James Frothingham (1786–1864) [1] [2] was an American portrait painter in Massachusetts and New York.
Life and work
James Frothingham was born in Charlestown, Massachusetts.[1] He began as a chaise painter in his father's chaise manufactory. In the Boston area, he was a student of Gilbert Stuart.[1] In 1888, The Atlantic Monthly described him as "a portraitist of talent",[2] adding that Stuart is quoted as having said of one of Frothingham's head portraits, "No man in Boston but myself can paint so good a head," and that Frothingham was greatly helped by Stuart's criticisms and encouragement, although initially his Nestor had advised him to adopt another, less precarious means of earning a livelihood.[2]
The Atlantic noted that there is a detailed portrait of Samuel Dexter by Frothingham in the Harvard Memorial Hall, in which Dexter, wearing a white wig and a red cloak atop a black coat, holds a book in his hand, and appears lost in meditation, saying the flesh coloring in the painting is rather dry and parchment-like, but overall, the color is harmonious. Dunlap noted that heads depicted by James Frothingham were painted with great truth, freedom, and excellence.[2]
He painted a number of likenesses in Salem, including the wealthy merchant Elias Hasket Derby. Frothingham would have been a regional competitor to the younger Chester Harding (1792–1866), but in 1826 moved to Brooklyn in New York City.
In 1828 he was elected into the National Academy of Design as an Associate member, and became a full Academician in 1831.
Selection of portraits
William Badger, c. 1805
Lucia Pickering, 1820
Elizabeth Brooks, 1823
Jonathan Brooks, 1823
Mrs. Peter Gilman Robbins, c.1818
See also
Francis Alexander (1800–1880) - American painter who moved to Boston.
John Burgum - ornamental painter, co-worker.
John Coles (1776/1780-1854) - portrait/heraldic painter, friend of James Frothingham, also studied under Gilbert Stuart.
Notes
"Chester Harding (1792–1866)" (biography), Worcester Art, webpage: WorcArt-Harding.
"Boston Painters and Paintings" (article), The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 62, Issue 370, August 1888, p. 258, LOC webpage: LOC-AMonthly-Boston (notes Samuel Dexter portrait flesh tone; has Dunlap & Gilbert Stuart quote: "No man in Boston but myself can paint so good a head.").
References
"Chester Harding (1792–1866)" (biography), Worcester Art, webpage: WorcArt-Harding.
"Boston Painters and Paintings" (old article), The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 62, Issue 370, August 1888, LOC webpage: LOC-AMonthly-Boston.
Wilson, James Grant; Fiske, John, eds. (1900). "Frothingham, James". Appletons' Cyclopædia of American Biography. New York: D. Appleton. Has 1781 as birth year, and Charleston as birthplace.
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