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Peter Max (1937- )
Born in 1937 in pre-war Berlin, the designer, painter, printmaker and illustrator Peter Max studied in New York City where he has spent most of his professional life.
He plunged into the art world with a highly personalized, exuberant, elegant style of imagery that reached more people than any other artist of his time. He became the foremost acknowledged pop culture hero of the 1960′s and 70′s and his work [...] Click here to continue reading.
Louis Maurer (1832-1932)
Louis Maurer, a German-born artist who resided in New York, was a painter of genre scenes, horses, and western landscapes. He worked with Currier & Ives for eight years. His best-known works were the series The Life of a Fireman and the American trotting horses. From 1872-1884 he headed up the commercial lithography firm of Heppenheimer & Maurer.
Information courtesy of Cowan’s Auctions Inc.
Tompkins Harrison Matteson(1813-1884)
A follower of William Sydney Mount, Tompkins Harrison Matteson was one of America’s most famous genre and historical painters.
Matteson was born in Peterborough, New York, and while trying to make his way as an artist, he worked as actor in a troupe of strolling Shakespearean players, as well as in other professions. Primarily self-taught, he studied at the National Academy of Design in New York and opened a studio there [...] Click here to continue reading.
Herbert Matter (1907-1984)
Born in Switzerland in 1907, Matter spent time in Paris where he studied with Leger and Ozenfant and met Cassandre. In 1935 he opened a photo studio in New York and went to work for Harper’s Bazaar, Knoll and many other companies. He also became a professor at Yale. He executed an extraordinary series of Swiss photomontage travel posters from 1934 to 1936, consisting of close-up images that seem to [...] Click here to continue reading.
Antonio Pietro Martino (1902-1989)
Born April 13, 1902 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, Antonio Martino was the son of an Italian immigrant stonecutter and mason. He exhibited an interest in art and drawing early in his life, and soon was attending art classes at the Graphic Sketch Club in South Philadelphia. It was at this Club that he found encouragement for his interest in drawing. Within two years Martino was taking evening classes at the Pennsylvania [...] Click here to continue reading.
James Martin
Little is known of James Martin. As indicated by advertisements, he was from London and arrived in New York circa 1794 and worked in the region until about 1820. His early 19th century Connecticut advertisements stated that he painted both full-size and miniature portraits “in Oil, Water, or Crayon from $11 to $50″. Despite some success, he was not well regarded by the art critic, William Dunlap, who described him as [...] Click here to continue reading.
Reginald Marsh (1898 to 1954)
Marsh was born in Paris to artist parents, both of whom were academically trained. His family retuned to the States when Marsh was two years old. He studied first at Yale University and then at New York’s Art Students League, where he became familiar with the work of John Sloan, George Luks, and the other members of The Eight, later known as the Ashcan School. In the early 1920s, [...] Click here to continue reading.
Andre Margat (French, 1903 to 1999)
Margat was an animal painter and sculptor. He exhibited at the Salon de la Nationale des Beaux-Arts, the Autumn Salon, the Salon des Independants, and la Societe des animaliers. In addition to painting, Margat frequently created engravings of animals to accompany stories and texts. He was posthumously honored by the Salon National des Artistes Animaliers.
Information courtesy of Neal Auction Company, July 2008.
Paul Howard Manship (1885 to 1966)
Paul Howard Manship was born in St. Paul, Minnesota. His early studies were at the St. Paul Institute of Arts and the Pennsylvania Academy of the fine Arts in Philadelphia. As a student and apprentice, he worked with George Bridgman, Hermon Atkins MacNeil, Solon Borglum, Charles Grafly and Isidore Konti. In 1909 he won the Prix de Rome scholarship and began his studies at the American Academy in [...] Click here to continue reading.
Edward Middleton Manigault (1887-1922)
Painter E. Middleton Manigault was born in Canada in 1887, and raised there, but was also associated with Charleston, South Carolina where his great-grandfather Joseph Manigault lived, building the Joseph Manigault House, which is still used by the Charleston Museum. Middleton Manigault moved to New York as an eighteen-year-old. Encouraged by his parents in his art pursuits, he studied with Robert Henri and Kenneth Hayes Miller, who became his friend, [...] Click here to continue reading.
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