Alexander Wallace Rimington Art
Alexander Wallace Rimington A.R.E., R.B.A., Hon. F.S.A was a Professor of Fine Arts at Queen’s College, London. An etcher, illustrator, painter and author, he was most famous for inventing a musical instrument, the color organ that projected different colors in harmony with the music. Rimington’s first summer exhibition at the Royal Academy was in 1880, over subsequent years he exhibited 34 works there, mostly topographical works related to his travels around Europe. Rimington had regular shows at the Fine Art Society – seven between 1893 and 1912, showing 100 or more watercolors.
Early 1900s Impressionist Alexander Wallace Rimington Art
Watercolor
1880s Impressionist Alexander Wallace Rimington Art
Watercolor
1880s Impressionist Alexander Wallace Rimington Art
Watercolor
1890s Impressionist Alexander Wallace Rimington Art
Watercolor
19th Century Impressionist Alexander Wallace Rimington Art
Watercolor
Late 19th Century Impressionist Alexander Wallace Rimington Art
Pastel, Gouache
Late 19th Century Impressionist Alexander Wallace Rimington Art
Watercolor, Gouache, Carbon Pencil
Late 19th Century American Impressionist Alexander Wallace Rimington Art
Paper, Watercolor
2010s American Impressionist Alexander Wallace Rimington Art
Watercolor, Paper
Early 20th Century American Impressionist Alexander Wallace Rimington Art
Paper, Watercolor
1920s Impressionist Alexander Wallace Rimington Art
Paper, Pastel, Watercolor
2010s American Impressionist Alexander Wallace Rimington Art
Watercolor, Vellum
Early 1900s Impressionist Alexander Wallace Rimington Art
Watercolor