Clementine Hunter paintings for sale
Rare, early works: some circa 1940s to early 1950s.
Offered by members of the Whitfield Jack family, descendants Blythe Rand, to whom the paintings
were originally given by Clementine Hunter many years ago on Melrose Plantation.

For more information about the history of these paintings and the
provence of Clementine Hunter's first oil painting, "Bowl of Zinnias",
please click here

 


Window Shade -- c.1950s
Oil on canvas shade
35" x 40"
The window shade painting at left is one of Clementine Hunter's earliest paintings and was given by the artist to Blythe Rand, grandmother of the current owner.
Mrs. Rand and her husband, Dr. Paul King Rand, owned a fishing camp on Melrose Plantation, the land for the camp having been leased to them in the early 1940s by Cammie Henry, owner of Melrose. Clementine Hunter lived just a short distance from the fishing camp and became a friend of Mrs. Rand and her grandchildren.
Clementine Hunter's early paintings were done with left-over tubes of oil paint left at Melrose by the many artists who visited there, and Mrs. Rand helped provide Clementine with window shades and canvas boards to use for her work.
Oddly enough, once Clementine had finished the paintings, she seemed to have no use for them and usually just gave them back to Mrs. Rand as gifts.
The paintings on this page are the result of that mutual generosity and form a collection of works that have never before been seen and are now being offered for sale by Blythe Rand's grandsons.
It is hoped that these paintings will pass into the hands of collectors who respect Clementine Hunter's works and will preserve them for future generations.

$40,500

Close-up Signature
Detail: Top Left Detail: Top Right

Detail: Bottom Left

Detail: Bottom Right

Framed in Case Behind Glass

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"Milking Time" -- 1940s
Oil on canvas board
15-1/2" x 10-1/2"

"Milking Time" was one of the early Clementine paintings that was shown in the Saturday Gallery Exhibition in St. Louis, Missouri in 1952, and, along with "Bowl of Zinnias", photographed in Look Magazine in 1953 (see links below). The signature is unusual in that it appears to be drawn rather than painted, which , along with the style of the painting,would indicate a date in the mid or early 1940s.
When Whitfield Jack Jr.'s grandmother, who originally owned the painting, asked Clementine why the cow had only three legs, Clementine gave her a perfectly good reason: She said that the milking stool only needed three legs, so the cow only needed three legs. Notice that there is a cowbird sitting on top of the cow's head waiting for a passing bug.

$35,500


Close-up Signature 
Detail: Man and Boy Detail: Cow
Look Magazine Saturday Gallery

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"Canasta Players" -- c.Late 1960s
Oil on rigid pasteboard
24" X 16"

This painting also belonged to the owner's grandmother, Blythe Rand. It depicts her canasta group, which normally included Blythe Rand and her friends, Annie White (a very small lady who is probably the diminutive player "seated" at the table sans chair), and a third player, possibly Alma Hemenway. Clementine knew the canasta ladies because they often played canasta at the Rand Family camp on Melrose.

The absence of a chair gives the painting a humorous element not usually found in Clementine's paintings, although it is uncertain whether it was intentional. Card-players-in-pleine-aire is a very unusual subject matter for her (or anybody else)!

The painting was given as a gift by Clementine to Blythe Rand and was bequeathed to her grandson.

$16,500


Close-up Signature 
Detail: Left Detail: Center

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"Washday" -- c.1950s
Oil on rigid pasteboard
24" x 24"

Clementine Hunter's sense of perspective, while primitive in its execution, is one of the delightful aspects of her paintings. Here in this early oil painting, one of the figures seems to be hanging on the line along with the wash. And in the lower right, the pot of boiling lye-soap, while actually at the end of a short path, seems to be balanced on an upright fulcrum. Notice, in the back under a tree, a man (probably relieved to be avoiding wash-day chores) is apparently slugging down a bottle of wine.
The painting was given as a gift by Clementine to Blythe Rand and was bequeathed to her grandson.
(Note: The painting has some mildew)

$22,500

Close-up Signature
Detail: Top Left Detail: Top Right

Detail: Bottom Left

Detail: Bottom Right

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"Gone Fishing" c.1950s
Oil on rigid pasteboard
23-1/2" x 15-1/2"


In this charming oil painting, Clementine Hunter depicts a day on Cane River with everybody fishing in their Sunday best. Notice that in every case but one, the man is doing the fishing and the wife is doing the supervising.
From the porch of the Rand family's camp,
"Happy Landing", this was a scene that could be witnessed almost any day of the week.
The painting was given as a gift by Clementine to Blythe Rand and passed on into the hands of her grandson.


$27,500

Close-up Signature
Detail: Top Left Detail: Top Right

Detail: Bottom Left

Detail: Bottom Right

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"Baptizing with Lady in Orange Dress"
c.Late 1950s -- Early 1960s
Oil on rigid pasteboard
24" x 15-1/2"


The mysterious lady in the orange dress appears from time to time in Clementine Hunter's work. Whether it is the same lady or not is unknown. But, where she appears, she invariably appears alone. No one else seems to dare to wear the same dress in the same painting! (See window-shade painting at top of page.)
These baptizings often took place in the backwaters of Cane River near Dr. and Mrs. Rand's fishing camp. Movies of the baptisms taken yeas ago by Dr. Rand have sadly been lost.
"Baptizing with Lady in Orange Dress" was a gift from Clementine Hunter to her friend, Blythe Rand, and from there passed into the ownership of Blythe Rand's grandson.

$18,000

Close-up Signature
Detail: Top Left Detail: Bottom Right

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"Hoeing Corn" c.1950s
Oil on rigid pasteboard
23" x 15-1/2"


Hoeing corn is a rare subject in Clementine Hunter's paintings compared to picking cotton and picking pecans. What the lady on the lower left is doing is anybody's guess (see Detail: Left). She could be picking corn worms off the ears and putting them in a jar. Or hopefully, just bringing water to the workers.
The painting was given as a gift by Clementine to Blythe Rand and was bequeathed to her grandson.

$25,000

Close-up Signature
Detail: Left Detail: Right

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"Going to Church" c.Early 1950s
Oil on rigid pasteboard
23" x 19"


Across Cane River from the Rand family's fishing camp, was the church seen so often in Clementine Hunter's paintings (also seen above in the painting "Baptizing with Lady in Orange Dress").
  The painting at left is unusual in that it shows two churchgoers arriving by boat, which was the very way some people did arrived during Clementine's day. Dr. Rand occasionally ferried a few of the local parishioners to the bank near the church in his lumbering old all-steel, very-slow "speed" boat.
Although Clementine Hunter painted and signed the painting with her initials"CH", the inscription, "Going To Church" (or possibly "Goong To Church") was most certainly done with guidance, since she could not read or write

$28,000

Close-up Signature

Detail

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.Note: Paintings are subject to prior sale and may be withdrawn from sale at the discretion of the seller
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