Artists
Name | Info | Years | Updated by | Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
Moore, Charles Herbert |
Artist,
professor, architectural historian and first Director of Harvard's Fogg Art Museum, Charles Herbert Moore was born on April
10, 1840 to Charles and Jane Maria Moore. He grew up in New York City, where he
attended public schools. Moore never attended college. He began a career as a
landscape painter in the 1850s, having studied at the... | 1840 - 1930 | Anonymous | 05/18/2012 |
Niles, George E. |
George E.
Niles was a lithographer as well as a painter. He kept a studio at Jackson, NH, where
he exhibited the works of many other artists.
He
exhibited at the Boston Art Club during the years 1873 to 1877.
References
New Hampshire SceneryThe Boston Art
Club Exhibition Record
| 1837 - 1898 | Anonymous | 12/14/2012 |
McConnell, George |
George McConnell was born in Steubenville, OH in 1852 and died in Portland, ME in 1929. He studied portraiture in Philadelphia and New York. He also studied landscape painting with George Inness and continue his art training at the Academy Julien in Paris.
In 1883, at the age of thirty-one, McConnell settled in Portland, Maine. He did... | 1852 - 1929 | Anonymous | 05/18/2012 |
Robbins, Horace Wolcott Jr. |
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 - 1904 | Anonymous | 05/20/2012 |
Richards, Thomas Addison |
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 - 1900 | Anonymous | 05/20/2012 |
Phelps, William Preston |
William
Preston Phelps (1848–1917), known as "the Painter of the Monadnock"[1], was an American landscape painter born
on the family farm near Chesham, in what is now the Pottersville
section of Dublin, New Hampshire on March 6, 1848 to mother Mary Phelps and
father Jayson Phelps.[2][3]
Early years
"Preston",
as he was known, grew up helping... | 1848 - 1917 | Anonymous | 05/19/2012 |
Thompson, Alfred Wordsworth |
Alfred
Thompson trained as a lawyer but turned to painting shortly before the Civil
War, painting both landscapes and portraits. He studied in Baltimore and in
Paris. He studied with Gleyke in 1861-62 and also with E. Lambinet
and A. Pasisi in the period 1862 to 1868.
He served
as an illustrator of war scenes with Harper's Weekly and... | 1840 - 1896 | Anonymous | 05/19/2012 |
Santry, Daniel |
Daniel
Francois Santry was born in Boston, MA in 1858. He studied with Boulanger and
Lefebvre. He exhibited at the Paris
Salon in 1886 and at the Boston Art Club from 1889 to 1891. The Boston Art Club exhibition records
record his address as 12 West Street, Boston, MA. Painting titles that he exhibited do not
describe White Mountain... | 1858 - 1915 | Anonymous | 05/22/2012 |
Shapleigh, Frank Henry |
Frank H.
Shapleigh was born in Boston and studied painting at the Lowell Institute of
Drawing. In 1867-1868, he sailed to
Europe where he studied in the studio of Emile Lambinet (1815-1877).
Shapleigh painted
throughout New England, in St. Augustine, Florida, California, and in
Europe. For sixteen years, from
1877 to 1893, he was... | 1842 - 1906 | Anonymous | 05/22/2012 |
Stanwood, Franklin |
Franklin
Stanwood was born in the Portland Alms House and shortly thereafter was adopted
by Captain Gideon Stanwood.
He was
self-taught and developed a very linear style, which accorded well with the ship
portraits for which he is best known.
He also painted "house portraits" and landscapes. He was a sailor by profession and
perhaps went to... | 1852 - 1888 | Anonymous | 05/22/2012 |