Born
in Adelaide, Australia, Hayley Lever was known for his town-shore
landscapes and still-life painting in a style that combined impressionism
with vivid colors and strong lines of realism. In his use of color,
he was deeply influenced by Vincent Van Gogh. He freely explored
numerous styles based on impressionism but was never locked into
any particular style.
He
showed early art talent and traveled to England in 1893. He studied
art in London and then painted at an artists' colony in Cornwall
on the seacoast of St. Ives where he began his seacoast paintings.
He received much attention in Europe for these works. In 1908,
he did a series of paintings called "Van Gogh's Hospital,
Holland" expressing the profound influence he felt of that
artist.
Lever
came to America in 1911, encouraged by American artist Ernest
Lawson whom he knew in France, and was soon counted among the
most widely exhibited artists in New York City. Many of his scenes
were of Manhattan. He had a summer studio in Gloucester, Massachusetts
and from 1919 to 1931 taught at the Art Students League in New
York City. He also became Director of the Studio Art Club in Mount
Vernon, New York.
Lever
imparted to his students the following message: "Art is the
re-creation of mood in line, form and color. If I were confined
to my own back yard for the rest of my life, I'd still have more
pictures in my mind than I would have time to paint. Art is nothing
but having a good time" (Comenos Fine Art).
He
died in Mount Vernon, New York in 1958, having suffered ill health
the last few years of his life.
He
received many awards and critical acclaim and his works were purchased
by major American museums, such as New York's Metropolitan Museum
of Art and Washington's Phillips Collection and Corcoran Museum.
Source:
Michael David Zellman, "Three Hundred Years of American Art"