![]() | This article's use of external links may not follow Wikipedia's policies or guidelines.(December 2021) |
Rosa (Rose) Frances Peckham Danielson, born October 28, 1842, in Killingly, Connecticut, was a nineteenth-century portrait and landscape artist. [1] [2] She was a founder of the Providence Art Club, where she was also the first female board member, serving as secretary and then as vice president. [1] [3] During her lifetime, her works were displayed at the Paris Salon on three occasions, and she exhibited at the Boston Art Club and the Providence Art Club. [1] At her request, many of her paintings were destroyed after her death on August 22, 1922. [1] More recently, in 2017, her paintings Girl Picking Flower, Breton Headdress, Portrait of Woman, [Schooners at Port], and Portrait of Katherine Peckham were displayed at the Providence Art Club's exhibition "Making Her Mark." [3]
Her mother was Catherine Davis Peckham and her father, Dr. Fenner Harris Peckham, was a doctor. [4] She had five siblings, including Katherine Fenner, Fenner H, Ella Lois Torrey, Grace, and Mary Davis, three of whom went on to become doctors. [4] [2]
On January 25, 1881, in Providence, Rhode Island, Peckham married George Whitman Danielson, editor of the Providence Journal. [1] [5] Together they had 2 children: Whitman, who was born December 17, 1881, and Rosamund, born November 6, 1884. [4] Her husband, George Whitman Danielson, died on March 25, 1884, before the birth of their second child. [1]
Peckham graduated high school in Providence in 1862. [2] She began her formal art training in 1868 with William Rimmer at the Cooper Union School of Design for Women in New York, prior to which she “studied drawing locally.” [1] [2] Afterwards, Peckham traveled to Paris, where she furthered her art education. [5] She attended the Académie Julian starting in 1876, studying under Jules Joseph Lefebvre. [3] She shared a room with her sister Katherine Peckham and her friend Abigail May Alcott Nieriker. [1] While in Paris, she also studied under François Flameng and Julius Rolshoven. [5] She submitted a painting to the Paris Salon in 1877 and was rejected, after which she started a different piece to submit. [1] She did not manage to finish this piece in time to submit it to the 1877 Salon; however, this piece would become arguably her most famous artwork: her Portrait of May Alcott Nieriker. [1] [3] Her subsequent artwork, Portrait of M.E.R, was accepted to the Paris Salon in 1878. [1] [6]
In 1880, Peckham founded the Providence Art Club, which was inspired by the small art community surrounding her studio in Providence. [1] At the first exhibition of the club in 1880, Peckham displayed ten paintings. [1] At the second exhibition, she displayed six more. [1] Her artwork was also exhibited in a couple other art galleries in Providence. [1] In I882, Peckham displayed her paintings, La Bresilienne and Brazilian Schoolgirl, at the Third Annual Exhibition of the Providence Art Club. [1]
Around the time of her husband's death and the birth of her children, between around 1882 and 1888, Peckham took a brief recess from art. [1] Prior to this, her known works show that she had painted mainly portraits, but afterward she began to paint more landscapes. [1] She also painted multiple portraits of her children. [1] At the beginning of the 1890s, Peckham traveled with her children to Europe, including Paris and Venice. [1] While in Europe, Peckham painted a small collection of landscapes of Venice. [1] She again exhibited at the Paris Salon in 1892 and 1893, with paintings entitled Portrait and Tulipes, respectively. [1] [6]
Her most famous work is the Portrait of May Alcott, painted in 1877. [1] Abigail May Alcott Nieriker was an artist and the youngest of the four Alcott sisters upon which the book Little Women, by Louisa May Alcott, was based. [7] May herself posed for the portrait and directed Peckham to subtly enhance her features. [8] May's family was delighted by the portrait and hung it in Orchard House, the Alcott family home. [8] May Alcott's mother says of the portrait:
"Miss Peckham has caught May’s air and post most successfully, and her ‘suaviter in mode’ of tone; -- years ago when her eyes were bright, and her heart was light, and she thought of Love and glory. The tone of high coloring is more the fashion than it has been, everything is more intense; Life itself is short and swift, music is loud and strong, more sound than harmony. The picture is May and nobody else, but the hat is Madame Williams’ `Salon Chapeau.’ May's own pretty hair, with her blue velvet snood, would have suited my taste better but Paris is all crimson and gilt, nude or dressed for exhibition." [8]
Peckham also painted many other portraits, miniatures, and landscapes. Some of her early works, most of which were portraits, included Farm with Pond (1869), untitled landscape (c. 1869), Portrait of William E. Richmond (1871), Portrait of Katherine Peckham (1877), Portrait of the Artist’s Father, Dr. Fenner Harris Peckham (1878), Self Portrait (probably before 1881, Bowstead Collection), Portrait of Dr. Fenner Harris Peckham, Jr. (before 1881), Portrait of Rev. Augustus Woodbury (before 1881, destroyed), untitled cityscape (c. 1880), and Whitman Danielson at Four Months (1882). [1] [9] Her later works include two untitled landscapes (c. 1888), Rosamond Danielson (1888), Whitman Danielson (1890), Danielson Family Home, William Torrey Harris Birthplace, Venice (1891), Venice (with Domes) (1891), Venice (Doge’s Palace) (1891), Venice (?) (1891), Infanta Margarita, Portrait of Katherine Peckham (1892, Bowstead Collection), Portrait of Edith and Grace Baldwin, (early 1890s, Whipple Collection, Putnam, CT), Study of a Girl (Grace Baldwin?), Girl Picking Flower (Grace Baldwin?) (1880?), Double Portrait (Rose Peckham Danielson and Katherine Baldwin?) (1892?), Whitman Danielson (1897), and Rosamond Danielson (1897). [1] She also painted Landscape Painting (1869), Breton Headdress (aka Costumed Child) (1880, Providence Art Club), [Schooners at Port] (1880, Providence Art Club), and Portrait of Woman (ca. 1880). [1] [3] Most of these can be found in the Brainard Collection in Putnam, Connecticut, unless otherwise stated. [1] [3]
Édouard Manet was a French modernist painter. He was one of the first 19th-century artists to paint modern life, as well as a pivotal figure in the transition from Realism to Impressionism.
Mary Stevenson Cassatt was an American painter and printmaker. She was born in Allegheny, Pennsylvania, and lived much of her adult life in France, where she befriended Edgar Degas and exhibited with the Impressionists. Cassatt often created images of the social and private lives of women, with particular emphasis on the intimate bonds between mothers and children.
Pierre-Auguste Renoir was a French artist who was a leading painter in the development of the Impressionist style. As a celebrator of beauty and especially feminine sensuality, it has been said that "Renoir is the final representative of a tradition which runs directly from Rubens to Watteau."
Abigail May Alcott Nieriker was an American artist and the youngest sister of Louisa May Alcott. She was the basis for the character Amy in her sister's semi-autobiographical novel Little Women (1868). She was named after her mother, Abigail May, and first called Abba, then Abby, and finally May, which she asked to be called in November 1863 when in her twenties.
Eugène Louis Boudin was one of the first French landscape painters to paint outdoors. Boudin was a marine painter, and expert in the rendering of all that goes upon the sea and along its shores. His pastels, summary and economic, garnered the splendid eulogy of Baudelaire; and Corot called him the "King of the skies".
Helena Sofia (Helene) Schjerfbeck was a Finnish painter. A modernist painter, she is known for her realist works and self-portraits, and also for her landscapes and still lifes. Throughout her long life, her work changed dramatically beginning with French-influenced realism and plein air painting. It gradually evolved towards portraits and still life paintings. At the beginning of her career she often produced historical paintings, such as the Wounded Warrior in the Snow (1880), At the Door of Linköping Jail in 1600 (1882) and The Death of Wilhelm von Schwerin (1886). Historical paintings were usually the realm of male painters, as was the experimentation with modern influences and French radical naturalism. As a result, her works produced mostly in the 1880s did not receive a favourable reception until later in her life.
Her work starts with a dazzlingly skilled, somewhat melancholic version of late-19th-century academic realism…it ends with distilled, nearly abstract images in which pure paint and cryptic description are held in perfect balance.
Lilla Cabot Perry was an American artist who worked in the American Impressionist style, rendering portraits and landscapes in the free form manner of her mentor, Claude Monet. Perry was an early advocate of the French Impressionist style and contributed to its reception in the United States. Perry's early work was shaped by her exposure to the Boston School of artists and her travels in Europe and Japan. She was also greatly influenced by Ralph Waldo Emerson's philosophies and her friendship with Camille Pissarro. Although it was not until the age of thirty-six that Perry received formal training, her work with artists of the Impressionist, Realist, Symbolist, and German Social Realist movements greatly affected the style of her oeuvre.
John White Alexander was an American portrait, figure, and decorative painter and illustrator.
Brenda Pye, also known as Brenda Landon or Brenda Capron, was an English portrait painter and landscape artist. She exhibited at the Royal Academy, the Paris Salon, the Royal Society of Portrait Painters, the Royal Society of British Artists and the Association of Women Artists; she was also a member of the Association of Sussex Artists.
Frances Mary Hodgkins was a New Zealand painter chiefly of landscape and still life, and for a short period was a designer of textiles. She was born and raised in New Zealand, but spent most of her working life in England. She is considered one of New Zealand's most prestigious and influential painters, although it is the work from her life in Europe, rather than her home country, on which her reputation rests.
Frank Bramley RA was an English post-impressionist genre painter of the Newlyn School.
Gaston La Touche, or de La Touche, was a French painter, illustrator, engraver and sculptor.
Édouard Joseph Dantan was a French painter in the classical tradition. He was widely recognized and successful, even receiving grudging respect from a contemporary Modernist painter and critic Walter Sickert.
Elin Kleopatra Danielson-Gambogi was a Finnish painter, best known for her realist works and portraits. Danielson-Gambogi was part of the first generation of Finnish women artists who received professional education in art, the so-called "painter sisters' generation". The group also included Helene Schjerfbeck (1862–1946), Helena Westermarck (1857-1938), and Maria Wiik (1853-1928).
Anna Huntington Stanley was an American Impressionist artist.
Maria Catharina Wiik was a Finnish painter. She worked principally with still life, genre images, landscape paintings and portraits.
Jeanna Bauck was a Swedish-German painter known for her landscape and portrait paintings, and her career as an educator, as well as her friendships with Bertha Wegmann and Paula Modersohn-Becker.
The Providence Art Club, Thomas Street, Providence, Rhode Island, was founded in 1880. An art club is an organization for artists and the community to engage and collaborate with each other in a shared space dedicated to art and culture. The Providence Art Club has studios, galleries, eateries, and a clubhouse in a "picturesque procession of historic houses," which are across the street from the First Baptist Church in America.[1] The buildings occupied by the Providence Art Club include Brick House, the two Seril Dodge Houses at 10 and 11 Thomas Street, Deacon Taylor House, and Fleur De Lys Studio.
Louise Chamberlain Herreshoff was an American painter and collector of porcelain. She lived for most of her life in either New York or Rhode Island, although she undertook extended art training in France at the Académie Julian. With her second husband, she collected a "little museum" of porcelain in two Providence houses. She stopped painting when her aunt, Elizabeth Dyer, who had been a foster mother to her, died. Her painting style has been described as Impressionist and Fauvist.
Amy Katherine Browning; Amy Dugdale; Amy Katherine Dugdale was a British Impressionist painter.