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Product Overview
Description
A striking and deeply personal American portrait, this framed chalk and charcoal work depicts Marcus Otte, Jr., with the reverse inscribed “Marcus Otte, Jr. / 1888–1936 / Elkhorn, Nebr.” Rendered with soft tonal transitions, sculpted facial detail, and a classic photographic vignette fade, the piece carries the unmistakable presence of an early 20th-century memorial or commemorative portrait.
The sitter is presented with remarkable dignity: neatly parted hair, formal jacket and waistcoat, and a calm, direct expression that gives the composition both intimacy and gravity. The monochromatic handling and softened edges are consistent with period portrait practices in which charcoal and chalk were used to enlarge or refine a photographic likeness into a more elevated keepsake work for the home.
Set within an ornate gilt frame, this portrait has the kind of quiet emotional weight that transforms a room. It is equally compelling as a piece of regional Americana, a conversation-starting interior object, or a collected example of vernacular portraiture with a named Nebraska association.
For collectors drawn to pieces with soul, history, and visual presence, this is the sort of work that does more than decorate. It holds a life.
Product Details
| Detail | Description |
|---|---|
| Title | Framed Chalk & Charcoal Portrait of Marcus Otte, Jr. |
| Medium | Chalk and charcoal on paper |
| Subject | Portrait of a gentleman identified on verso as Marcus Otte, Jr. |
| Date | c.1936 |
| Origin | Elkhorn, Nebraska |
| Inscription | Reverse inscribed: “Marcus Otte, Jr. / 1888–1936 / Elkhorn, Nebr.” |
| Framing | Presented under glass in an ornate gilt decorative frame |
| Style | American vernacular portraiture / memorial portrait |
| Color Palette | Monochrome black, gray, and cream tones with gilt frame |
| Condition | Age-appropriate wear to frame and backing; toning and surface wear consistent with age; not examined out of frame |
| Display | Ready to hang |
| One of a Kind | Yes |
Why It Belongs in Your Home
Named portraiture has a completely different kind of pull than anonymous decorative art. This piece offers not just atmosphere, but identity. The inscription ties the work to a real person, real place, and real moment in time, giving it emotional and historical presence that mass-produced decor can never fake.
The portrait’s monochrome palette makes it incredibly versatile. It can live beautifully in a layered traditional interior, an academic or old-world study, or a modern space that needs one soulful, human object to ground it. The gilt frame adds warmth and architectural richness, while the portrait itself brings depth, story, and a haunting kind of elegance.
This is the kind of piece designers use when they want a room to feel collected rather than merely furnished.
Research note: The reverse inscription corresponds to Marcus Otte Jr. (1888-1936) of Elkhorn, Nebraska. Genealogical and obituary sources place him in the Chalco-Elkhorn-Millard area of eastern Nebraska, as the son of Marcus Otte Sr. and Louise Ehlers Otte. He married Loretta Inglina Prinz in Millard in 1921, and the couple had two sons, Robert Charles Otte and Marcus Gordon Otte, both later identified in obituary records as born in Elkhorn. An Omaha-area obituary index points to a 24 Dec. 1936 Omaha World-Herald death notice with burial at Prospect Hill Cemetery, Elkhorn. Local-history records further connect the Otte family to the Elkhorn area, including land later associated with Mount Michael and the documented work of Marcus Jr.’s brother Adolph Otte, builder of the Ackerhurst-Eipperhurst Dairy Barn.
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Product Overview