Artists
Name | Info | Years | Updated by
![]() ![]() | Date |
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Jouett, Matthew Harris | ![]()
Matthew Harris Jouett was born April 22, 1788, near Harrodsburg, in what became Mercer County, Kentucky. Except for a few trips outside the state in search of commissions, he would reside virtually all of his life in Kentucky. His father, Captain Jack Jouett, was known as the "Paul Revere of the South" in honor of his 1781 ride warning Southern... | 1788 - 1827 | Anonymous | 04/02/2012 |
Johnson, David | ![]()
David
Johnson (May 10, 1827 – January 30, 1908) was a member of the second
generation of Hudson River School painters.
He was born
in New York City, New York. He studied for two years at the antique school of
the National Academy of Design. He also studied briefly with the Hudson River
artist Jasper Francis Cropsey. Along with John Frederick... | 1827 - 1908 | Anonymous | 05/17/2012 |
Jarvis, John Wesley | ![]()
Although
born in England in 1780, John Wesley Jarvis was the son of an American mariner
who moved his family back to the United States by the mid-1780s. At the end of
that decade, the Jarvises settled in Philadelphia,
where the artist spent his childhood and began his artistic training. He is
known to have frequented the studio of the aging Matthew... | 1780 - 1840 | Anonymous | 05/17/2012 |
Johnson, Eastman | ![]()
Eastman Johnson (July 29, 1824 –
April 5, 1906) was an American painter, and Co-Founder of the Metropolitan
Museum of Art, New York City, with his name inscribed at its entrance. Best
known for his genre paintings, paintings of scenes from everyday life, and his
portraits both of everyday people, he also painted portraits of prominent
Americans... | 1824 - 1906 | Anonymous | 05/17/2012 |
Jacobsen, Antonio | ![]()
Antonio Nicolo Gasparo Jacobsen (November
2, 1850 – February 2, 1921) was a Danish-born American maritime artist
known as the "Audubon of Steam Vessels".[1]
Biography
Jacobsen
was born in Copenhagen, Denmark. Jacobsen attended the Royal Academy of Design
before heading across the Atlantic Ocean.[1] He arrived in the United States in
1871 and... | 1850 - 1921 | Anonymous | 04/02/2012 |
James, Frederick | ![]()
Frederick
E. James (Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, 1845 – Percé,
Quebec, 17 July 1907) was an American artist. He was noted for his depictions
of 18th-century American life.
James
trained first at the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts and later under the
famed French artist Jean-Léon Gérôme.
Portraits
by him of Benjamin Franklin, Stephen... | 1845 - 1907 | Anonymous | 04/11/2012 |
Jamieson, Bernice Evelyn | ![]() An artist and teacher at the Rhode Island School of Design in 1940, Bernice Jamieson was also a curator of New Jersey painters for the New Jersey State Museum in Trenton from the mid 1940s to the 1960s.
Source:
Peter Falk, "Who Was Who in American Art" | 1898 - 1977 | Anonymous | 05/17/2012 |
Jarvis, Charles Wesley | ![]()
Charles
Wesley Jarvis, the second son of the portrait painter John Wesley Jarvis, was
born in New York City. His mother died the following year, and he and an older
brother, John, were raised by her relatives on Long Island. Jarvis' father
spent many years away from home working as an itinerant painter.
Jarvis
apparently received his earliest... | 1812 - 1868 | Anonymous | 05/17/2012 |
Jennys, William | ![]()
William Jennys (1774–1859), also known as J. William Jennys, was an American primitive portrait painter who was
active from about 1790 to 1810. He traveled throughout New England seeking
commissions in rural areas and small towns.
His early
works are characterized by broadly modeled faces with a minimum of costume
detail and bare backgrounds.... | 1774 - 1858 | Anonymous | 04/02/2012 |
Jewett, William | ![]()
A painter
of portraits, landscapes, and works of genre, or scenes of everyday life,
William Smith Jewett became California’s first resident professional
artist. Jewett was born near South Dover, New York, and he studied at New York
City’s prestigious National Academy of Design. He established a
portrait-painting practice in New York in 1833; in... | 1792 - 1874 | Anonymous | 05/17/2012 |