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![]() | Artist Sketching In The Roman Campagna 1882 Private Collection Unknown, USA | Unrated | Anonymous | |
![]() | Four Studies Of Heads In Profile 1842 New York Historical Society New York, NY | ![]() John F. McGuigan, Jr., a James Edward Freeman scholar, makes the following identification of the caricatures. Center figure: Frederick Fink Top left: Luther Terry Bottom figure: possibly Thomas Cole Bottom Left: unidentified. Albany Institute has similar caricature sketches by Cole. | Unrated | Anonymous |
![]() | Horatio Seymour 1835 New York Historical Society New York, NY | ![]() Seymour was born at Pompey Hill, Onondaga County, New York, the son of Henry Seymour and Mary (Forman) Seymour. He studied law in Utica and was admitted to the bar in 1832. He immediately entered the state political arena and served as mayor of Utica and in the state assembly where he was instrumental in the passage of the Erie Canal legislation. He... | Unrated | Anonymous |
![]() | Portrait Of A Young Roman Girl 1852 Private Collection Unknown, USA | Unrated | Anonymous | |
Princess And The Parrot 1871 Private Collection Unknown, USA | Unrated | Anonymous | ||
Self Portrait 1830 Museum of Fine Arts Boston, MA | Unrated | Anonymous | ||
![]() | The Savoyard Boy In London 1865 Smithsonian American Art Museum Washington, D.C. | ![]() James Freeman's image of an exhausted, threadbare boy dozing on a London curb typifies the "fancy pictures" of sweet, colorful street children popular on both sides of the Atlantic. But the painting also reflects one of the great reform issues of the nineteenth century. The young beggars were often called "Savoyard boys" because many had emigrated... | Unrated | Anonymous |
- James Edward Freeman