In 1881, Turcas was living in Brooklyn, New York, and had begun to establish himself as a yachtsman, angler, and professional illustrator. In July of that year, he fished and made sketches during a schooner cruise from Manhattan to Cape Cod and back. His companions were the editor of the
New York Times and other prominent New Yorkers. Three years later, he joined another schooner expedition, this time down the west coast of Florida to the
Keys. At about that time, he became a member of an informal dining club of fishing enthusiasts called the Ichthyophagi. In 1890, Turcas illustrated a story that appeared in a popular semi-monthly magazine called
Short Stories. The piece described a cynical and embittered artist who was transformed during a Christmas Eve dream. One of the small illustrations Turcas made shows a
dream vision of one of the artist's models in his studio. In 1893 Turcas provided illustrations for two magazines. The first were published in
St. Nicholas magazine accompanying a poem about a morning glory vine that became entwined around a water bucket. Translated from Japanese by Mary M. Scott, the verse was called "Noshi and the Morning Glory". Turcas's picture showed young Noshi with her bucket. The second, published in
Harper's Weekly, accompanied an article about the canals and waterways of
Tokyo. That year, he also made the title page illustration and other pictures for the ''Book-Lover's Almanac
. One journalist said the illustrations revealed "an artist of real merit" who was sure to become better known, and another said his work was "happily conceived and in closest union with the subject matter". A year later, when Turcas illustrated a poem by Henry Bedlow in the New York Times
, a reporter said the results showed a "vigorous and adroit pencil". When in 1895 Turcas made the cover illustration for the Easter number of The Art Interchange
magazine, a reporter noted Japanese influence in his drawing and called it an "artistic and special" cover design. That year Turcas also contributed illustrations to a memoir of southern gentility called A Girl's Life in Virginia Before the War''. In the early 1890s, Turcas began to show works in major exhibitions. In 1893 he showed a landscape in the New York Watercolor Club's annual exhibition and a pastel of a young boy in a red tie at the annual exhibition in the National Academy. Reviewing the latter, a critic for the British
Magazine of Art approved his commitment to
method and praised his skill in drawing. In 1894, he showed a pastoral in the annual exhibition of the Pennsylvania Academy and an urban scene in the Water Color Club exhibition. Reviewing the latter, a critic for the
New York Times noted a "simple sincerity" of workmanship that made the painting worth extended contemplation. Between 1895 and 1905, Turcas continued to show in large, well-publicized exhibitions, including the
American Watercolor Society (1900),
Pan-American Exposition (1901), and
Boston Art Club (1901). In 1902 he showed at the
Worcester Art Museum,
Union League Club, American Art Society, and
Society of American Artists, He won medals at the Pan-American Exposition in 1901 and an American Art Society exhibition in 1902. Between 1904 and 1916, his work appeared in exhibitions held by the
National Arts Club (1904), Pennsylvania Academy,
Art Club of Philadelphia,
Lewis and Clark Centennial Exposition (1905), National Academy (1906–1913),
Corcoran Gallery (1907), and Allied Artists (1916). Turcas was never represented by a private gallery and never held an independent exhibition. In 1912, he and
George H. Clements appeared in a duo exhibition at New York's
Century Club. Turcas contributed 40 canvases to the show. Reviewing it, a critic for the
New York Times said that Turcas had a "special faculty for gaining charm of surface and texture from his pigment." In the 1890s Turcas rented a studio in the Vandyke Studio Building on 8th Avenue near Columbus Circle in Manhattan. In August 1894, a fire that originated in his studio destroyed the upper floors of the building. He was not present at the time and lost a half-completed portrait to the blaze. In 1901 he joined with other artists in designing, constructing, and managing a cooperative studio apartment building at
27 West 67th Street, a few blocks north of the Vandyke. For extended periods Turcas served as either secretary or treasurer of the corporation that was formed to manage the building. At the turn of the century, New York tonalists, led by
Henry Ward Ranger, formed an
art colony in
Old Lyme, Connecticut near the Long Island Sound. During its first decade the group held exhibitions at a local library and in 1914 organized as the
Lyme Art Association and began to raise funds for the purchase of its own gallery. In 1905 Turcas purchased a home in the village, and began exhibiting with the other artists who spent their summer months in Old Lyme. Reviewing paintings he exhibited there in 1907, a critic praised Turcas for his individuality and called attention to a "glowing" autumn landscape, "rich with color and strong in detail." After the outbreak of World War I, Turcas used his skill at illustration in an organization he formed with two other artists to promote American support for the
Allies. On March 16, 1917, Turcas died of pneumonia at his home in the artists' 67th Street cooperative building he helped to build.
Artistic style and critical reception Turcas was principally a landscape artist who, along with other tonalists, favored cool palettes and soft brush strokes in painting bucolic twilight and autumn scenes. This style, like that of the other tonalists, took its origin from the 19th-century
Barbizon School. Regarding this connection, a
New York Times critic saw strong Barbizon influence in one of his paintings but said, "His style has a more personal accent, and his farm workers somehow seem more real than the French peasants transplanted to New England in so many paintings by his contemporaries." After Turcas died, a fellow artist,
Charles Vezin, wrote, "His art was strong, reserved, quiet, noble, and will survive the fashions of manner, technique, and subject, and will live when no one is left who knew his soul incorporate." ==Personal life and family==