Mrs Anna Flensburg by Mina Carlson-Bredberg
1887 / Oil on canvas / 51”x34 1/4” / Nationalmuseum, Stockholm, Sweden
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Previous September 2 posts:
Hispanic Artists~September 2
Artist Birthday Quiz for 9/2~
1887 / Oil on canvas / 51”x34 1/4” / Nationalmuseum, Stockholm, Sweden
Previous September 2 posts:
Hispanic Artists~September 2
Artist Birthday Quiz for 9/2~
1939 / Oil on canvas / 36 1/4”x25 1/2” / Weinstein Gallery, San Francisco, CA
Previous August 30 posts:
Self Portraits~August 30
Artist Birthday Quiz for 8/30~
1990 / Paint and printed collage on five panels of paper / 84”x110”
© Nancy Spero and Leon Golub Foundation for the Arts/VAGA at ARS, New York
Previous August 24 posts:
Self Portraits~August 24
Artist Birthday Quiz for 8/24~
c.1630 / Oil on Slate / 9 1/24”x7 4/5” / Capitoline Museums, Rome, Italy
Previous August 17 posts:
Self Portraits~August 17
August 17~ Black Cat Appreciation Day 2018
August 17~ Black Cat Appreciation Day 2017
The World’s First Cartoon: Fantasmagorie (1908)
Artist Birthday Quiz for 8/17~
1966 / Painted wood / 16 5/8”x19 1/4”x3 3/4” / The Metropolitan Museum of Art, NYC
Previous May 6 posts:
Love & War~ May 11
Irving Berlin~ Born May 11, 1888
William Grant Still~ Born May 11, 1895
Artist Birthday Quiz for 5/11~
1958 / Oil on canvas / 90”x60 1/8” / Anderson Collection at Stanford University, California
Previous March 14 posts:
March 14~ Women’s History Month in visual arts
Premiered March 14, 1885: “The Mikado”
Albert Einstein: Born March 14, 1879
Diane Arbus: Born March 14, 1923
Artist Birthday Quiz for 3/14~
1997 / Hand embellished lithograph / 30 1/2”x37 3/4” / Various private collections
February 27, 1924: Samella Sanders Lewis, artist, art historian, author and educator, was born in New Orleans, Louisiana.
Lewis earned her Bachelor of Arts degree from Hampton University in 1945 and her Master of Arts degree in 1948 and Ph. D. in 1951 from Ohio State University. She was the first African American woman to receive a doctorate in fine arts and art history. Lewis became chair of the Fine Arts Department at Florida A&M University in 1952. From 1969 to 1984, she was professor of art history at Scripps College. She founded Contemporary Crafts in 1969, the first African American owned art publishing house. Lewis founded the International Review of African American Art in 1975 and was a co-founder of the Museum of African American Art in Los Angeles, California in 1976. Lewis published “African American Art and Artists,” a history of African American art since the colonial era, in 1978. She has also published works on Elizabeth Catlett and Richmond Barthe.
FROM https://www.thewright.org/
From age twelve until age ninety-nine, William Henry Jackson was involved on some level with photography. After a tour of duty in the Civil War, he headed West and eventually settled in Omaha, Nebraska, where he opened a portrait photography studio with his brother Edward. As Jackson explained, however, “Portrait photography never had any charms for me, so I sought my subjects from the house-tops, and finally from the hill-tops and about the surrounding country; the taste strengthening as my successes became greater in proportion to the failures.” In 1870 he accompanied geologist Ferdinand Vandiveer Hayden on an expedition across Wyoming, along the Green River, and eventually into the Yellowstone Lake area. Jackson’s images were the first published photographs of Yellowstone. Partly on the strength of these photographs, the area became America’s first national park in March 1872.
On one of several independent expeditions that he headed, Jackson also became the first to photograph the prehistoric Native American dwellings in Mesa Verde, Colorado. He finally settled in Denver, Colorado, where he worked as a commercial landscape photographer and continued to publish his photographs as postcards.
FROM http://www.getty.edu/art/collection/artists/1853/william-henry-jackson-american-1843-1942/

Anna Atkins was born Anna Children in the town of Tonbridge in the English county of Kent. Her mother died soon after she was born and Anna was raised by her father John George Children, who was a chemist, mineralogist, and zoologist. Anna was particularly interested in plant collecting and botany, and in 1823 illustrated her father’s translation of a book on the subject of shells with her own engravings.
Through her father, Atkins knew Sir John Herschel, the inventor of the process known as “cyanotype”. This process, originated in the 1840s, was one of the first non-silver technologies used to create photographic images. It later evolved into the process known by the term “blueprint”, those blue background reproductions of large architectural and mechanical drawings. William Henry Fox Talbot, another acquaintance of the Atkins family, improved upon the chemistry to create what he called the “calotype” and this became the basis for all subsequent negative/positive processes.
Anna Atkins recognized that photographic processes were an excellent method to accurately illustrate scientific studies. She began work on her first book British Algae: Cyanotype Impressions using the cyanotype process, which today is often referred to as sun printing. This was a 12-part privately published series which Atkins worked on from 1843 to 1853. Anna Atkins is considered to be the first person to publish a book illustrated with photographic images. However, since it was privately published, her mentor Sir John Herschel is the person credited with producing the first commercially published book illustrated with photographs (The Pencil of Nature, 1844).
Atkins followed her series with two other volumes, British and Foreign Ferns and British and Foreign Flowering Plants and Ferns. Atkins collaborated on these books with Anne Austen Dixon, a close childhood friend and incidentally a distant cousin of the novelist Jane Austen. Additionally, Atkins published several other non-botanical volumes, including a memoir of her father.
Atkins died on June 9th, 1871 at age 72. The cause of death was given as “paralysis, rheumatism, and exhaustion”.
~The Misty Miss Christy
“Anna Atkins published the first book with photographs. Here are a few of them.”
http://www.vox.com/2015/3/16/8218855/anna-atkins-photographs“The Cyanotype Process”
http://www.sciencecompany.com/The-Cyanotype-Process.aspxThe New York Public Library Digital Collections: “Photographs of British Algae: Cyanotype Impressions”
http://digitalcollections.nypl.org/collections/photographs-of-british-algae-cyanotype-impressions#/?tab=navigation&scroll=0
Remembering Diane Arbus
Arbus is most known for her photographs of social deviants or “freaks.” “There’s a quality of legend about freaks,” Arbus said. “Like a person in a fairy tale who stops you and demands that you answer a riddle. Most people go through life dreading they’ll have a traumatic experience. Freaks were born with their trauma. They’ve already passed their test in life. They’re aristocrats.”
http://darkroom.baltimoresun.com/2015/03/remembering-diane-arbus/#1