Skip to main content
Want more images or videos?
Request additional images or videos from the seller
1 of 3

Alfred Thompson Bricher
The Pier, Atlantic City

More From This SellerView All
  • "A Good Read, Venice, " Watercolor, 19th c. Realist, Small, Richly Detailed
    Located in Wiscasset, ME
    Antonio Canella, born in 1849, was a Venetian painter who exhibited in Venice and Paris. He painted charming vignettes of street life in Venice and the...
    Category

    19th Century Realist Figurative Paintings

    Materials

    Watercolor

  • On a Country Path, Sheep, Figures, Village, Belgian Countryside
    Located in Wiscasset, ME
    Born in Brussels in 1809, genre painter Franz Van Severdonck studied at the Brussels Academy of Fine Arts. A painter of landscapes, animals and ar...
    Category

    19th Century Realist Landscape Paintings

    Materials

    Oil, Panel

  • "Nesting, " French 19th c Realist, Louvre Museum, Charming Small Oil of Chickens
    By Charles-Emile Jacque
    Located in Wiscasset, ME
    Born in 1813 in Paris, Charles Emile Jacque began his training in etching as an apprentice to a map engraver. By 1833 he was painting and debuted at the Paris Salon and contributed r...
    Category

    19th Century Realist Animal Paintings

    Materials

    Oil, Wood Panel

  • "Venice, 1906, " Italy, Warren W. Sheppard, Realist, Oil, Gondola, Canal
    By Warren W. Sheppard
    Located in Wiscasset, ME
    Marine painter Warren W. Sheppard was born in Greenwich, New Jersey, to a ship captain father who instilled in his son a love and respect for the sea. He studied privately with Mauritz F. H. De Haas and took courses in drawing at Cooper Union in New York City. He traveled along the Mediterranean coast in 1879, sketching the ports of Naples, Gibraltar, Genoa and Messina. Sheppard’s foreign tours continued between 1888 and 1893, with stays in Paris and Venice, where he captured the architecture and busy canals of the Floating City. This fondness for travel also translated to his home country. He sailed along the East Coast from New Jersey to Maine in search of subjects and was an expert navigator, eventually writing the book Practical Navigation. Yacht design became a second career for Sheppard and he participated in a number of sailing competitions himself, most notably winning the New York-to-Bermuda race twice while skipper of the Tamerlane. Sheppard exhibited at the Denver Exposition, Chicago Exposition...
    Category

    Early 1900s Realist Landscape Paintings

    Materials

    Canvas, Oil

  • The Letter, late 19th c, American, Realism, oil on panel, figural, the forest
    By Samuel S. Carr
    Located in Wiscasset, ME
    Samuel S. Carr was born in England in 1837. He studied at the Royal School of Design in Chester before immigrating to the United States around 1862, where he settled in Brooklyn, New York. He began exhibiting genre paintings in the 1870s. He was known for his paintings of children, seashore life and pastoral subjects. Carr was a member of the Brooklyn Art...
    Category

    Late 19th Century Realist Figurative Paintings

    Materials

    Oil, Wood Panel

  • Up the Kennebec
    By John Fulton Folinsbee
    Located in Wiscasset, ME
    John Folinsbee (1892-1972) was born in Buffalo, New York and, after finishing his studies at the Art Students League in 1916, moved to New Hope, Pennsylvania where he joined a renown...
    Category

    1940s Realist Landscape Paintings

    Materials

    Oil, Board

You May Also Like
  • Armenian Contemporary Art by Kamsar Ohanyan - Gray Paradise
    By Kamsar Ohanyan
    Located in Paris, IDF
    Watercolor on paper
    Category

    2010s Realist Still-life Paintings

    Materials

    Watercolor, Handmade Paper

  • "Homeward Bound"
    By Samuel Frederick Brocas
    Located in Southampton, NY
    Circa 1830 Signed lower left. Sight size 6.5 x 8 inches Overall size in original gilt oval frame 13 x 15 in.
    Category

    1830s Realist Landscape Paintings

    Materials

    Watercolor, Paper

  • Tanks River Road
    By Errol Barron
    Located in New Orleans, LA
    Framed sized is 16 x 20 inches. Framed in a white oak frame. In any landscape there are places and objects of quiet monumentality so ingrained into the scene that they are nearly invisible or regarded only as ordinary or outdated artifacts of the past. Some are small in scale, and some suggest a kind of architectural grandeur mixed with a pathos stemming from their obsolete utility and the evidence they bear of the passage of time. Some, like the abandoned oil rigs in and around the Gulf of Mexico, are poignant reminders of environmental optimism and tragedy. Primarily encountered on trips around our region, stretching up as far as the delta of northwestern Mississippi and southeastern Arkansas and as far south as the mouth of the Mississippi, these places and objects evoked the curiosity and affection, which prompted this show. The paintings, the result of a labor-intensive technique requiring many layers of color, are intimately sized though they often deal with subjects of great scale. Trained as an architect and a practicing architect until 2016, Barron now works primarily as a painter. For many years he has taught at the Tulane University School of Architecture and is a Fellow in the American Institute of Architects. In 2012, he was awarded the Gold Medal of the Louisiana Architects Association and in 1995 was awarded the prestigious Gabriel Prize from the Western European Architecture Foundation. Errol Barron...
    Category

    2010s Realist Landscape Paintings

    Materials

    Paper, Mixed Media, Watercolor

  • Nashville Wharf
    By Errol Barron
    Located in New Orleans, LA
    Framed sized is 16 x 20 inches. Framed in a white oak frame. In any landscape there are places and objects of quiet monumentality so ingrained into the scene that they are nearly invisible or regarded only as ordinary or outdated artifacts of the past. Some are small in scale, and some suggest a kind of architectural grandeur mixed with a pathos stemming from their obsolete utility and the evidence they bear of the passage of time. Some, like the abandoned oil rigs in and around the Gulf of Mexico, are poignant reminders of environmental optimism and tragedy. Primarily encountered on trips around our region, stretching up as far as the delta of northwestern Mississippi and southeastern Arkansas and as far south as the mouth of the Mississippi, these places and objects evoked the curiosity and affection, which prompted this show. The paintings, the result of a labor-intensive technique requiring many layers of color, are intimately sized though they often deal with subjects of great scale. Trained as an architect and a practicing architect until 2016, Barron now works primarily as a painter. For many years he has taught at the Tulane University School of Architecture and is a Fellow in the American Institute of Architects. In 2012, he was awarded the Gold Medal of the Louisiana Architects Association and in 1995 was awarded the prestigious Gabriel Prize from the Western European Architecture Foundation. Errol Barron...
    Category

    2010s Realist Landscape Paintings

    Materials

    Paper, Mixed Media, Watercolor

  • Plaquemine
    By Errol Barron
    Located in New Orleans, LA
    Framed sized is 16 x 20 inches. Framed in a white oak frame. In any landscape there are places and objects of quiet monumentality so ingrained into the scene that they are nearly invisible or regarded only as ordinary or outdated artifacts of the past. Some are small in scale, and some suggest a kind of architectural grandeur mixed with a pathos stemming from their obsolete utility and the evidence they bear of the passage of time. Some, like the abandoned oil rigs in and around the Gulf of Mexico, are poignant reminders of environmental optimism and tragedy. Primarily encountered on trips around our region, stretching up as far as the delta of northwestern Mississippi and southeastern Arkansas and as far south as the mouth of the Mississippi, these places and objects evoked the curiosity and affection, which prompted this show. The paintings, the result of a labor-intensive technique requiring many layers of color, are intimately sized though they often deal with subjects of great scale. Trained as an architect and a practicing architect until 2016, Barron now works primarily as a painter. For many years he has taught at the Tulane University School of Architecture and is a Fellow in the American Institute of Architects. In 2012, he was awarded the Gold Medal of the Louisiana Architects Association and in 1995 was awarded the prestigious Gabriel Prize from the Western European Architecture Foundation. Errol Barron...
    Category

    2010s Realist Landscape Paintings

    Materials

    Paper, Mixed Media, Watercolor

  • Norco Gateway
    By Errol Barron
    Located in New Orleans, LA
    Framed sized is 16 x 20 inches. Framed in a white oak frame. In any landscape there are places and objects of quiet monumentality so ingrained into the scene that they are nearly invisible or regarded only as ordinary or outdated artifacts of the past. Some are small in scale, and some suggest a kind of architectural grandeur mixed with a pathos stemming from their obsolete utility and the evidence they bear of the passage of time. Some, like the abandoned oil rigs in and around the Gulf of Mexico, are poignant reminders of environmental optimism and tragedy. Primarily encountered on trips around our region, stretching up as far as the delta of northwestern Mississippi and southeastern Arkansas and as far south as the mouth of the Mississippi, these places and objects evoked the curiosity and affection, which prompted this show. The paintings, the result of a labor-intensive technique requiring many layers of color, are intimately sized though they often deal with subjects of great scale. Trained as an architect and a practicing architect until 2016, Barron now works primarily as a painter. For many years he has taught at the Tulane University School of Architecture and is a Fellow in the American Institute of Architects. In 2012, he was awarded the Gold Medal of the Louisiana Architects Association and in 1995 was awarded the prestigious Gabriel Prize from the Western European Architecture Foundation. Errol Barron...
    Category

    2010s Realist Landscape Paintings

    Materials

    Paper, Mixed Media, Watercolor

Recently Viewed

View All