In 1899, Henry and Edith moved to the north shore of Peconic Bay on Long Island, where their artist friends
Irving Ramsay Wiles and Edward August Bell were already established. They painted
plein air paintings and also worked in adjoining studios at High House, their Peconic Bay home. Prellwitz painted
Impressionist and
Tonalist waterscapes of Peconic Bay and
allegorical figure paintings such as the 1904
Lotus and Laurel. He exhibited mainly on the east coast and at expositions like the
St. Louis World's Fair, where he won a silver medal. He won the Third
Hallgarten Prize from the
National Academy of Design (NAD) in 1893 for
The Prodigal Son, and his
Venus won the Thomas B. Clarke Prize at the 1907 NAD exhibition for the best figure composition by an American citizen painted in the United States. Both Prellwitzes disappeared into obscurity for several decades after their deaths in the early 1940s. Rediscovered in the 1980s, they have been called one of the best-kept secrets in art history. Prellwitz's work is now in the collection of the
Metropolitan Museum, the
Parrish Art Museum, and other institutions. ==References==