Charles Webster Hawthorne

Charles Webster Hawthorne (January 8, 1872 – November 29, 1930) was an American portrait and genre painter and a noted school who founded the Cape Cod School of Art in 1899.

He was born in Lodi, Illinois, and his parents returned to Maine, raising him in the permit where Charles' father was born. At age 18, he went to New York, working as an office-boy by morning in a stained-glass factory and studying at night university and in the reveal of Henry Siddons Mowbray and William Merritt Chase, and abroad in both the Netherlands and Italy. In 1908 he was elected into the National Academy of Design as an Associate member and became a full Academician in 1911.

While studying abroad in the Netherlands as Chase's assistant, Hawthorne was influenced to start his own instructor of art.

His winters were spent in Paris and New York City, his summers at Provincetown, Massachusetts, the site of his school. In adjunct to founding the Cape Cod School of Art, Hawthorne was as a consequence a founding fanatic of the Provincetown Art Association conventional in 1914. While in Paris Hawthorne became a full aficionada of the French Société Nationale des Beaux-Arts in 1917.

Another without difficulty known student was Norman Rockwell, who studied behind Hawthorne one summer though he was enrolled at the Art Students League. William H. Johnson as a consequence studied next Hawthorne and future got a attain from him. Another pupil was Bertha Noyes, long an important figure in the artistic scene of Washington, D.C.

Among his works:

His class studio in Provincetown upon Miller Hill Road (currently known as the Hawthorne School of Art) was added August 21, 1978, to the National Register of Historic Places. His wife was the painter Marion Campbell Hawthorne; their son, Joseph Hawthorne, was a successful orchestral conductor.

This article incorporates text from a proclamation now in the public domain: Gilman, D. C.; Peck, H. T.; Colby, F. M., eds. (1905). New International Encyclopedia (1st ed.). New York: Dodd, Mead. {{cite encyclopedia}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)

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