FINE-ART.COM Artists Marketplace Featured Web Directory Community
My d'ART  
Luxury Bazaar

 
Email this page!Bookmark this page!
Welcome to Luxury Bazaar, a place where nothing is ordinary! We specialize in High End Watches, Jewelry, Fine Art, Antiques as well as other Luxury items. We are the ultimate portal for those with the taste for the luxury things in life, for those that enjoy the beauty and complication of an exclusive timepiece, a timeless piece of jewelry, a rare work of art or 19th century French bronze. We pride ourselves in being able to bring you the impossible to get, the most limited and rare items, that
www.fine-art.com/luxurybazaar/forum

Home | About | Community | Contact

Art Community | Member: luxurybazaar | Daniel Garber
| Post Reply |
Subject: Daniel Garber

Posted By:  luxurybazaar
Msg #:
Posted On:  1/28/2010 11:43 AM 0 Replies

Daniel Garber (1880 - 1958)
http://www.luxurybazaar.com/images/items/thumbs/Daniel_Garber_The_Susquehanna.jpg
Daniel Garber (1880-1958) was an American Impressionist landscape painter and member of the art colony at New Hope, Pennsylvania. He is best known today for his large impressionist scenes of the New Hope area, in which he often depicted the Delaware River. He also painted figurative interior works and excelled at etching. In addition to his painting career, Garber taught art at the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts for over forty years.

Garber was born on April 11, 1880 in North Manchester, Indiana. He studied art at the Art Academy of Cincinnati, and at the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts from 1899 to 1905. During this time Garber met and married his wife, Mary Franklin, who was also an art student. In the tradition of many American artists, Garber and his wife traveled to Europe to complete his art education. Returning to America in 1907, on the advice of artist William Langson Lathrop he settled at Cuttalossa just downriver from Lumberville, Pennsylvania, six miles up the Delaware River from New Hope.

Like most impressionist painters, Garber painted landscapes en plein air, directly from nature. He exhibited his works nationwide and earned numerous awards, including a gold medal at the Panama-Pacific International Exposition (1915) in San Francisco, California. He was elected a member of the National Academy of Design in 1913. Garber died on July 5, 1958, after falling from a ladder at his studio. Today, Garber's paintings are considered by collectors and art historians to be among the finest works produced from the New Hope art colony. His paintings are owned by major museums including the Smithsonian American Art Museum in Washington, DC, and the Art Institute of Chicago. Daniel Barber died in 1958 in Lumberville, Pennsylvania.
http://www.luxurybazaat.com

| Post Reply |
Reply #
Subject
Author
Date Posted
There are no replies to this Topic.

 

Not logged in. log in now...
© 2012 fine-art.com. Terms of Use.