Yahoo Canada Web Search

Search results

  1. John Vanderlyn (October 18, 1775 – September 23, 1852) was an American neoclassicist painter. Biography. Ariadne Asleep on the Island of Naxos (1809–1814), Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, Philadelphia. Vanderlyn was born at Kingston, New York, and was the grandson of colonial portrait painter Pieter Vanderlyn. [1] .

  2. John Vanderlyn (born October 15, 1776, Kingston, New York, U.S.—died September 23, 1852, Kingston) was a U.S. painter and one of the first American artists to study in Paris. He was largely responsible for introducing the Neoclassical style to the United States.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  3. John Vanderlyn was born October 15, 1775, in Kingston, Ulster County, New York, the son of house and sign painter Nicholas Vanderlyn and his second wife Sarah Tappan; his grandfather was the Dutch immigrant and limner Pieter Vanderlyn (ca. 1687-1778).

  4. This circular panoramic view of Versailles was painted at Kingston, New York, and New York City between 1818 and 1819. Vanderlyn used numerous sketches (Senate House Museum, Kingston, New York) that he had made at Versailles in 1814. The perspective was carefully adjusted to the circular shape.

    • John Vanderlyn1
    • John Vanderlyn2
    • John Vanderlyn3
    • John Vanderlyn4
    • John Vanderlyn5
  5. John Vanderlyn American. 1800. On view at The Met Fifth Avenue in Gallery 756. Vanderlyn, a New York native, executed this masterful self-portrait in Paris, where he had lived for four years; he was the first American-born painter to study in France.

  6. John Vanderlyn: A Collection of 27 Paintings. https://danielearte.instabio.cc [The Artist] John Vanderlyn (October 18, 1775 – September 23, 1852) was an American neoclassicist painter....

  7. People also ask

  8. John Vanderlyn. born Kingston, NY 1775-died Kingston, NY 1852. John Vanderlyn began drawing as a young child and at age sixteen went to New York to work for an art supplies store. He met the artist Gilbert Stuart, who gave the young apprentice permission to copy two of his paintings.