Artwork by Otto Reinhold Jacobi,  Cottage Landscape

Otto Jacobi
Cottage Landscape

watercolour
signed and dated 1884 lower right
10.5 x 14.5 ins ( 26.7 x 36.8 cms )

Auction Estimate: $500.00$300.00 - $500.00

Price Realized $330.00
Sale date: December 9th 2015

Provenance:
Private Collection, Calgary

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Otto Reinhold Jacobi
(1812 - 1901) OSA, PRCA

Born at Konigsberg, Prussia, the son of Ehlert Reinhold Jacobi, a malt brewer and Johanne Louise Linck. He received his education at Konigsberg where he became a teacher. He then studies art at the Academy of Berlin and in 1832 he won a 1,000 dollar prize to study three years at Dusseldorf. While he was at the Dusseldorf school, he was appointed (c. 1837) court painter at Wiesbaden, a position he held for twenty years. His work became well known in his own country and he received numerous commissions from royalty. He became known in England and later Canada.

It was someone in Canada familiar with his work who suggested he be invited to come to Canada and paint a scene of Shawinigan Falls. This scene would then be presented to the Prince of Wales during his official Canadian reception. Jacobi arrived in Canada in 1860 and completed his commission but instead of returning to Germanywhere he had established himself, he stayed in Canada. Newton McTavish described this period as follows, “His paintings of this period and even of the period embracing the next ten years, display a good sense of colour values, though they may be found lacking in originality and variety of design. Some of his paintings are notable for their delightful tones of gray, but most of them are emphatic exponents of the merits of red and orange. In Shawinigan Falls, Jacobi must have aroused geniune enthusiasm, for the painting of waterfalls became with him a veritable passion....One of his favourite compositions was an orange sunset, with some indication of trees on either side and a waterfall down the middle. This somewhat sentimental bit of landscape he repeated many times, with, of course, enough variation...”

Jacobi arrived in Montreal where he worked for Notman and Fraser. Then he moved to Toronto where he became a charter member of the Royal Canadian Academy in 1880 and was president of this society from 1890-1893. He was among the first exhibitors at the Ontario Society of Artists and was one of the first teachers (of water colour drawing) at the Ontario School of Art which was founded by the Ontario Society of Artists. He was a better painter than a teacher and it seems he was not able to impart his fine watercolour technique to his pupils. For this reason he left the Ontario School of Art but later taught pupils privately including Henry Sandham.

Discussing his work, Edgar Andrew Collard noted “He would paint in oils, sometimes on canvases of tremendous size. Or he would paint in watercolours, often minute little pictures, measuring only a few inches. But whether the scale was large of small, he achieved a sense of sublimity, perhaps with a certain touch of romantic wistfulness.”

He was married in Germany in 1837 and had one son who came to to America and took up ranching in the Dakota country. It was at his son's ranch in 1901 that Jacobi died at the age of 89.

Robert Harris painted an excellent portrait of Otto Jacobi in 1892. This portrait was acquired by the Royal Canadian Academy who made a gift of it to the National Gallery of Canada around 1900.

Jacobi is represented in the National Gallery of Canada, the Art Gallery of Ontariom The Agnes Etherington Art Centre (Queen's University, Kingston); The Montreal Museum of Fine Arts; The Museum of the Province of Quebec; as well as many private collections.

Source: "A Dictionary of Canadian Artists, Volume I: A-F", compiled by Colin S. MacDonald, Canadian Paperbacks Publishing Ltd, Ottawa, 1977