Robert Reid (painter)

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Robert Reid in 1908
The knowledge . Mural in the Thomas Jefferson Building , Washington, DC (1896)
Lady with a parasol

Robert Lewis Reid (* 29. July 1862 in Stockbridge (Massachusetts) , † 2. December 1929 in Clifton Springs , New York ) was an American puppet and muralist , who from 1905 when a portrait painter mainly motifs with soft impressionist pastels turned .

Life

Robert Reid, the son of the Stockbridge school principal Jared Reid jr. (1824-1886) and his wife Louisa Dwight studied, first at the Boston School of Art School of the Museum of Fine Arts at Emil Grundmann . From 1884 he studied at the Art Students League of New York in Manhattan and in 1885 moved to the Paris Académie Julian to Gustave Boulanger and Jules-Joseph Lefebvre . In France he painted figures of farmers from the area around Étaples . Returned to America in 1889, he taught at the Art Students League of New York and at the Cooper Union for the Advancement of Science and Art . Later one of Reid's students was Nan Sheets (1885-1976).

In addition to his apprenticeship, this and that young, attractive woman - mostly framed with flowers - became his favorite motif as a portrait painter. In the winter of 1896/97 he left the Society of American Artists with nine other artists in protest against the art business that was predominant at the time . The ten founded the association Ten American Painters . In 1898 he was elected to the American Academy of Arts and Letters . He was also a member of the National Academy Museum and School from 1906 .

By 1904 Reid rose to be a sought-after painter of wall paintings .

Wall paintings (selection)

Locations of some of Reid's plants:

literature

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Members: Robert Reid. American Academy of Arts and Letters, accessed April 21, 2019 .