Artists

NameInfoYearsUpdated by
Date
Rose, Guynotes
Guy Rose (3 March 1867–17 November 1925) was an American Impressionist painter who is recognized as one of California's top impressionist painters of the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Guy Orlando Rose was born March 3, 1867 in San Gabriel, California. He was the seventh child of Leonard John Rose and Amanda Jones Rose. His father was a...
1867 - 1925Anonymous05/22/2012
Rosenthal, Tobynotes
Toby Edward Rosenthal (15 March 1848 in New Haven, Connecticut – 23 December 1917 in Munich) was an American painter. Biography Moving to San Francisco with his parents in 1855, he there studied painting under Fortunato Arriola. In 1865 he went to Munich, where he was a pupil of the Royal Academy under Strachuber, Karl Raupp and Karl Theodor...
1848 - 1917Anonymous05/25/2012
Rossiter, Thomas Prichardnotes
Thomas Prichard Rossiter (1818-1871) was born in New Haven, Connecticut. He first learned painting as an apprentice for a Mr. John Boyd, and also studied with Nathaniel Jocelyn. In 1838 he exhibited two paintings at the National Academy of Design, and in 1939 moved to New York City and opened a studio. In 1840, Rossiter traveled to Europe with...
1818 - 1871Anonymous06/11/2012
Rothermel, Peter Fredericknotes
Peter Frederick Rothermel (July 8, 1817 – August 15, 1895) was an American painter. Biography Rothermel was born in Nescopeck, Pennsylvania in 1817, although some date his birth earlier, in 1813 or 1814. He had a common-school education, and studied land surveying.[1] At age 20, he moved to Philadelphia and became a sign painter.[2] Then at age...
1812 - 1895Anonymous05/22/2012
Rowley, Reubennotes
Little is known about the life of Reuben Rowley, an itinerant miniature and portrait painter. Based upon the identification of the sitters in several portraits dating from the 1820s, he appears to have worked mainly in central New York State between circa 1825 and 1836. It has long been assumed that Rowley and an artist named Reuben Roulery, who is...
Born 1825Anonymous04/21/2012
Rusell, Edward J. 1835 - 1906Anonymous04/10/2012
Russell, Charles M.notes
Charles Marion Russell (March 19, 1864 – October 24, 1926),[1] also known as C. M. Russell, Charlie Russell, and "Kid" Russell, was an artist of the Old American West. Russell created more than 2,000 paintings of cowboys, Indians, and landscapes set in the Western United States, in addition to bronze sculptures. Known as 'the cowboy...
1864 - 1926Anonymous05/27/2012
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
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
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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