Background
The son of German-born American sculptor Julius Theodore Melchers, Gari Melchers was a native of Detroit, Michigan, who at seventeen studied art at the Kunstakademie Düsseldorf under von Gebhardt and is associated with the Düsseldorf school of painting.
Education
After three years went to Paris, where he worked at the Académie Julian, and the Ecole des Beaux Arts, where he studied under Lefebvre and Boulanger.
Career
He was one of the leading American proponents of naturalism. Attracted by the pictorial side of Holland, he settled at Egmond. In 1882, Melchers presented The Letter, painted the previous year in Brittany, at the Paris Salon.
This first presentation by a young artist was well received.
In 1884, he founded an art colony at Egmond-aan-Zee in Holland with American artist George Hitchcock. His first important Dutch picture, The Sermon, brought him favorable attention at the Paris Salon of 1886.
His paintings from the World Columbian Exposition (1893) held in Chicago are now in the Library at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor. In 1904 he was named an Officer in the French Legion of Honor.
In 1909 he was appointed Professor of Art at the Grand Ducal Saxony School of Art in Weimar, Germany.
In 1915 he returned to New York City to open a studio at Abraham Archibald Anderson"s Bryant Park Studios building. From 1920 to 1928 he served as the president of the New Society of Artists. He served as chairman of the Art Committee of the National Gallery of Artist
He spent his final years at Belmont Estate in Falmouth, Virginia, near Fredericksburg.
He died on November 30, 1932 in Falmouth, Virginia, at his 27-acre estate known as "Belmont".
Membership
He was a member of the Virginia Fine Arts Commission and a trustee of the Corcoran Gallery of Artist