Page loaded successfully. Showing magazine articles for Robert Seldon Duncanson.
Artist Magazine Ads
Magazine articles page for Robert Seldon Duncanson ((1821 - 1872)), known for Hudson River landscape, portrait, floral still life and genre painting, murals. Showing 10 magazine articles.
Robert Seldon Duncanson MAGAZINE ADS
1821 Seneca County, New York - 1872 Detroit, Michigan. Known for: Hudson River landscape, portrait, floral still life and genre painting, murals.
The following information was submitted by Kate Pennington of Maine Antique Digest. On April 23, 2012, she wrote: "Our most recent issue features an article by Jeanne Schinto on Robert S. Duncanson... Read full biography
The following information was submitted by Kate Pennington of Maine Antique Digest. On April 23, 2012, she wrote: "Our most recent issue features an article by Jeanne Schinto on Robert S. Duncanson in which she reports that his middle name is actually Seldon, not Scott, and his father was not... Read full biography
The following information was submitted by Kate Pennington of Maine Antique Digest. On April 23, 2012, she wrote: "Our most recent issue features an article by Jeanne Schinto on Robert S. Duncanson in which she reports that his middle name is actually Seldon, not Scott, and his father was not Scottish-Canadian.". The article follows. Artist Robert S. Duncanson: . "What's in a Middle Name" by Jeanne Schinto. An exhibition curated by Joseph D. Ketner II, "Robert S. Duncanson: The Spiritual... Read full biography
The following information was submitted by Kate Pennington of Maine Antique Digest. On April 23, 2012, she wrote: "Our most recent issue features an article by Jeanne Schinto on Robert S. Duncanson in which she reports that his middle name is actually Seldon, not Scott, and his father was not Scottish-Canadian.". The article follows. Artist Robert S. Duncanson: . "What's in a Middle Name" by Jeanne Schinto. An exhibition curated by Joseph D. Ketner II, "Robert S. Duncanson: The Spiritual Striving of the Freedmen's Sons", was on view at the Thomas Cole National Historic Site in Catskill, New York, from May 1 through October 30, 2011. The accompanying 34-page illustrated catalog, written by Ketner, amounts to a mini-biography of the artist.... Read full biography
The following information was submitted by Kate Pennington of Maine Antique Digest. On April 23, 2012, she wrote: "Our most recent issue features an article by Jeanne Schinto on Robert S. Duncanson in which she reports that his middle name is actually Seldon, not Scott, and his father was not Scottish-Canadian.". The article follows. Artist Robert S. Duncanson: . "What's in a Middle Name" by Jeanne Schinto. An exhibition curated by Joseph D. Ketner II, "Robert S. Duncanson: The Spiritual Striving of the Freedmen's Sons", was on view at the Thomas Cole National Historic Site in Catskill, New York, from May 1 through October 30, 2011. The accompanying 34-page illustrated catalog, written by Ketner, amounts to a mini-biography of the artist. Works by the 19th-century African-American artist who signed himself "Robert S. Duncanson," "R.S. Duncanson,"... Read full biography
Robert Seldon Duncanson - Artist Info
About Robert Seldon Duncanson: Magazine Ads
Magazine Articles (10)
Magazine articles based on askART research. List may not be comprehensive.
- Museum AccessionsApril 2006Gustafson, Eleanor HThe Magazine Antiques
- Melting Pot: Art That Looks Like AmApril 2004Severens, Martha RAmerican Art Review
- Walter O Evans CollectionJune 2003Benjamin, Tritobia HayesAmerican Art Review
- Extraordinary Gifts from the ProctFebruary 2003Aronson, JulieAmerican Art Review
- Museum AccessionsNovember 2002Gustafson, Eleanor H.The Magazine Antiques
- The Top 100 Collectors in AmericaMarch 2002Bryant, Kathy; Cathy ByrdArt & Antiques
- Current and ComingAugust 2000Editors, Magazine AntiquesThe Magazine Antiques
- Evolution of African-American ArtAugust 2000Hampton, R KumasiAmerican Art Review
- American Art & the Civil WarOctober 1999Walker, AndrewAmerican Art Review
- Robert S Duncanson: Lifting the VeiOctober 1995Durrell, JaneAmerican Art Review
