Alfred Wordsworth THOMPSON
1840–1896, USA

Name Alfred Wordsworth THOMPSON
Birth 1840, 26/5, USA
Died 1896, USA

Alfred Wordsworth Thompson biography:

Alfred Wordsworth Thompson was born in Baltimore on May 26, 1840. He was intended by parental vision as well as education to enter his father's law office; however, just before the War Between the States began, he opened his art studio in Mulberry Street. He visited Harper's Ferry to sketch John Brown in prison. The resulting drawing was published in Harper's Weekly, and when war broke out, he went to work for that periodical as a special artist. He also provided illustrations for the Illustrated London News. Thompson cut short his participation in the War Between the States. After less than one year as an artist-correspondent, he left the United States to study art in Paris. His instructors included the genre painter Charles Gleyre (1806-1874) and the landscapist Emile Lambinet (1815-1878). (1) In 1865 he enjoyed the distinction of having his painting "The Moorlands of Au Fargis" exhibited in the annual Paris Salon. Not until 1868, well after the war, and after he had had time to travel throughout the Rhineland, along the Danube, and make a six-month walking tour from Heidelberg to Calabria, did he return home, establishing his studio in New York City. (2) Despite Addison Richard's warning of the difficulty which the artist would encounter in traveling through the south, Thompson did visit Virginia and North Carolina soon after he returned to the States and at other times in the 1870s and 80s. He exhibited "The Poor White Trash - A Home in the Sand Hills" at the Spring exhibition of the Brooklyn Art Association in 1869 (3), and seven years later "Virginia in the Olden Time" was hung in the Centennial Exhibition in Philadelphia. "Road Out of Norfolk", which Thompson completed in 1888, today may be seen in the collection of the Chrysler Museum. Thompson's southern views did not go unnoticed in the North. S. G. W. Benjamin, writing in 1879, glowingly described Thompson's picture of "a steamboat landing in Chesapeake Bay, with its groups of carriages and horses, mules, cattle, negroes, babies, planters and dogs, in picturesque confusion."(4) An anonymous nineteenth-century reviewer who visited Thompson's studio wrote, "He has at present on his easel and nearly completed a large landscape of western North Carolina scenery." The reviewer went on to identify the scene as representing a broad valley with Mount Pisgah and Coal Mountain in the background and continued, in praise of Thompson's technique, "Mr. Thompson combines in his style much of the solidity of the French with the charming detail of the American school, and in all that he does he gives evidence of the thorough training he has received in his preliminary studies

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