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George
Inness (1825-1894)
Tropical
Landscape
Executed
circa 1890
Signed
lower left
Oil
on academy board
down on panel
24
x 18 inches
Ex-Collection:
The Artist
Private
Collection
Meredith
Long, Houston, Texas
Private
Collection Texas until 2005
This
work will be included in the forthcoming catalogue raisonne
being prepared by Michael Quick
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Born
in Newburgh, New York, in 1825, George Inness was raised
in New York City and Newark, New Jersey. His early life
was disrupted by severe illness, and he had as a result
little formal academic or artistic education. In Newark,
he studied with the itinerant painter John Jesse Barker,
and in New York, probably in 1843, with the French-born
landscape painter, Regis Francois Gignoux. Inness visited
Italy in 1850. In 1853 he visited France, where he studied
French Barbizon landscape painting, admiring especially
the work of the most radical of the Barbizon artists, Theodore
Rousseau. This was, in the influence on his style, the most
decisive experience of Inness' artistic life. In the early
1860s Inness moved from New York to Medfield, Massachusetts.
In 1864, he moved to Eagleswood, New Jersey. At Eagleswood
he was introduced to the teaching of Emanuel Swedenborg.
It became his religious faith, and determined, too, the
increasingly allusive, expressive, and almost mystical character
of his later art. Inness lived in Italy from 1870 to 1874
and in France briefly in 1875, when he returned to America.
In 1876 he settled in Montclair, New Jersey. He lived in
Montclair for the rest of his life, but traveled widely,
often for the sake of his health, to Niagara Falls, Virginia,
California, and Tarpon Springs, Florida.He died on a trip
to Scotland in 1894.
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