Artists

Name
InfoYearsUpdated byDate
Richards, Thomas Addisonnotes
During the first half of the nineteenth century artists fanned out across the northeastern United States to find aesthetic inspiration in nature. Thomas Addison Richards was one of the few who traveled extensively in the South. Through his paintings, illustrated magazine articles, and guidebooks, Richards introduced the natural beauty and distinct...
1820 - 1900Anonymous05/20/2012
Richards, William Trostnotes
William Trost Richards (June 3, 1833 - April 17, 1905) was an American landscape artist associated with both the Hudson River School and the American Pre-Raphaelite movement. Biography William Trost Richards was born on 3 June 1833 in Philadelphia. In 1846 and 1847 he attended the local Central High School. Between 1850 and 1855 he studied...
1833 - 1905Anonymous05/20/2012
Richardt, Ferdinandnotes
Joachim Ferdinand Richardt (10 April 1819 - 29 October 1895) Danish-American artist, in Denmark known for his lithographs of manor houses, and in the U.S. for his paintings of Niagara Falls and other landscapes. Life Ferdinand Richardt, the son of Johan Joachim Richardt and Johanne Frederikke née Bohse, was born in Brede, north of Copenhagen in...
1819 - 1895Anonymous05/20/2012
Rimmer, Williamnotes
William Rimmer (20 February 1816 – 20 August 1879) was an American artist born in Liverpool, England. He was the son of a French refugee, who emigrated to Nova Scotia, where he was joined by his wife and child in 1818, and who in 1826 moved to Boston, where he earned a living as a shoemaker. The son learned the father's trade; at fifteen became a...
1816 - 1879Anonymous05/20/2012
Rindisbacher, Peternotes
Peter Rindisbacher (12 April 1806 – 12 August or 13 August 1834) was a North American artist who specialized in watercolors and illustrations dealing with First Nation tribes of mid-Western Canada and the United States, mostly depictions of the Anishinaabe, Cree, and Sioux, usually in group action or genre scenes.[1] He seldom did individual...
1806 - 1834Anonymous05/20/2012
Robbins, Ellennotes
Ellen Robbins is best known for her watercolor paintings of flowers and autumn leaves. Primarily a self-taught watercolorist, Robbins was born in Watertown, Massachusetts in 1828. During her youth, she spent hours copying lithographs from drawing books. During the 1940s, she studied briefly at the New England School of Design and Manchester...
1828 - 1905Anonymous04/03/2012
Robbins, Horace Wolcott Jr.notes
Robbins studied at Newton University in Baltimore.  He moved to New York City after college, studied under James M. Hart in 1859, and opened his own studio in 1860.  He accompanied Frederic Church to Jamaica in 1864 and continued his studies in England, Paris, and Switzerland in 1865 and 1866.  He had a studio in the Adirondack Mountains of...
1842 - 1904Anonymous05/20/2012
Roberts, Marynotes
Mary Roberts (died 1761) was an American miniaturist active in Charleston, South Carolina in the 1740s and 1750s. One of the earliest American miniaturists, and the first woman recorded as working in the medium in the American colonies,[1] she is also believed to have painted the first watercolor-on-ivory miniature in the...
Active ca. 1745 - 1755Anonymous10/15/2012
Robertson, Andrew 1777 - 1845Anonymous05/20/2012
Robertson, Archibaldnotes
ROBERTSON, ARCHIBALD (1765–1835), miniature-painter, born at Monymusk in Scotland on 8 May 1765, was eldest son of William Robertson of Drumnahoy, near Aberdeen, and Jean Ross, his wife; Andrew Robertson [q. v.] was his brother. He was educated at Aberdeen, and received his first instruction in drawing from a deaf-and-dumb artist. In 1786 he...
1765 - 1835Anonymous04/13/2012
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