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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
John White Allen Scott (1815- March 4, 1907) was an American painter and lithographer associated with the Hudson River School and White Mountain art.
John White Allen Scott | |
---|---|
Born | 1815 Roxbury, Massachusetts |
Died | March 4, 1907 91–92) | (aged
Nationality | American |
Known for | painting, lithography |
John White Allen Scott or John W.A. Scott was born in Roxbury, Boston, Massachusetts, in 1815.[1][2] Scott began as an apprentice at Pendleton's Lithography in 1830 at the same time as fellow Roxbury native Nathaniel Currier of Currier and Ives.[3] In 1844 Scott started a lithography firm in partnership with Fitz Hugh Lane ("Lane & Scott's Lithography"), which lasted until 1847.[4][5] The firm successfully produced lithographs dominated by ships, landscapes and architectural forms. Scott continued to produce "exceptional" lithographs into the 1850s and would remain friends with Lane.[6] Around 1852 he kept a studio in Boston's Tremont Temple.[7] Scott's work sold well during his time; for instance, in 1855 he "sold more than 50 landscapes at auction."[8] Among his favorite subjects was Southern New Hampshire's Mount Monadnock.[9] He belonged to the New England Art Union[10] and the Boston Art Club (1863-1907), of which he was the oldest member at the time of his death.[11] Scott also frequently exhibited at the Boston Athenæum.[12]
Scott's paintings are now held in the collections of the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston,[13] the Currier Museum of Art,[14] the Farnsworth Art Museum,[15] the New Hampshire Historical Society,[16] and The Butler Institute of American Art, among other museums and galleries.
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