| 1. William Vincent Cahill (American, 1878-1924), "A Days Work", 1915; oil/canvas, 36" x 24", signed. Cahill studied at the Art Students
League and in Boston with Tarbell and Benson. He shared a studio in Boston with John Hubbard Rich, and the two of them moved to Los Angeles
in 1914, and established a school of illustration and painting. Cahill also taught at several studios he had in Los Angeles, after selling the school
in 1917. In 1920, he and his wife moved to San Francisco, where he worked as a commercial artist. He was a member of the Laguna Beach
Art Association and the California Art Club. He exhibited at the Pan-Pacific International Exhibition, San Francisco Art Association, Los
Angeles County Museum of Art, and the Salmagundi Club. REF:
Art Across America: Two Centuries of Regional
Painting, Gerdts; Impressionism, The California View.
8000-10,000 |