Alfred Cornelius Howland PRICE CHARTS
1838 Walpole, New Hampshire - 1909 Pasadena, California. Known for: Rural landscape, bucolic genre and figure painting-tonalism, lithography.
Alfred Cornelius Howland, a tonalist painter of light-filled, cheerful story-telling landscapes and genre scenes, was born in 1838 in Walpole, New Hampshire. In 1855, he graduated from Walpole... Read full biography
Alfred Cornelius Howland, a tonalist painter of light-filled, cheerful story-telling landscapes and genre scenes, was born in 1838 in Walpole, New Hampshire. In 1855, he graduated from Walpole Academy and then went to Boston, where he found employment as an engraver and studied drawing and... Read full biography
Alfred Cornelius Howland, a tonalist painter of light-filled, cheerful story-telling landscapes and genre scenes, was born in 1838 in Walpole, New Hampshire. In 1855, he graduated from Walpole Academy and then went to Boston, where he found employment as an engraver and studied drawing and lithography with Max Eppendorff and Paul Schulze. In 1856, he moved to New York City where again he worked as an engraver and also took antique and life classes at the National Academy of Design. In 1860, he... Read full biography
Alfred Cornelius Howland, a tonalist painter of light-filled, cheerful story-telling landscapes and genre scenes, was born in 1838 in Walpole, New Hampshire. In 1855, he graduated from Walpole Academy and then went to Boston, where he found employment as an engraver and studied drawing and lithography with Max Eppendorff and Paul Schulze. In 1856, he moved to New York City where again he worked as an engraver and also took antique and life classes at the National Academy of Design. In 1860, he began three years of study in Germany; a year was spent with Andreas Muller at the Dusseldorf Academy and a year and a half was in the Dusseldorf studio of Albert Flamm. Then Howland went to Paris, where he studied for two years with Emile Lambinet.... Read full biography
Alfred Cornelius Howland, a tonalist painter of light-filled, cheerful story-telling landscapes and genre scenes, was born in 1838 in Walpole, New Hampshire. In 1855, he graduated from Walpole Academy and then went to Boston, where he found employment as an engraver and studied drawing and lithography with Max Eppendorff and Paul Schulze. In 1856, he moved to New York City where again he worked as an engraver and also took antique and life classes at the National Academy of Design. In 1860, he began three years of study in Germany; a year was spent with Andreas Muller at the Dusseldorf Academy and a year and a half was in the Dusseldorf studio of Albert Flamm. Then Howland went to Paris, where he studied for two years with Emile Lambinet. He also met Barbizon painter Camille Corot, who introduced Howland to Barbizon painters Jean Francois Millet and Theodore Rousseau. Beca... Read full biography
Alfred Cornelius Howland - Charts
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