The Ferris Collection of Prints - Artist Bios

Hippolyte Bellangé (1800–1866) was best known for his paintings and lithographs of contemporary and Napoleonic military subjects, which were popular in France in this period. He trained in the studio of Antoine Jean Gros, a history painter in the style of Jacques-Louis David, where he learned about lithography. Bellangé actively pursued lithography until 1836, when he was appointed curator at the Musée des Beaux-Arts de Rouen. Thereafter he devoted himself almost entirely to painting military scenes. During his lifetime he produced almost 500 lithographic prints.
Stephen James Ferris (1835–1915) was a portrait painter and founding member of the Philadelphia Society of Etchers. In 1860, John Sartain, a veteran engraver, demonstrated the etching process for Ferris and his future brother-in-law, artist Thomas Moran. Ferris himself later demonstrated the etching process frequently for members of the Philadelphia Sketch Club, which he had joined in 1860. He etched prints after paintings by others and many portraits of his own composition. His print, the Head of Fortuny, an artist he admired, was published in 1875, one of the earliest etchings to be printed and distributed by a publisher in the United States. In addition to portrait painting and etching, Ferris taught for many years at the Philadelphia School of Design for Women.
Léopold Flameng (1831–1911) was born to French parents in Brussels where he trained as an engraver with Luigi Calamatta. He collaborated on several projects with Calamatta, who had a considerable reputation as a reproductive engraver of contemporary French and old master paintings. Flameng went to Paris in 1853 where he learned the technique of etching, and tried unsuccessfully to launch himself as an original etcher. However, he proved himself a versatile copyist, able to reproduce successfully the work of a broad range of painters in both etching and engraving. He made more than 800 plates for many different projects over his lifetime. His prints were widely collected in the United States by New York art dealer Samuel P. Avery among others.
Louise Girard was active in the second quarter of the 19th century, a period in which there were not many women graphic artists working. Not much is known about the artistic career of Girard, who debuted in the Paris Salon of 1824. In addition to her graphic work, she also painted miniatures. Her husband, François Girard, was an engraver of religious and history subjects as well as portraits.
Louis-Pierre Henriquel-Dupont (1797–1892) a French painter and graphic artist known as Henriquel, began his engraving studies at age seventeen after four years in a painter’s studio. Henriquel has been described by one contemporary French print authority as “the most celebrated engraver of the 19th century.” Engraving in this context means primarily reproductive engraving. The great skill with which he interpreted paintings of his contemporaries such as Paul Delaroche and others won Henriquel many important awards in France. He was elected a member of the Académie des Beaux-Arts in 1849. He also worked in lithography, aquatint, and etching, and taught for decades at the École des Beaux-Arts in Paris, where artists of many nations came to study the fine arts.
Charles Jacque (1813–1894), painter and graphic artist, was an important figure in the French etching revival of the 1860s. Called a poet of rural life, he was largely self-taught and apprenticed briefly with a map engraver. Alfred Cadart brought Jacque’s etchings with the work of other contemporary French painters and print makers to the United States in 1866. Samuel P. Avery, a noted art dealer and collector, first saw Jacque’s work at this time. He eventually collected almost 400 of Jacque’s etchings, now in the New York Public Library. Jacque’s work was later exhibited in major 19th-century print exhibitions in the United States such as the Philadelphia Centennial Exhibition of 1876. Jacque’s etchings, seen in these exhibitions or in private collections, were important references for contemporary American etchers like Peter Moran.
Jules Jacquemart (1837–1880), a French watercolorist and etcher, taught himself to etch and evolved a very personal style. His early etchings reproduce objects. He worked directly from the objects, which were etched with almost microscopically fine detail but appear solidly three dimensional. He began to reproduce paintings in earnest at the end of the 1860s. In 1871 Jacquemart, as one of the finest etchers of the day, was commissioned by the Metropolitan Museum of Art to create a portfolio of etchings to be sold to its members. His work was shown and collected in Europe and the United States but is little known today.
Maxime Lalanne (1827–1886), a founding member of the Société des Aquafortistes (Society of Etchers) started by Alfred Cadart in 1862, was an important figure in the etching revival in France. He published almost 200 etchings, most of which were original, not reproductive. The subjects included city and rural scenes and picturesque sites in Paris, Bordeaux, London, and Switzerland. Alfred Cadart brought the work of a number of French artists, including Lalanne, to the U.S. in 1866. In that year, Lalanne published an important manual on etching, Traité de la Gravure à l’Eau-Fort, later translated into English by Sylvester R. Koehler, the first Graphic Arts Curator at the Smithsonian as A Treatise on Etching. New York art dealer Frederick Keppel remarked in 1910, “Lalanne’s treatise still remains the standard text-book on the making of etchings.” The New York Etching Club exhibited his prints in 1890. He received a medal for his drawings at the Philadelphia Centennial Exhibition in 1876.
Mary Nimmo Moran (1842–1899) is known for her landscape etchings, especially those of eastern Long Island where she summered. Born in Scotland, she immigrated with her brother and father to the United States in 1847, and settled in Pennsylvania. In 1862 she married artist Thomas Moran (1837–1926). Her husband oversaw her early efforts at oil painting and water color and encouraged her to try etching. She etched her first plate of the St. John’s River in Florida from memory in 1879, but later worked directly from subjects outdoors. The quality of her etchings was recognized by her peers. Among the early members of the New York Etching Club, she was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of Painter-Etchers in London in 1881. In 1950 the Smithsonian’s Graphic Arts Division presented her only solo show, although her work was widely exhibited with others in her lifetime.
Peter Moran (1841–1914), an animal and genre painter and etcher, came to the United States from England with his family in 1844. One of the younger Morans, he trained with his artist brothers Edward and Thomas after a brief stint with a Philadelphia lithographer in 1857. He specialized in animal subjects, while his brother Edward was known for his marine painting and Thomas for his views of the West. Peter Moran began to etch in 1874, and at the 1876 Philadelphia Centennial Exhibition received medals for his etchings and paintings. French artists of the Barbizon school like Charles Jacque were important models for his scenes of animals. Moran made visits to New Mexico and Arizona in the 1870s and 1880s, and material from these visits inspired some of his prints. He served as president of the Philadelphia Society of Etchers and taught for many years at the Philadelphia School for Design for Women.
Thomas Moran (1837–1926) best known as a landscape painter, especially of the American West, was also active as a graphic artist. In 1853 he apprenticed at a Philadelphia wood engraver’s studio, where he drew designs on blocks. His early graphic work consisted of lithographs and cliché-verre, in which a drawing on a coated glass plate is contact printed on light-sensitive paper. Moran, together with his future brother-in-law Stephen Ferris, watched John Sartain, an engraver, demonstrate the etching process in 1860. In 1878 he seriously took up the etching needle and bought his own etching press. His subject matter ranged from East Hampton, Long Island, where he summered with his wife, artist Mary Nimmo Moran (1843–1899) and their children, to the American West, Mexico, and Europe. He favored impressive views. Like many contemporary European and American artists, he also etched some reproductive prints after his own and others’ paintings. Moran was an early member of the New York Etching Club and in 1881 became a Fellow, together with his wife, of the London Society of Painter-Etchers. He also belonged to the Society of American Etchers. He was elected to the National Academy of Design in 1885.
Camille Piton (1844–1918) immigrated to the United States from France and worked in Philadelphia, teaching art, etching, and illustrating magazine articles. Between 1879 and 1892, he contributed some seventy illustrations alone to The Art Amateur. He also opened a school in Philadelphia, where he taught china painting, and wrote a book on the subject. China Painting in America (1878) contains patterns to use for this craft, a popular hobby for women in the late 19th century. Eventually, he returned to France where he wrote about 18th- and 19th-century dress. He died in Marly-le Roi, where he was born.
Paul Adolphe Rajon (1842–1888), painter and graphic artist, began his career as a photographer while studying at the École des Beaux-Arts in Paris. He later studied etching with Léon Gaucherel and Léopold Flameng. Rajon etched some original portraits, but most of his prints reproduced paintings of contemporary artists and old masters for publications such asL’Art and the Gazette des Beaux-Arts. Frederick Keppel, a New York art dealer who had met Rajon in Europe, exhibited his prints together with other French artists at Cincinnati fairs and in Keppel’s own gallery in New York. Rajon visited New York in 1886 to work and then returned in 1887, when he addressed the New York Rembrandt Club in Brooklyn. The Grolier Club of New York exhibited his prints posthumously in 1890. His etchings were collected on both sides of the Atlantic.
Abbé Jean-Claude-Richard de Saint-Non (1727–1771), a patron of the arts and acquaintance of Voltaire and Jean Jacques Rousseau, was an amateur etcher who made his first print in 1753. Although ordained as a priest, Saint-Non chose to pursue his artistic interests. On a visit to Italy, he met Hubert Robert (best known as a landscape painter) and Jean Honoré Fragonard, both of whom made numerous studies for him. On returning to Paris, Saint-Non issued sets of prints that reproduced some of these studies. In 1765, with the help of the graphic artist Delafosse, he invented an aquatint process that reproduced the tonal character of an ink wash drawing. Of the 366 prints Saint-Non made, three-quarters are aquatints.
William Unger (1837–1932), a prolific German graphic artist, made hundreds of reproductive etchings after paintings by old master and contemporary artists. He also etched sculptures. His etchings were widely published in many editions in Europe and the United States. A volume titled The Works of William Unger came out in New York in 1876, and Sylvester R. Koehler included his work in Foreign Etchings (1887). Unger’s prints also were issued in portfolios of loose etchings and appeared in a number of American publications, such as Koehler’s American Art Review. William Unger’s name was familiar to many Americans in the last quarter of the 19th century. In addition to his graphic work, Unger was also was an influential professor of graphic arts at the Vienna Academy of Fine Arts (Akademie der bildenden Künste Wien). He received medals for his prints in Paris, Vienna, and Berlin.
"The Ferris Collection of Prints - Artist Bios" showing 16 items.
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S. J. Ferris Self-portrait
- Description
- The Philadelphia Society of Etchers commissioned this self-portrait of Stephen James Ferris in 1880. Ferris was a founding member of the society, which formed the same year, three years after the founding of New York Etching Club, the first in the United States. Ferris had seen the etching process demonstrated in 1860 by John Sartain, an engraver. In 1875 Ferris produced one of his earliest etchings to be commercially published in the United States, a portrait of Mariano Fortuny (1838–1874).
- Location
- Currently not on view
- Date made
- 1880
- graphic artist
- Ferris, Stephen James
- ID Number
- GA*14388
- accession number
- 94830
- catalog number
- 14388
- Data Source
- National Museum of American History, Kenneth E. Behring Center
Barbizon School Artists
- Description
- Stephen James Ferris etched this group portrait The Barbizon School: Seven French Artists as a frontispiece for the auction catalog of works from the J. C. Runkle collection, sold in New York in March 1883. Artists of the Barbizon School, named after a rural village in France near which many of them worked outdoors, specialized in realistic landscapes and animal paintings. Samuel P. Avery had arranged the sale and the catalog, which was illustrated with fifteen etchings by four American etchers. This print marks the first time that an auction catalog contained an original etching, as opposed to the usual reproductive etchings. The New York Times gave a favorable review of Ferris’s print.
- Location
- Currently not on view
- Date made
- 1883
- publisher
- Avery, Samuel Putnam
- graphic artist
- Ferris, Stephen James
- ID Number
- GA*14508
- accession number
- 94830
- catalog number
- 14508
- Data Source
- National Museum of American History, Kenneth E. Behring Center
Goose Pond, East Hampton
- Description
- Mary Nimmo Moran chose The Goose Pond, Easthampton as her diploma work when the recently formed Royal Society of Painter-Etchers in London elected her a Fellow in 1881, the only woman among the sixty-five original Fellows. When she exhibited four etchings in the Society’s show, the New York Herald commented on a review in a London paper, ‘“Mrs. Moran’s work is so masculine [sic] that the Daily News critic takes it for that of a man.”’ Her vigorous etching style has been frequently noted along with her preference for working outdoors directly on a prepared plate, before the subject.
- The print shows a pond, now known as Town Pond, and Gardiner’s Mill, which still stands in the town of East Hampton, where the Morans spent many summers. Landscape and in particular the landscape around East Hampton was the subject of many of Mary Nimmo Moran’s etchings.
- Location
- Currently not on view
- Date made
- 1881
- graphic artist
- Moran, Mary Nimmo
- ID Number
- GA*14566
- catalog number
- 14566
- accession number
- 94830
- Data Source
- National Museum of American History, Kenneth E. Behring Center
Portrait of Lawrence Alma-Tadema
- Description
- Paul Rajon etched the portrait of Lawrence Alma-Tadema (1836–1912) during one of his annual six-month visits to England. Rajon first visited England in 1873 to execute a commission. He etched some original portraits, but most of his prints reproduced paintings by contemporary artists and old masters for publications. Alma-Tadema, a Dutch-born painter of neoclassical pictures, enjoyed a considerable success on the Continent and decided to move to London where his work was enthusiastically appreciated from the 1860s to 1890s. This print was intended not only for the European market but also for the United States, and it carries a U.S. copyright line. Rajon etched Alma-Tadema’s paintings as well as his portrait.
- Location
- Currently not on view
- Date made
- 1883
- graphic artist
- Rajon, Paul-Adolphe
- publisher
- Knoedler & Co.
- British and Foreign Artists' Association
- ID Number
- GA*14592
- catalog number
- 14592
- accession number
- 94830
- Data Source
- National Museum of American History, Kenneth E. Behring Center
Scottish Landscape
- Description
- Thomas Moran etched this rugged landscape, Bridge in the Pass of Glencoe, Scotland, in 1882 after his painting of the subject. He and his wife Mary Nimmo Moran, also an etcher, visited Scotland, her birthplace, in the spring of 1882 during a five-month stay (May–October) in the United Kingdom.
- This print is the first state of two. The second state was published by Estes and Lauriat of Boston in 1888. Moran showed this print in the New York Etching Club Exhibition in mid-January 1883. For the Club’s catalog of the exhibition, Moran etched a smaller version of this scene.
- The bridge, which is known as the Bridge of Three Waters, stands near the site in Glencoe where members of the MacDonald clan were massacred by soldiers from a Campbell regiment during a night in February 1692.
- Location
- Currently not on view
- Date made
- 1882
- graphic artist
- Moran, Thomas
- ID Number
- GA*14737
- catalog number
- 14737
- accession number
- 94830
- Data Source
- National Museum of American History, Kenneth E. Behring Center
Mission Church, New Mexico
- Description
- Thomas Moran etched this view of a mission church in New Mexico in 1881 after a photograph by friend and traveling companion William Henry Jackson (1843–1942). Moran had met Jackson in 1871 on Ferdinand V. Hayden’s Yellowstone expedition, the first government-sponsored survey of that area. Jackson and Moran worked side by side recording views. While Moran’s paintings of the West made his reputation, fewer than one-fifth of his etchings depict Western or Mexican scenes. His signature “TYM” at lower left stands for Thomas “Yellowstone” Moran.
- The church shown in this print was replaced by a stone building in the early 20th century, and the San Juan Pueblo recently changed its name to Ohkay Owingeh Pueblo. It lies twenty-five miles north of Santa Fe.
- Location
- Currently not on view
- Date made
- 1881
- Associated Date
- 1881
- graphic artist
- Moran, Thomas
- photographer
- Jackson, William Henry
- ID Number
- GA*14750
- catalog number
- 14750
- accession number
- 94830
- Data Source
- National Museum of American History, Kenneth E. Behring Center
Cows by a Stream
- Description
- This print, On the Neshimaney, which shows cows on a still, warm afternoon standing by a creek, is typical of the views of rural Pennsylvania that were the specialty of Peter Moran. He took pains to make the landscape details appear natural. French artists who depicted the rural landscape, such as Constant Tryon (1810–1865) and Charles Jacque (1813–1894), were important to Moran’s artistic development.
- Somewhat confusingly, Peter Moran exhibited three etchings with the title On the Neshaminey in his one-man show in 1887 and 1888 at Frederick Keppel’s New York gallery. This print is the largest and last of the Neshaminey series. Philadelphia book dealer Robert M. Lindsay commissioned the print from Moran and published it in an edition of 100 in late October 1886.
- This print is signed in the image and in pencil at lower left below the image, “P Moran.” It also has a remarque (small design) of a cow’s head at left in the lower margin. Remarques are of special interest to collectors as they are used on prepublication prints and then removed from the plate before the edition is printed.
- The Neshaminey Creek in Bucks County, Pennsylvania, runs north of Philadelphia through what are today mostly suburban areas, although some farmland does remain. The area shown in the print is probably near either New Britain or Edison. Peter Moran and his family spent some summers in the area.
- Location
- Currently not on view
- Date made
- 1886
- graphic artist
- Moran, Peter
- publisher
- Lindsay, Robert
- ID Number
- GA*14769
- catalog number
- 14769
- accession number
- 94830
- Data Source
- National Museum of American History, Kenneth E. Behring Center
Street Musicians
- Description
- Jean Léon Gérôme (1824–1904) painted this scene of Pifferari or street musicians serenading an unseen image of the Virgin Mary in 1870. Camille Piton etched it for an auction catalog of works from the collection of J. C. Runkle, which were sold on March 8, 1883. The auction was organized by Samuel P. Avery, art dealer and print collector. Pifferari come from the mountains in Calabria, Italy, and from the Abruzzi to play bagpipes and reed instruments like the piffero, a kind of oboe, before images of the Virgin in Rome during the Christmas season. Jean Léon Gérôme was a favorite painter of Stephen Ferris, who named his son after him.
- Location
- Currently not on view
- Date made
- 1879
- 1883
- original artist
- Gerôme, Jean-Léon
- graphic artist
- Piton, Camille
- ID Number
- GA*14886
- catalog number
- 14886
- accession number
- 94830
- Data Source
- National Museum of American History, Kenneth E. Behring Center
Portrait of William Baker
- Description
- Stephen Ferris etched the portrait of distinguished Philadelphian William Spohn Baker in 1882. Baker (1824–1897), a critic and author, wrote several books, including American Engravers and Their Works and The Origin and Antiquity of Engraving. An antiquarian who specialized in George Washington, he collected medals, biographies, and engraved portraits of the first president, and wrote about these subjects. Baker was an active member of the Historical Society of Pennsylvania, serving as a vice president from 1892 and also as a director of the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts.
- Location
- Currently not on view
- Date made
- 1882
- graphic artist
- Ferris, Stephen James
- ID Number
- GA*14536.16
- catalog number
- 14536.16
- accession number
- 94830
- Data Source
- National Museum of American History, Kenneth E. Behring Center
Spanish Gypsy's Home
- Description
- Stephen Ferris etched Home of Mariano, Gypsy King in Granada, Spain, during his 1881 visit to sites associated with Mariano Fortuny, a Spanish artist he deeply admired. In a letter from Granada to art editor Sylvester R. Koehler, Ferris told of his fascination with gypsy cave dwellings. He described them as “most picturesque and weird, overgrown with vines, cactus, and aloes . . . . I have made several drawings of Gitanos [gypsy] caves and of one especially a favorite model of Fortunys [sic] a Gitano prince in splendid costume. We bought his dress and I intend to paint and etch my picture when I get time.” Ferris etched the gypsy’s portrait in costume separately and included it, slightly altered, on the right in this print showing the family and animals assembled in front of their cave. Ferris noted in pencil on the print that it was etched directly from life.
- Gypsies or gitanos still live in caves in the Sacromonte(Holy Mountain) area of Granada. Today the number of cave dwellers has dwindled, but the area remains famous for flamenco singing and dancing.
- Location
- Currently not on view
- Date made
- 1881
- graphic artist
- Ferris, Stephen James
- ID Number
- GA*14404.03
- accession number
- 94830
- catalog number
- 14404.03
- Data Source
- National Museum of American History, Kenneth E. Behring Center
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