Artists

NameInfoYearsUpdated byDate
Weber, Sarah Stilwell 1863 - 1935Anonymous12/27/2012
Wilson, Erdix Tenneynotes
Erdix Tenney Wilson was born on October 15, 1831 in Hardwick, VT.  His parents, Samuel and Martha, resided in Hardwick.  The 1860 census lists Wilson as living with his parents in Plainfield, VT and his occupation as "ambrotype taker" (photographer).  He married Julia B. Wentworth in April 1868.   Living in Lancaster, NH, he learned the art of...
1831 - 1901Anonymous12/27/2012
Wolcott, Josiahnotes
Josiah Wolcott was a New England portrait and landscape painter, active from 1835 to 1857.  He exhibited at the Boston Athenaeum in 1837. In addition to the painting on this site of The Flume, he is known to have painted Mount Kearsarge from Rattlesnake Hill (oil on canvas, 18 x 24 inches, private collection 1960).  
active 1835 - 1857Anonymous12/27/2012
Waud, Alfred Rudolphnotes
Alfred Rudolph Waud (wōd) (October 2, 1828 – April 6, 1891) was an American artist and illustrator, born in London, England. He is most notable for the sketches he made as an artist correspondent during the American Civil War. Early career Before emigration, Alfred Waud had entered the Government School of Design at Somerset House, London, with...
1828 - 1891Anonymous12/27/2012
Wiggins, John Carletonnotes
John Carleton Wiggins (more commonly known as just Carleton Wiggins) was born to Guy and Adelaide Ludlum Wiggins on March 4, 1848, in Turners (now Harriman), N. Y., west of the Hudson River. Wiggins received his early education in Middletown N.Y., and later attended public schools in Brooklyn. As a youth, he took a job at an insurance company on Wall...
1848 - 1932Anonymous12/24/2012
Whistler, James McNeillnotes
James Abbott McNeill Whistler (July 10, 1834 — July 17, 1903) was an American-born, British-based artist. Averse to sentimentality and moral allusion in painting, he was a leading proponent of the credo "art for art's sake". His famous signature for his paintings was in the shape of a stylized butterfly possessing a long stinger for a tail.[1]...
1834 - 1903Anonymous12/24/2012
Wheeler, William Ruthvennotes
William Ruthven Wheeler was basically a portrait painter, but he did produce some landscapes.   His first instruction came at an early age from an itinerant miniature painter, and he began his profession at the age of fifteen.  At the age of 28 he studied for a short time in Detroit under Alvan Bradish.  He moved to Hartford, Connecticut about 1862...
1832 - 1894Anonymous12/22/2012
Waters, George Wellingtonnotes
George W. Waters was born on March 31, 1832 in the small upstate community of Coventry in Chenango County, NY.  He began his artistic career early and in 1850, at the age of eighteen, Waters had his first exhibit when one of his paintings was on view at the National Academy of Design in New York City.  Though he maintained a studio in New York City...
1832 - 1912Anonymous12/22/2012
Wentworth, Catherine D. 1865 - 1948Anonymous12/16/2012
Werner, Carl Friedrich Heinrichnotes
Carl Friedrich Heinrich Werner (1808–1894) was a German watercolor painter. Born in Weimar, Werner studied painting under Julius Schnorr von Carolsfeld in Leipzig. He switched to studying architecture in Munich from 1829 to 1831, but thereafter returned to painting. He won a scholarship to travel to Italy, where he ended up founding a studio in...
1808 - 1894Anonymous11/12/2012
Walter, Russelnotes
Walter Bowman Russell (May 19, 1871 – May 19, 1963) was an American polymath known for his achievements as a painter, sculptor, author and builder and less well known as a natural philosopher and for his unified theory in physics and cosmogony. He posited that the universe was founded on a unifying principle of rhythmic balanced interchange. This...
1871 - 1963Anonymous11/10/2012
Wheeler, Dora 1856 - 1940Anonymous10/15/2012
Weldon, Charles Dater 1855 - 1935Anonymous10/13/2012
Weber, Gottlieb Daniel Paulnotes
Gottlieb Daniel Paul Weber (19 January 1823-12 October 1916) was a German artist. He was born in Darmstadt. He studied art in Frankfurt, and in 1848 came to the United States, settling in Philadelphia. In 1858 he went to Darmstadt, where he was appointed court painter. Among those of his works that are owned in the United States are “A Scene in...
1823 - 1916Anonymous07/18/2012
Waite, A. P. Active ca. 1850Anonymous06/04/2012
Weir, Robert W.notes
Robert Walter Weir (June 18, 1803 - May 1, 1889) was an American artist, best known as an educator, and as an historical painter. He was considered an artist of the Hudson River school,[1] was elected to the National Academy of Design in 1829, and an instructor at the United States Military Academy. Among his better-known works are: The Embarkation...
1803 - 1889Anonymous05/19/2012
Ward, Edgar Melvillenotes
Edgar Melville Ward (1839–1915) was an American genre painter. Ward was born in Urbana, Ohio. His elder brother was the sculptor, John Quincy Adams Ward. He studied at the National Academy of Design in New York and in Paris under Cabanel. In 1883 he became a member of the Institut de France and was made a professor there. His paintings which are...
1839 -  1915Anonymous05/19/2012
Williams, Virgil Maceynotes
Virgil Macey Williams was born in Dixfield, Maine on October 29, 1830. He was raised in Taunton, Massachusetts and, after studying at Brown University, began his art training in New York City under Daniel Huntington. During 1853-60 he studied in Rome with renowned New York painter William Page and became a close friend of Page after marrying his...
1830 -  1886igrkio05/16/2012
Wright, James Henry 1813 - 1883Alexander Lusher05/15/2012
Woodward, John Douglasnotes
John Douglas Woodward (12 July 1846 – 1924) was an American landscape artist and illustrator described by Joseph Pennell as one of the country's "best-known painters and illustrators". He produced hundreds of scenes of Europe, the Holy Land, and the United States, many of which were reproduced in popular magazines of the day.[1] Life and...
1846 - 1924Alexander Lusher05/15/2012
Woodville, Richard Catonnotes
Richard Caton Woodville (30 April 1825 – 13 August 1855) was an American artist from Baltimore who spent his professional career in Europe, after studying in Düsseldorf under the direction of Carl Ferdinand Sohn. He died of an overdose of morphine in London at the age of 30.[1] He was the father of Richard Caton Woodville, Jr., also a noted...
1825 - 1855Alexander Lusher05/15/2012
Wood, Thomas Watermannotes
Thomas Waterman Wood (November 12, 1823 – April 14, 1903) was an American painter born in Montpelier, Vermont. Origins Thomas Waterman Wood's father, John Wood, came to Montpelier from Lebanon, New Hampshire in 1814. The Wood family was of Puritan stock, and it was from Lebanon that John Wood, the father of the artist, married his wife Mary...
1823 - 1903Alexander Lusher05/15/2012
Woodside, John A. 1781 - 1852Alexander Lusher05/15/2012
Wood, Joseph 1778 - 1830Alexander Lusher05/15/2012
Woodbury, Marcia Oakes 1865 - 1913Alexander Lusher05/15/2012
Woodbury, Charles Herbertnotes
Charles Herbert Woodbury (July 14, 1864—January 21, 1940), United States marine painter, was born at Lynn, Massachusetts. Biography Charles H. Woodbury was born in Lynn, Massachusetts, where his earliest work was part of the oeuvre of the group later known as the Lynn Beach Painters. While an undergraduate at MIT he became a regular exhibitor...
1864 - 1940Alexander Lusher05/15/2012
Witt, John Harrison 1840 -  1901Alexander Lusher05/15/2012
Winstanley, Williamnotes
William Winstanley was an early American painter born in England and transferred to the United States as a young man. He is credited as one of the very first American landscape painters and was active in the late 18th and early 19th centuries. Winstanley has been criticized by some art historians for his “sterile recipes” for creating...
1775 - 1806Alexander Lusher05/15/2012
Winegar, Anna 1867 - 1941Alexander Lusher05/15/2012
Wimar, Charlesnotes
Karl Ferdinand Wimar (also known as Charles Wimar and Carl Wimar) (1828-1862), was a painter of Western Native Americans and buffaloes. He is particularly known for his 1855-1856 painting entitled The Abduction of Boone's Daughter by the Indians, a depiction of the 1776 capture of Jemima Boone and two other girls by Indians. The painting shows...
1828 - 1862Alexander Lusher05/15/2012
Willson, Mary Annnotes
This artist was unknown until 1943, when a New York art gallery discovered a portfolio of her drawings. Mary Ann Willson is now regarded as one of the earliest American watercolorists, along with Eunice Pinney of Connecticut. An anonymous letter written in 1850 and signed by "an admirer of art" accompanied the drawings. It relates that Willson...
Born 1810Alexander Lusher05/15/2012
Williams, Williamnotes
William Williams (1727 – 27 April 1791)[1] was an English/American painter. He was born in Bristol, England. His family is believed to have originated in Caerphilly, Wales just across the Severn River from Bristol. He began living in Philadelphia around 1747 after time at sea. In Philadelphia he was instrumental in building America's first...
1727 - 1791Alexander Lusher05/15/2012
Willard, William 1819 -  1904Anonymous05/15/2012
Williams, Henry 1787 - 1830Anonymous05/15/2012
Willard, Archibald M.notes
Archibald MacNeal Willard (August 22, 1836–October 11, 1918) was an American painter who was born and raised in Bedford, Ohio.[1] Willard joined the 86th Ohio Infantry in 1863 and fought in the American Civil War. During this time he painted several scenes from the war, and forged a friendship with photographer James F. Ryder. Willard painted...
1836 - 1918Anonymous05/15/2012
Wicks, Mary Born 1843Anonymous05/15/2012
Whittredge, Worthingtonnotes
Thomas Worthington Whittredge[1] (May 22, 1820 - February 25, 1910) was an American artist of the Hudson River School. Whittredge was a highly regarded artist of his time, and was friends with several leading Hudson River School artists including Albert Bierstadt and Sanford Robinson Gifford. He traveled widely and excelled at landscape painting,...
1820 - 1910Anonymous05/15/2012
White, Stanfordnotes
Stanford White (November 9, 1853 – June 25, 1906) was an American architect and partner in the architectural firm of McKim, Mead & White, the frontrunner among Beaux-Arts firms. He designed a long series of houses for the rich and the very rich, and various public, institutional, and religious buildings, some of which can be found to this day...
1853 - 1906Anonymous05/15/2012
Whitehorne, James 1803 - 1888Anonymous05/15/2012
White, Edwinnotes
Edwin White (born, South Hadley, Massachusetts 1817; died Saratoga Springs, New York 1877) was an American painter who studied in Paris, Rome, and Florence and later taught at the National Academy of Design, in New York. Works by White, mostly in storage, are in the collections of Yale; The Metropolitan Museum of Art; Museum of Fine Arts, Boston;...
1817 - 1877Anonymous05/15/2012
Wharton, Thomas Kelah 1814 - 1862Anonymous05/15/2012
West, William Edward 1788 -  1857Anonymous05/15/2012
West, Benjamin Franklin 1818 - 1854Anonymous05/15/2012
Wertmuller, Adolf Ulrichnotes
Adolf Ulrik Wertmüller (February 18, 1751 — October 5, 1811) was a Swedish painter whose notable works include Danaë receiving Jupiter in a Shower of Gold. Wertmüller was born in Stockholm and studied art at home before moving to Paris in 1772 to study under his cousin Alexander Roslin and French painter Joseph-Marie Vien.[1] On July 30,...
1751 -  1811Anonymous05/15/2012
Wenzell, Albert Becknotes
The Bell Époche, prior to World War I, was a prosperous and extravagant era when royalty governed most of Europe. At the same time in the United States, great fortunes were being made through unfettered trusts and monopolies, creating a class of Nouveau Riche. This ambitious society of Robber Barons and their social climbing wives was just as...
1864 -  1917Anonymous05/15/2012
Wendel, Theodorenotes
Though born in Ohio, Theodore Wendel eventually made the town of Ipswich his full time permanent residence. He in Germany under fellow Ohioan Frank Duveneck, and through the great teacher met and befriended James McNeil Whistler. He later attended the Academie Julian in Paris at the same time as Dow and Henry Rodman Kenyon. While living in France...
1859 - 1932Anonymous05/15/2012
Weir, John Ferguson 1841 - 1926Anonymous05/15/2012
Weinedel, Carl 1795 - 1845Anonymous05/15/2012
Weeks, Edwin Lordnotes
Edwin Lord Weeks (1849 – 1903), American artist, was born at Boston, Massachusetts, in 1849. He was a pupil of Léon Bonnat and of Jean-Léon Gérôme, at Paris. He made many voyages to the East, and was distinguished as a painter of oriental scenes. Weeks' parents were affluent spice and tea merchants from Newton, a suburb of Boston and as such...
1849 - 1903Anonymous05/15/2012
Way, Marynotes
Mary Way (1769-1833) and her sister Elizabeth Way (1771-1825) were born in New Haven, Conn., the daughters of Ebenezer Way (1728-1813) and Mary Taber Way (1737-1771).  The sisters were both painters of small watercolors.   Mary Way moved to New York City about 1811 and advertised herself as a portrait and miniature painter, as well as a teacher...
1769 - 1833Anonymous05/15/2012
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