Frank Fowler (artist)

Frank Fowler (July 12, 1852 – August 18, 1910) was an American figure and portrait painter, born in Brooklyn, New York. He studied painting in Europe at Florence, Italy for two years under Edwin White, and for seven years below Carolus-Duran in Paris, and below Alexandre Cabanel at the École des Beaux-Arts.

He assisted Duran upon the fresco of Marie de Médicis in the Luxembourg Palace. On his reward to New York in 1879 he devoted himself for a period to mural painting, his most important performance being the decoration of the ballroom at the Waldorf Hotel (1892) (The building exists no more, having been destroyed to allow a place where the Empire State Building could be erected). Later he painted chiefly portraits, including a number of public men. Some of his portraits have been kept at Albany, New York and elsewhere.

In the late 1890s, he resided in a home on at #16 The Enclosure, an artists' colony in Nutley, New Jersey. He built a large studio upon the incite of that house, where he painted. The similar studio was innovative owned by Michael Lenson, a without difficulty known New Jersey painter who was director of the mural separation of the New Jersey WPA in the 1930s. Earlier, the same house was owned by Frederick Dana Marsh, the illustrator. The house was the childhood house of Reginald Marsh, the distinguished American painter. In 1892, he was elected into the National Academy of Design as an Associate member, and became a full Academician in 1900.

He wrote on art topics for the magazines and several textbooks: Oil Painting (1885), Portrait and Figure Painting (1901) and Drawing In Charcoal And Crayon (1899).

Fowler died in New Canaan, Connecticut in 1910.

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