Thomas Birch
Paintings
US Frigate President
An American Ship in Distress
The Constitution
Winter landscape in Philadelphia
USS United States vs HMS Macedonian
Capture of the Tripoli by the Enterprise
Castle William New York harbor
Ships in Choppy Seas
Coastal Scene
Picnic by the Lake
Philadelphia Harbor
Winter Scene in Pennsylvania
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The Constitution
Thomas Birch (1779 – January 3, 1851), was an English-born American portrait and marine painter.
Birch was born in London, England. He came to the U. S. in 1794, and assisted his artist father, William Birch, in preparing a 29-plate collection of engravings:Birch's Views of Philadelphia (1800). Subscribers to the series included President John Adams and Vice President Thomas Jefferson. This sold well and went into multiple editions, inspiring similar collected views of New York City, and of suburban estates surrounding Philadelphia and Baltimore. The son's first major painting appears to have been a view of Philadelphia from the Treaty Elm in Kensington, which was also engraved and published in 1804. He painted portraits until about 1807, when he took up marine-painting. Some of his most famous works depict naval battles of the War of 1812. "Birch was the first American ship portraitist, and his paintings were copied by countless artists and craftsmen in America and Europe." In addition to ships, they provide valuable images of bridges, lighthouses, docksides, and harbor fortifications in the Early Republic, especially those surrounding New York City and Philadelphia. His paintings of suburban mansions and rural snow scenes were often turned into engravings.
Historically, the Birches' most important work may be a circa-1801 engraving documenting the unfinished U.S. Capitol. Another, may be the son's painting depicting an 1812 naval battle between USS United States and HMS Macedonian, that hung in the Oval Office of U.S. President John F. Kennedy. It was sold at auction in 2008, setting a record price for the artist of $481,000.[6]
An assessment from 1867:
Marine landscapes were painted thirty years ago by an Englishman in Philadelphia — Thomas Birch. The freshness of his atmosphere and clearly-painted waves were a marked feature. His delineation of the engagement between the U.S. frigate Constitution and the British frigate Guerriere, and that between the United States and the Macedonian — each four by two feet six inches — are fine specimens of this artist, and of rare historical value.[7]
He exhibited regularly at the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts for forty years, beginning in 1811, and managed the museum, 1812-17.[8] His work is collected at PAFA,[9] the Library Company of Philadelphia,[10] the Philadelphia Museum of Art,[11] the Smithsonian American Art Museum,[12] the U.S. Naval Academy,[13] and the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston,[14] among others. In 1833, he was elected into the National Academy of Design as an Honorary member. He died in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
References
Marian Carson, "Thomas Birch", Catalogue of the 150th Anniversary Exhibition of the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, (PAFA, 1955), p. 34.
Doris Jear Creer, Thomas Birch: A Study of the Condition of Painting and the Artist's Position in Federal America, M.A. thesis, University of Delaware, 1958.
William H. Gerdts, Thomas Birch (1779-1851), Paintings and Drawings, exhibition catalogue, Philadelphia Maritime Museum, 1966.
Richard Anthony Lewis, "Interesting Particulars and Melancholy Occurrences: Thomas Birch's Representations of the Shipping Trade, 1799-1850", 3 vols., Ph.D. dissertation, Northwestern University, 1994.
Tony Lewis, "Sleigh Ride on a Grey Day, 1832", "American Paintings", (Schwarz Galleries, 2003), pp. 36–38.
Stefanie A. Munsing, "Thomas Birch (1779-1851)", Philadelphia: Three Centuries of American Art, (Philadelphia Museum of Art, 1976), pp. 229–30.
Michael W. Schantz, Celebrating Philadelphia's Artistic Legacy, (Woodmere Art Museum, 2000), pp. 23–24.
Martin P. Snyder, "William Birch: His Philadelphia Views", Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography, vol. 73 (1949), pp. 271–315.
S. Robert Teitelman, Birch's Views of Philadelphia, with Photographs of the Sites in 1960 & 1982, (Free Library of Philadelphia, 1982, reprinted University of Pennsylvania Press, 1983).
Birch's Views from ushistory.org.
William Birch, The City of Philadelphia in the State of Pennsylvania as It Appeared in the Year 1800, (1799), endpiece.
Munsing, Philadelphia: Three Centuries, p. 229.
Universal Cyclopædia & Atlas, 1902, New York, D. Appleton & Co.
Munsing, Philadelphia: Three Centuries, p. 230.
USS United States vs. HMS Macedonian (1813) from Sotheby's Auction, 22 May 2008.
Henry T. Tuckerman, Book of the Artists, (New York, 1867), p. 551.
Gerdts, Philadelphia Maritime Museum, pp. 12-13.
PAFA; accessed January 29, 2007
LCP; accessed January 6, 2010
PMA; accessed January 6, 2010
si.edu; accessed January 29, 2007
USNA; accessed January 6, 2010
mfa.org; accessed January 29, 2007
External links
Biography from ushistory.org
artcyclopedia.com
brooklynmuseum.org
View of the Delaware near Philadelphia, 1831, Corcoran Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C.
The Mariners' Museum
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