Jane E. Bartlett (1839 – 1923) was an American portraitist.
Biography
Bartlett was born in Harmony, Maine. She studied under William Morris Hunt in Boston in the late 1860s. She developed a style of portraiture based on the principles he taught, including a spontaneous approach and a lack of trivial detail. She lived in Colorado and Minnesota before returning to Boston in 1877, where she worked out of a studio at 17 South Russell Street until 1887.[1]
After 1887, she continued to paint in Boston in both the Irvington Street Studio Building and the Harcourt Building. In 1907 she was commissioned by the Kansas State Agricultural College to paint portraits of its college presidents.[2]
Awards and recognition
Bartlett exhibited two works at the Philadelphia Centennial Exhibition in 1876, and was awarded a silver medal at the Massachusetts Mechanics' Fair in 1880. Contemporary critics praised Bartlett for having a "fresh, strong hand and hearty, unaffected way of seeing and painting things," and for her "strong heads, bold and masculine in untormented color and confident handling."[1]
Bartlett's portrait of the actress Sarah Cowell Le Moyne is on display at the Brooklyn Museum.[3]
See also
List of 20th-century women artists
References
Carbone, Teresa A. (2006). American Paintings in the Brooklyn Museum, Artists Born by 1876 (Volume 1 ed.). Brooklyn Museum, in association with D. Giles. pp. 260–262.
The Industrialist. Kansas State Agricultural College. 1907. Retrieved 11 April 2015.
", Collections: Jane E. Bartlett". Brooklyn Museum. Retrieved 11 April 2015.
External links
Exhibition of Works by Living American Artists, Nov. 9 to Dec. 20, 1880, Museum of Fine Arts, Boston
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