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Exhibition/Expo: Regional/National/International * Exposition Universelle, Paris, 1889 * Louisiana Purchase Expo, St. Louis World's Fair 1904 * World's Columbian Exposition, 1892-1893
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Exhibition: Art Association * Boston Art Club- * Brooklyn Art Association-
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Exhibition: Museum * Art Institute of Chicago * Corcoran Gallery, Washington DC * National Academy of Design- * Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts
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Methods * Easel Painting * Illustration, Illustrator * Murals of Fresco, Mixed Media, Mosaic or Paint * Printmaking, Graphic Design
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Media * Charcoal * Fresco * Gouache * Graphite, Pencil * Oil Paint
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Subjects * Animals, Zoology * Architecture Images-Buildings, Houses, Structures * Figure, Figurative, Human Figure * Genre, Human Activity * History: Historical Figures, Sites, Events * Landscape * Marine, Maritime, Nautical, Boats * Narrative * North American Frontier Genre * Portrait * Seascape * Still Life
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Geography/Places Lived and/or Worked * Europe * Paris Studied Before 1900
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Association * American Water Color Society, Painters in Water Color * Art Students League, New York * Brooklyn Art Association * National Academy of Design * Salmagundi Club-
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Teacher * Jean Paul Laurens * Leon Bonnat, Bonnat Atelier
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Schools * Academie Julian, Student * Art Students League of New York, Student * Art Students League of New York, Teacher * Maryland Institute of Design, College of Art, Student * National Academy of Design School, Student
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Chronology * Early 20th Century Before 1950 * Late 19th Century, After Civil War
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Some Collections * Chicago Union League Club
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Added Description * Art Educator: School Teaching, Public Lectures, Workshops * Genre Specialty * Mural Specialty * Western Subject Specialty
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 The Warrior Artwork images are copyright of the artist or assignee
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The above Keywords are derived from what AskART has identified
from our research for this artist and are intended as an additional tool for
information. Sources include books, periodicals, auction records, family
members, friends, and professional researchers. AskART has derived Quick Facts
as a brief overview; it is not a complete list rather it is a list that is most
frequently cited.
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