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| "Indian Encampment" by Henry Farny |
The first signs of failing health were observed a little more than two months ago, a complication of diseases, due largely to exposures and hard life in the Western mountains, being the cause that was found necessary to take him to German Deaconess Hospital shortly after his illness became apparent, and there he remained until the hour of his death. Besides his widow and son, two sisters survive him. The funeral will be held at 2 o'clock Tuesday afternoon in the Crematory Chapel. Services will be conducted by Carson Lodge of Masons.
He had earned the respect of fellow Cincinnati artists. Shortly after his death, Lewis Henry Meakin remembered Farny as 'a man of rare gifts and unusual personality. His art was of the kind that was understood and cared for by a wide range of people. His skill in craftsmanship, the invisible excellence of his design or composition, his fertility of invention and his remarkable ability in making use of the material at his command: his clearness of vision and the readiness and dexterity with which he caught and embodied an idea commanded the respect and admiration of his fellow-artists and the artistically cultured at the same time...'
However, from the time of his death until recently, Farny's works dropped into obscurity outside of Cincinnati. The majority of his paintings were in private collections in Cincinnati and often were passed from one generation to another. No exhibitions of his work are known to have been held elsewhere until recently. However, over the last ten years, interest in Farny's work has increased dramatically because of the upsurge in the popularity of Western painting. His paintings are now widely sought after by dealers and collectors."
(Excerpts from "The Artist's Materials and Techniques" by Cecile D. Mear in "Henry Farny Paints the Wild West.")






