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Walter L. Greene
Walter Greene, "Station with Locomotives"

1920s/1930s

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  • "Shoes" - Late 20th Century City Figure Painting
    Located in New Orleans, LA
    In addition to having his work in museums and fine corporate collections, Alabama artist Donny Finley showed for years at prestigious Bryant Galleries on ...
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    Late 20th Century American Realist Landscape Paintings

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  • Village Road (20th Century Framed Impressionist European Landscape Painting)
    Located in New Orleans, LA
    A delightful Impressionist scene of a road through a rural village by French painter Raymond Bernanose, painted in 1933. Rendered with confident daubs and strokes in a wonderful pal...
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    1930s Impressionist Landscape Paintings

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    Oil

  • Farmhouse in the Countryside (Impressionist Oil Painting, c. 1920)
    Located in New Orleans, LA
    A lovely rural Impressionist scene, of an old farmhouse with terra cotta roof and complete with chickens in the yard. The painter Anton Funke is listed as both German and Dutch (born...
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    Early 20th Century Realist Landscape Paintings

    Materials

    Oil

  • "Bayou Barataria" Louisiana - Framed Contemporary Impressionist Landscape
    Located in New Orleans, LA
    For those unfamiliar with the gorgeous swamplands of Louisiana, Bayou Barataria is not only quite scenic - it was also where the famous pirate Jean Lafitte...
    Category

    Early 2000s Impressionist Landscape Paintings

    Materials

    Oil

  • Sailboats at Anchor
    Located in New Orleans, LA
    We originally had the name of the actual bay in Canada this fine painting depicts, but have been unable to dig it up. At any rate, it shows a number of sailboats with sails lowered, ...
    Category

    1970s Impressionist Landscape Paintings

    Materials

    Oil

  • Cottages in the Countryside (Framed Early 20th Century Antique Landscape)
    Located in New Orleans, LA
    A charming antique oil painting from 1911 by artist William Williamson, signed and dated. A rustic road follows along a pond, leading to two cottages side by side in the distance wit...
    Category

    1910s Landscape Paintings

    Materials

    Oil

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    Signed Lower Left Poskas was born in Waterbury, Connecticut, a small industrial city set on the banks of the Naugatuck River. He was interested in art as a child, but on entering ...
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  • New York from Hoboken
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  • Saint-Malo, Brittany
    By William Stanley Haseltine
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    The career of William Stanley Haseltine spans the entire second half of the nineteenth century. During these years he witnessed the growth and decline of American landscape painting, the new concept of plein-air painting practiced by the Barbizon artists, and the revolutionary techniques of the French Impressionists, all of which had profound effects on the development of painting in the western world. Haseltine remained open to these new developments, selecting aspects of each and assimilating them into his work. What remained constant was his love of nature and his skill at rendering exactly what he saw. His views, at once precise and poetic, are, in effect, portraits of the many places he visited and the landscapes he loved. Haseltine was born in Philadelphia, the son of a prosperous businessman. In 1850, at the age of fifteen, he began his art studies with Paul Weber, a German artist who had settled in Philadelphia two years earlier. From Weber, Haseltine learned about Romanticism and the meticulous draftsmanship that characterized the German School. At the same time, Haseltine enrolled at the University of Pennsylvania, and took sketching trips around the Pennsylvania countryside, exploring areas along the Delaware and Susquehanna rivers. Following his sophomore year, Haseltine transferred to Harvard University. After graduating from Harvard in 1854, Haseltine returned to Philadelphia and resumed his studies with Weber. Although Weber encouraged Haseltine to continue his training in Europe, the elder Haseltine was reluctant to encourage his son to pursue a career as an artist. During the next year, Haseltine took various sketching trips along the Hudson River and produced a number of pictures, some of which were exhibited at the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts in the spring of 1855. Ultimately, having convinced his father that he should be allowed to study in Europe, Haseltine accompanied Weber to Düsseldorf. The Düsseldorf Academy was, during the 1850s, at the peak of its popularity among American artists. The Academy’s strict course of study emphasized the importance of accurate draftsmanship and a strong sense of professionalism. Landscape painting was the dominant department at the Düsseldorf Academy during this period, and the most famous landscape painter there was Andreas Achenbach, under whom Haseltine studied. Achenbach’s realistic style stressed close observation of form and detail, and reinforced much of what Haseltine had already learned. His Düsseldorf training remained an important influence on him for the rest of his life. At Düsseldorf, Haseltine became friendly with other American artists studying there, especially Emanuel Leutze, Worthington Whittredge, and Albert Bierstadt. They were constant companions, and in the spring and summer months took sketching trips together. In the summer of 1856 the group took a tour of the Rhine, Ahr, and Nahe valleys, continuing through the Swiss alps and over the Saint Gotthard Pass into northern Italy. The following summer Haseltine, Whittredge, and the painter John Irving returned to Switzerland and Italy, and this time continued on to Rome. Rome was a fertile ground for artists at mid-century. When Haseltine arrived in the fall of 1857, the American sculptors Harriet Hosmer, Chauncey B. Ives, Joseph Mozier, William Henry Rinehart...
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