- Albert Fitch Bellows
Albert Fitch Bellows (
November 20 ,1829 -November 24 ,1883 ), American landscape painter of theHudson River School , was born atMilford, Massachusetts .He first studied
architecture and opened his own architectural firm in 1849, but quickly turned to painting. From 1850 to 1856 he taught at the New England School of Design in Boston. He resigned his post to travel and study abroad, and spent time inParis and at the Royal Academy atAntwerp as well as inEngland . He exhibited his first work at theNational Academy of Design in 1857, becoming a full member in 1861, and he settled in New York City in 1858 on his return to America.Bellows spent most of his remaining career in New York, though he briefly moved to Boston. He visited Europe again in 1867. In New York he kept a studio in the same building as many of the notable Hudson River School artists of the time. His landscape work of the 1860s is fully in the late Hudson River School tradition, though Bellows depicted people more prominently in his landscapes than most other artists. He excelled at figurative scenes.
Bellows also differed from most Hudson River School artists in that he became skilled at watercolor, and authored a respected book on the subject titled "Water-Color Painting: Some Facts and Authorities in Relation to Its Durability". He eventually maintained two studios, one for oil paintings and one for watercolor. He was a member of the American Watercolor Society, and an honorary member of the Royal Belgian Society of Water-Colorists.
Bellows also mastered
etching —along withSamuel Colman he was possibly the only other Hudson River School artist to do so—and became a member of theNew York Etching Club , the Philadelphia Society of Etchers and the Royal Society of Painter-Etchers and Engravers in London, England, an esteemed professional organization whose members includedJames McNeil Whistler andFrancis Seymour Haden .He died in
Auburndale, Massachusetts , on the 24th of November 1883. A major Albert Fitch Bellows landscape, "The River Bank", is in the collection of the Columbia Museum of Art in Columbia, South Carolina.
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