landscape of a lake and snow-capped mountains by Lillian Josephine Heath (American, 1864-1961). A gigantic, snow-covered mountain dominates the upper portion of the composition, rising above the rest of the landscape. In the shadow of the mountain is a valley lake, filled with snowmelt, with several smaller mountains in between. Signed "Lillian Heath" lower left. Displayed in a giltwood frame. Image, 20.5"H x 28"L. Lillian Heath was one of the Jolly Daubers at the turn of the 19th-century and as a young student, married the senior artist and instructor, Frank Heath in Santa Cruz, California. Artists Frank and Lillian [Heath] by Margaret Koch [transcribed from Santa Cruz Public Library website]….Frank L. Heath courted Lillian Dake Storey during painting trips around Santa Cruz County back in the 1890s. Those were the years when Lillian was riding a saddle horse daily from Santa Cruz to the Powdermill where she taught school. Today [1974] the Powdermill is Paradise Park. Frank's actual proposal of marriage was delivered at Rocky Falls, a beautiful scenic place on Carbonero Creek. There he had constructed a painting platform with a perfect view of the rushing waters, and it was there that he asked Lillian in that formal day and age, to be his bride. Frank was nearly 40 years old at the time, and Lillian was about 32. She had always been interested in art and had talent to a large degree. She took a year's leave of absence from teaching school to travel alone to New York where she visited relatives and stayed to study china painting and the painting of miniatures which is an art in itself. ‘When I returned from New York I enrolled in the art classes of a Santa Cruz artist who was making a name for himself,’ she once said with a smile. The artist was Frank L. Heath, and that was the start of their romance, she told me in 1959. She accepted Frank's proposal at Rocky Falls. At the Heath home on Third Street, Beach Hill, Frank added a wing with a large studio workroom downstairs and several bedrooms upstairs. That was his wedding gift to his bride. ‘The Studio’ had a fireplace and big bay windows that looked out over the town of Santa Cruz and back to the mountains they both loved and painted many times. Lillian painted a set of tiles for the fireplace; they showed darting swallows in the clouds above a stream where song birds perched on tulles and water lilies floated. In 1897 Lillian and Frank were married in the First Methodist Church and they moved into the home on Beach Hill, a house she continued to live in for 64 years. Frank's father, Lucien Heath, was the first Secretary of State of Oregon. He came to Santa Cruz from Oregon in 1866 with his wife, Jane, and sons, Frank and Henry. A daughter, Lina, had died in Michigan where the Heaths lived before crossing the plains to Oregon in 1852. [?] In Santa Cruz Lucien Heath opened one of the early hardware stores on Pacific Avenue in partnership with John Byrne...
Category

1940s American Impressionist Lillian Jackson Heath Art

Materials

Canvas, Oil

Old Davenport Whaling Village - 1930's Landscape
By Lillian Jackson Heath
Located in Soquel, CA
Beautiful vintage 1930's watercolor of Davenport, California Whaler's Cottage by Lillian Josephine Heath, (American, 1864 - 1961), c. 1930. Signed lower right corner. Image size: 9.50"H x 13"W. Presented in new mat. Born in Milwaukee, WI on Aug. 2, 1864. Lillian Dake moved to Santa Cruz, CA in 1877 with her widowed mother who later married Judge W. D. Storey of that city. Lillian became a teacher in the county schools at Powder Mill Flat, riding to school daily on horseback. During 1889 she briefly stopped teaching to study art in New York. Returning to Santa Cruz, she studied with local artists L. P. Latimer, Sydney Yard, and Frank Heath...
Category

1930s American Impressionist Lillian Jackson Heath Art

Materials

Watercolor, Paper

Related Items
"Tavern Snow, West Village" Impressionistic Oil Painting in New York City 1920s
By Cindy Shaoul
Located in New York, NY
"With shades of Pierre Bonnard’s Parisian street vistas and Edward Hopper’s New York shopfronts, American impressionist Cindy Shaoul’s oil paintings depict the much-loved locales and...
Category

2010s American Impressionist Lillian Jackson Heath Art

Materials

Oil, Canvas

Grey Day on the Bay
By Lu Haskew
Located in Loveland, CO
"Grey Day on the Bay" by Lu Haskew Oil 24x28" framed, 16x20" image size Signed lower left When Lu visited her sister in Oregon she always made a point of visiting the ships at dock ...
Category

Early 2000s American Impressionist Lillian Jackson Heath Art

Materials

Canvas, Oil

ONE FLOCK LISTENS Impressionism, Landscape, Sheep, Plein Aire
Located in Houston, TX
BEST VIEWED ON MOBILE DEVICE One Flock Listens is part of newly released small works from V....Vaughan's collection of recent travels in Italy and France. V....Vaughan painted each of these on location "en plein air" It has an Impressionistic Style as seen in many of Virginia Vaughan's paintings. This was taken from a plein aire painting near the castle where V....Vaughan was giving a workshop in 2022. 18 x 22 framed. V....Vaughan is know for her animal, Texas missions Italy, France and Gulf Coast paintings. . Also shown in photos are other paintings by in the "Small Works" collection. Photos were taken to show the detail of each painting. Her paintings are part of the permanent collection of the Gadsen Museum of Art, the Bone Creek Museum of Agrarian Art and the Great Plains Art Museum as well as in countless private collections. In the fall 2023 she will teach a workshop at a castle in France, where artists will stay and enjoy the southern French food and scenes. I paint because it’s the best way I know to communicate, study, and observe creative work that’s how Texas painter V…. Vaughan (the first initial stands for Virginia) describes her drive to create fine art. “It’s a calling,” she says of her life’s work, which has taken several twists and turns but has, nevertheless, led her down the path toward fulfillment. A lifelong Texan, Vaughan grew up in the Austin area and today makes her home in Round Rock, a suburb of the capital city. As a child, she exhibited a love of making art and played the role of the creative one among the seven children in her family, eventually working for several of her siblings as a sign painter and designer. Her parents forever encouraged her to appreciate and mine her passion, instilling in her that it was not simply a passing fancy, but an innate gift. “It was always conveyed to me that this was a God-given talent,” she says. Somehow that made me feel like it was something I was supposed to do. It gave me permission to pursue it. Vaughan attended college on an athletic scholarship, though she filled her schedule with art classes and subsequently secured an internship at an advertising agency. That introduction to the corporate world set her off in a new direction—she left school to parlay the summer job into a full-time position. She continued to work as a commercial artist for many years after that, winning several prestigious ADDY Awards and working on high-profile accounts for Samsung, the Lady Bird Johnson...
Category

2010s American Impressionist Lillian Jackson Heath Art

Materials

Canvas, Oil

Colon [Panama]
By Reynolds Beal
Located in New York, NY
Reynolds Beal painted this watercolor entitled “Colon” [Panama] in the spring of 1923. The paper size of this painting is 7 x 10" (17.7 x 25.3 cm). It is signed, titled, and dated ...
Category

Early 20th Century American Impressionist Lillian Jackson Heath Art

Materials

Watercolor, Pencil

Colon [Panama]
Colon [Panama]
H 16 in W 20 in D 0.1 in
Crashing Waves and Rocks, California Coast, 1920s Seascape Marine Oil Painting
By Charles Partridge Adams
Located in Denver, CO
Vintage marine seascape oil painting of waves crashing on rocks along the California coast by Charles Partridge Adams (1858-1942). Colors include blue,...
Category

1920s American Impressionist Lillian Jackson Heath Art

Materials

Oil, Canvas

"The Canal"
By Edward Willis Redfield
Located in Lambertville, NJ
Jim’s of Lambertville is proud to offer this artwork. Signed lower left. Complemented by a hand carved and gilt frame. Illustrated in "Edward Redfield: Just Values and Fine Seeing" by Constance Kimmerle and the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts's Exhibition of Paintings by Edward Redfield (April 17 to May 16, 1909) brochure Edward Willis Redfield (1869 - 1965) Edward W. Redfield was born in Bridgeville, Delaware, moving to Philadelphia as a young child. Determined to be an artist from an early age, he studied at the Spring Garden Institute and the Franklin Institute before entering the Pennsylvania Academy from 1887 to 1889, where he studied under Thomas Anshutz, James Kelly, and Thomas Hovenden. Along with his friend and fellow artist, Robert Henri, he traveled abroad in 1889 and studied at the Academie Julian in Paris under William Bouguereau and Tony Robert-Fleury. While in France, Redfield met Elise Deligant, the daughter of an innkeeper, and married in London in 1893. Upon his return to the United States, Redfield and his wife settled in Glenside, Pennsylvania. He remained there until 1898, at which time he moved his family to Center Bridge, a town several miles north of New Hope along the Delaware River. Redfield painted prolifically in the 1890s but it was not until the beginning of the twentieth century that he would develop the bold impressionist style that defined his career. As Redfield’s international reputation spread, many young artists gravitated to New Hope as he was a great inspiration and an iconic role model. Edward Redfield remained in Center Bridge throughout his long life, fathering his six children there. Around 1905 and 1906, Redfield’s style was coming into its own, employing thick vigorous brush strokes tightly woven and layered with a multitude of colors. These large plein-air canvases define the essence of Pennsylvania Impressionism. By 1907, Redfield had perfected his craft and, from this point forward, was creating some of his finest work. Redfield would once again return to France where he painted a small but important body of work between 1907 and 1908. While there, he received an Honorable Mention from the Paris Salon for one of these canvases. In 1910 he was awarded a Gold Medal at the prestigious Buenos Aires Exposition and at the Panama-Pacific Exposition of 1915 in San Francisco, an entire gallery was dedicated for twenty-one of his paintings. Since Redfield painted for Exhibition with the intent to win medals, his best effort often went into his larger paintings. Although he also painted many fine smaller pictures, virtually all of his works were of major award-winning canvas sizes of 38x50 or 50x56 inches. If one were to assign a period of Redfield’s work that was representative of his “best period”, it would have to be from 1907 to 1925. Although he was capable of creating masterpieces though the late 1940s, his style fully matured by 1907 and most work from then through the early twenties was of consistently high quality. In the later 1920s and through the 1930s and 1940s, he was like most other great artists, creating some paintings that were superb examples and others that were of more ordinary quality. Redfield earned an international reputation at a young age, known for accurately recording nature with his canvases and painting virtually all of his work outdoors; Redfield was one of a rare breed. He was regarded as the pioneer of impressionist winter landscape painting in America, having few if any equals. Redfield spent summers in Maine, first at Boothbay Harbor and beginning in the 1920s, on Monhegan Island. There he painted colorful marine and coastal scenes as well as the island’s landscape and fishing shacks. He remained active painting and making Windsor style furniture...
Category

Early 1900s American Impressionist Lillian Jackson Heath Art

Materials

Canvas, Oil

Landscape with Trail
Located in San Francisco, CA
This artwork "Landscape with Trail" c.1980 is a watercolor on paper by noted American artist Gerald F. Brommer, 1927-2020. It is signed at the lower right corner by the artist. The a...
Category

Late 20th Century American Impressionist Lillian Jackson Heath Art

Materials

Watercolor

Landscape
Located in San Francisco, CA
This artwork "Landscape" is a watercolor on heavy rag paper by noted Arkansas artist Bruce Roy Anderson, 1907-1985. It is signed at the lower left corner ...
Category

Mid-20th Century American Impressionist Lillian Jackson Heath Art

Materials

Watercolor

Landscape
Landscape
H 21.25 in W 29 in D 0.01 in
Lake McDonald Glacier Park Plein Air Morgan Cawdrey Mountain Landscape Oil
Located in Whitefish, MT
Lake McDonald, Glacier National Park Plein Air Study by Morgan Cawdrey, an 8" x 10" Mountain Landscape Oil on Canvas, 10" x 12" framed. Morgan Cawdrey, raised in the relative wilder...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary American Impressionist Lillian Jackson Heath Art

Materials

Oil, Canvas

Spring Path, American Impressionist Landscape, Oil on Canvas
By Albert Van Nesse Greene
Located in Doylestown, PA
"Spring Path" is an Impressionist landscape with farmhouse and blooming springtime trees by American painter Albert Van Nesse Greene. The painting is a 16" x 20" oil on canvas, framed in a 22K gold reproduction frame, and signed in the lower left. Provenance: Private Collection, Doylestown, Pennsylvania...
Category

Early 20th Century American Impressionist Lillian Jackson Heath Art

Materials

Canvas, Oil

American Impressionist Original Oil Painting The Creek in Spring, framed
By Charles E. Buckler
Located in Cirencester, Gloucestershire
The Creek in Spring by Charles E. Buckler (American 1869-1953), signed lower corner titled verso oil painting on canvas: 16x 20 inches framed: 21.5 x 25.5 inches condition: very good...
Category

Mid-20th Century American Impressionist Lillian Jackson Heath Art

Materials

Canvas, Oil

Texas Pastoral Landscape with Bluebonnets
By Manuel Garza
Located in Austin, TX
A luminous, oil on canvas painting by Texas plain air painter Manuel Garza (American, B. 1940) measuring 24 by 36 inches. The painting depicts an idyllic nature scene set in Central Texas in the spring. The landscape features majestic oak trees, green mesquite bushes, prickly pear cacti, and fields of the Texas State flower: bluebonnets. The vast landscape expands into the distance beneath a blue sky with fluffy white cumulous clouds. The painting is beautifully framed and ready to hang in a modern, brown wood and gold leaf frame measuring 42 by 30 inches. Manuel Garza (American, B. 1940) ​ Manuel Garza has made his vocation the painting of Central Texas Landscapes. Born in the Hill country, his parents were migrant farm workers. He traveled all over Texas and as far north as Michigan with his family, working along side them in the fields. It was while picking cotton...
Category

Late 20th Century American Impressionist Lillian Jackson Heath Art

Materials

Canvas, Oil

Lillian Jackson Heath art for sale on 1stDibs.

Find a wide variety of authentic Lillian Jackson Heath art available for sale on 1stDibs. You can also browse by medium to find art by Lillian Jackson Heath in paint, canvas, fabric and more. Much of the original work by this artist or collective was created during the 20th century and is mostly associated with the Impressionist style. Not every interior allows for large Lillian Jackson Heath art, so small editions measuring 18 inches across are available. Customers who are interested in this artist might also find the work of Robert Hallowell, Greta Allen, and James March Phillips. Lillian Jackson Heath art prices can differ depending upon medium, time period and other attributes. On 1stDibs, the price for these items starts at $920 and tops out at $2,000, while the average work can sell for $1,460.

Artists Similar to Lillian Jackson Heath

Recently Viewed

View All