In 1903 Beal won his first award (3rd prize) in a competitive exhibition, held at Worcester Art Museum, Massachusetts. Many prizes followed including those awarded by:
Beal was elected President of the Art Students League of New York in 1916, again in 1918, and from 1920 he held this office continuously until 1930, becoming the longest serving President in its history. He taught at The Art Students’ League in 1931 and 1932.
In 1920 Beal held his first one-man exhibition at Kraushaar Galleries in New York City. It was the beginning of a lifelong relationship he would have with the gallery. His work was exhibited continuously in the country.
The Smithsonian Institution in Washington D.C. holds an archive[29] concerning Beal’s career as an artist containing correspondence, writings, works of art and printed material, much of it provided by Kraushaar Galleries, New York City. This collection has been fully digitized and is available online.
Style and inspiration
Beal’s subjects varied. He found inspiration not only in holiday spectacle and pageantry but also in the natural and everyday side of life. Some of his best known pictures are of holiday crowds, circus performers and hunting scenes. Yet, Beal enjoyed painting the Caribbean Islands and the landscape along the Hudson River and in Gloucester and Rockport, Massachusetts, where he spent many summers. He depicted many scenes of the fishermen who worked there.
The French Impressionists' use of color and light to create form and atmosphere provided Beal's first influence. As his personal style developed, other elements of painting were emphasized: compositions were built on line and form thereby adding more solidity to the work. For example, he depended on balanced, rhythmic elements to depict motion in riding or fishing scenes. Beal believed in the power of spontaneity and would sometimes rework a "dead" area of color with line in order to revitalize it.
Beal's style underwent a simplification in the 1930s, his "austere" phase which coincided with American regionalism. As he grew older, his work became increasingly free and spirited, in part due to his exploration of different media, especially egg/oil tempera and brush and ink. These changes increased his sense of color and gesture, and he began to emphasize the abstract qualities of his subject. He did some of his boldest and brightest work during the last years of his life.[30]
Notes
^Richard Beer, “As They Are,” The Art News (May 19, 1934)
"Gifford Beal-An Appreciation," by Barry Faulkner for the Memorial Exhibition of Paintings by Gifford Beal (New York: American Academy of Arts and Letters, 1956).
"His Art Was Joyful: Death of Gifford Beal, 14 Years President of the League", Art Students League News 9, No. 3 (March 1956).
"Chase the Artist," by Gifford Beal, Scribner's Magazine 61 (February 1917):258.
"Gifford Beal: Perennially Youthful Painter of the Good Life," American Artist (October 1953):24.
"Gifford Beal’s Versatility," Helen Comstock, International Studio (June 1923): 242.
"A Collection in the Making”, Duncan Phillips 1926, E. Weyhe, New York