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John Quidor The Return of Rip van Winkle oil painting reproduction


The Return of Rip van Winkle
1829
John Quidor1.jpgPainting ID::  4282
 

 

 
   
      

John Quidor
  
1801-1888 Quidor was born in Gloucester Co., N. J., and in 1826 moved to New York City where he studied painting under John Wesley Jarvis and Henry Inman. Afterward he lived on a farm near Quincy, Illinois, but returned to New York City in 1851. He was obliged to support himself by painting the panels of stage coaches and fire engines and died in abject poverty. Although Quidor was little appreciated in his own time, after his death he was accorded a place among the best early American artists. His paintings establish a mysterious romantic setting for scenes in which he mingled macabre elements with an earthy humor. Many of his works, such as Ichabod Crane Pursued by the Headless Horseman, in the Smithsonian American Art Museum, were inspired by the writings of Washington Irving, who was a personal friend. Irving's A History of New York gave Quidor the subjects for the four paintings in the Brooklyn (N. Y.) Institute: Dancing on the Battery (c. 1860), Peter Stuyvesant's Wall Street Gate (1864), Voyage of the Good Oloff up the Hudson (1866), and The Voyage from Communipaw to Hell Gate (1866). These show Quidor's characteristic mellow and harmonious color, poetic imagination, and naïve humor. He is represented in the Brooklyn Museum by three paintings: Dorothea, Money Diggers, and Wolfert's Will. He also painted religious subjects such as Jesus Blessing the Sick.
The Return of Rip van Winkle
1829

Related Paintings to John Quidor :.
| PIERRE-AUGUSTE RENOIR-DANSEUSE AU TAMBOURIN | Ignace-Henri-Jean-Theodore Fantin-Latour, French, 1836-1904 -- Still Life with Roses of Dijon | Paul Cezanne (1839-1906)-Mont Sainte-Victoire | John Everett Millais3 | Copy after Hans Holbein the Younger--Lady Guildford (Mary Wotton, born 1500) | | The Jazz Singer | Self portrait | The Gates of the Khalif | Jupiter and Callisto | Allegory of the Four Seasons SG |


        

 

 

 

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