The Lambdins of Philadelphia (Schwarz Gallery
Transcription
The Lambdins of Philadelphia (Schwarz Gallery
THE LAMBDINS OF PHILADELPHIA N E W LY D I S C O V E R E D W O R K S THE LAMBDINS OF PHILADELPHIA NEWLY DISCOVERED WORKS ❀ ❀ ❀ the LAMBDIN FAMILY COLLECTION OF PAINTINGS by JAMES REID LAMBDIN and GEORGE COCHRAN LAMBDIN Adapted from AN ESSAY by Ruth Irwin Weidner ❀ F I N E P A I N T I N G S SCHWARZ P 1806 Chestnut Street H I L A D E Philadelphia PA 19103 L P H I Fax 215 561 5621 F O U N D E D A Tel 215 563 4887 Art Dealers Association of America; Art and Antique Dealers League of America; CINOA Please direct inquiries to Robert Schwarz 1 9 3 0 Foreword The rare opportunity to purchase a group of works that has come down in the family of the artist offers unusual possibilities for study and for understanding the creative process. When the Gallery acquired some twenty watercolors and oils by James Reid Lambdin and his son George Cochran Lambdin from a descendant of the artists in 1987, I knew that Ruth Irwin Weidner was the art historian to work with us on a catalogue. Dr.Weidner, who was then on the faculty of West Chester University and is now professor emerita at the University, had just published an essay for the catalogue of the exhibition George Cochran Lambdin at the Brandywine River Museum (September 6–November 23, 1986). In the intervening years Dr. Weidner has assembled extensive files regarding George Lambdin’s genre pictures, which have allowed her to discuss the genre paintings in this catalogue in unusual depth and in the context of George Lambdin’s other work, the art of his time and the art of his father, James Lambdin. The landscapes of upstate New York, by the elder Lambdin, a welcome addition to the iconography of that picturesque region, receive scholarly attention in print for the first time in this catalogue. In addition, the wealth of information about James Lambdin’s museums places him in the tradition of the Peale family, long a major interest of the Schwarz Gallery. I thank Dr. Weidner for her thorough scholarship and her perseverence over the years, when both she and the Gallery have had numerous other projects. This catalogue has been adapted from a longer essay with complete notes that for the first time make available to other scholars references and sources that Dr. Weidner has unearthed in many places over many years.The Gallery is releasing the essay in a companion volume to be sent to appropriate libraries and made available to others upon request. During the last two years, Dr. Weidner has been ably assisted by Christine Schultz Magda; I join Dr. Weidner in commending her efforts. From the Gallery’s staff I also thank Renee Gross; Christine Poole; Nathan Rutkowski; David Cassedy, who oversaw the editorial process; and Matthew North, who designed the catalogue. —Robert D. Schwarz Cover: George Cochran Lambdin, Two Girls Picking Fruit, detail (plate 19) Back cover: James Reid Lambdin, Shawangunk Mountains from Artist’s Rock (plate 8) Philadelphia Collection LXX September 2002 Copyright © 2002 The Schwarz Gallery All Rights Reserved Library of Congress Control Number: 2002111948 Editing: Alison Rooney, Kate Royer Schubert Photography: Rick Echelmeyer Printing: Piccari Press Paintings are offered subject to prior sale. For complete essay and endnotes, see Ruth Irwin Weidner, The Lambdin Family Collection of Paintings by James Reid Lambdin and George Cochran Lambdin (Philadelphia: Schwarz Gallery, 2002), Library of Congress Control Number 2002111949. For archival purposes only.This PDF differs from the originally published version: text has reflowed due to legacy font replacement. Preface and Acknowledgements The nucleus of the present exhibition of oil paintings, watercolor studies, and drawings is a collection of works by the nineteenth-century American artists James Reid Lambdin and his son George Cochran Lambdin that remained in the Lambdin family and were unknown to the larger art world until 1987. Such a cache of works held in an artist’s family has particular meaning to art historians and collectors, as such works are often imbued with sentimental value, and the family provenance virtually assures their authenticity. Such works as James Lambdin’s landscapes, created during summer visits to New York State, may also evince the artist’s simple delight in painting, rather than the more formal constrictions of fulfilling commissions or preparing for the competition and scrutiny of exhibitions, and some of George Lambdin’s early works in the collection shed light on the artist’s working methods and his use of photography. This exhibition and its accompanying essay provide an overview of the careers of the Lambdin artists. The group of portraits, landscapes, genre subjects, and still lifes, treasured and kept together by the family for more than one hundred years, is a tribute to the Lambdins’ contributions to American art. Most of my research has taken place in the following libraries, where staff members have been extraordinarily helpful in providing materials: Historical Society of Pennsylvania; Morris Library, University of Delaware; Archives of American Art; Library of Congress; Watson Library, Metropolitan Museum of Art; Sterling Library, Yale University; Winterthur Library; and Francis Harvey Green Library, West Chester University. I am especially grateful to the Interlibrary Loan Department, West Chester University. James Duff, Director, Brandywine River Museum, has kindly authorized the use in this publication of certain ideas and information first published in my essay for the exhibition catalogue George Cochran Lambdin (Chadds Ford, Pa.: Brandywine River Museum, 1986); see various credits in the notes at the end of this volume. The following individuals have kindly contributed information and ideas or have otherwise facilitated my research: Henry Adams, J. Curtiss Ayres, Ann Barnett, Mary Anne Burns-Duffy, Kirsten Carlson, Margaret Colahan, Sara Eugenia Lambdin (Baack) Curley, David Dearinger, James Duff, Laura Fiorenza, Virginia Lee Wagner Foster,Al Frane,William Gerdts, Kimberly Klaus, Joan Lachance, Cheryl Leibold, Rachael Morehouse, Jerry Pepper, James Pitcher, Sue Ann Prince, Marion Ryan, Elizabeth Kennedy Sargent, Susan P. Schreiber, Paul Schweizer, Willis L. Shirk, Jr., Sister Barbara Jean, Linda Stanley, Mary Sweeney, Neville Thompson, Sarah Weatherwax, David Weidner, WIlliam H. Whiteley, John Wilmerding, and Ann Lambdin Young. Many thanks go to the Schwarz Gallery staff: David Cassedy, Matthew North, and especially to Christine Schultz Magda, who worked with me every step of the way. —Ruth Irwin Weidner 1 The Lambdin Family Collection of Paintings by James Reid Lambdin and George Cochran Lambdin Few cities can boast so many families of artists as Philadelphia.1 These include the Peale clan, many of whom followed patriarch Charles Willson Peale into artistic professions; three generations of John Sartain’s family, artistic leaders in Philadelphia for a century; two generations of the Smith family, active for more than seventy years; William Trost Richards and his daughter Anna Richards Brewster; two generations of Morans; the Webers; and the Gilmans.2 George Cochran Lambdin, under the tutelage of his father, began exhibiting at an early age and chose as his first subjects portraits of children as well as religious and literary themes. Soon, however, George, following or, often, leading American taste, moved into sentimental and anecdotal genre, Civil War subjects, and, later, portraits of young women and the floral studies for which he became so well known. Fig. 1. James Reid Lambdin in His Studio (c. 1878) Such a list would scarcely be complete without James Reid Lambdin (1807–1889) and his son George Cochran Lambdin (1830–1896), for these two nineteenth-century Pennsylvania artists enjoyed long and highly successful painting careers and were also important contributors—culturally, educationally, and politically—to the progress of art in this country. 3 The two Lambdins lived and worked in close proximity, but their career paths had certain differences. James Reid Lambdin specialized in portraits, especially state portraiture, and was an outstanding American portraitist of his time. Although a few landscapes by James have long been known, until now the art world has not been acquainted with his landscape views of remote areas in New York State. This exhibition, built around a previously unknown collection of Lambdin paintings, provides an opportunity not only to examine little-known aspects of the Lambdins’ work but also to survey their rich contributions to American art. In the early nineteenth century, when James was young, this country could boast numerous outstanding artists but was virtually lacking in the educational and cultural institutions that supported and encouraged the arts. Throughout their careers both Lambdins avidly participated in the founding and leadership of Pennsylvania’s artistic organizations. Both were involved in artistic instruction, and George, well versed in aesthetics and criticism, published numerous essays and gave many lectures on such topics as style, the human form, and the history of oil painting. Fig. 2. George Cochran Lambdin in His Studio (c. 1884–86) Fig. 1. W. L. Shoemaker, James Lambdin in His Studio (c. 1878). Historical Society of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia. Here, the aging artist is surrounded with portraits and at least one landscape in his studio at 1224 Chestnut Street, Philadelphia, where he painted from 1869 to 1887. Fig. 2. Unknown photographer, George Cochran Lambdin in His Studio (c. 1884–86). Historical Society of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia. George Cochran Lambdin is shown here in his elegant Baker Building studio at 1520 Chestnut Street, Philadelphia, with a rose painting and a portrait of a young woman. This same large rose painting, entitled Roses, was published in Poetic Thoughts with Pictures: Paintings by Members of the Artists’ Fund Society of Philadelphia (Philadelphia: J. B. Lippincott Co., 1886). 2 James Reid Lambdin (1807–1889) At the time of James Reid Lambdin’s birth on May 10, 1807, his native Pittsburgh was a flourishing manufacturing town where affluent residents eagerly sought cultural diversions.4 His father, James Lambdin, was a carpenter from Kent County, Maryland. His mother, Prudence Harrison Lambdin, was from a plantation family on Maryland’s Eastern Shore: she was related to Benjamin Harrison (1726?–1791), a signer of the Declaration of Independence, and to William Henry Harrison (1773–1841), ninth President of the United States. James and Prudence Lambdin had settled in Pittsburgh by chance in about 1806. Six years later Prudence was widowed and left with her three young sons: Jonathan Harrison (known as Harrison), then about twelve to fourteen years old; James Reid, age five; and Samuel Hopkins, an infant. A few years later, after James had attended several Pittsburgh schools, it was decided that he should terminate formal education and seek employment.5 James Lambdin’s Early Career In early nineteenth-century Pittsburgh, James was surrounded by the work of artists and artisans—advertising engravings, painted signs and coaches, theater scenery, and likenesses by itinerant portraitists. Captivated, he aspired to an artistic career. In December 1822, eager for instruction, fifteen-year-old James left Pittsburgh and traveled to Philadelphia, where he first studied with the English miniature painter Edward Miles (1752–1828) and then with the distinguished portraitist Thomas Sully (1783–1872). After this period of study, James asked Sully to paint his portrait, which provided the younger man a first opportunity to watch an artist at work.The finished portrait (fig. 3), now in the Baltimore Museum of Art, became one of James’s most treasured possessions.6 James continued to enjoy Miles’s and Sully’s congeniality, and throughout his life James’s sociability would bring him many valuable new friendships and acquaintances. In his early years his connections also included the painter and art historian William Dunlap (1766–1839); the artist and naturalist John James Audubon (1785–1851); and Samuel F. B. Morse (1791–1872), artist, inventor, and first president of the National Academy of Design in New York City. Sometime before James left Philadelphia, he had joined The Painter’s [sic] Club of Philadelphia, which met each Thursday evening. In 1824 its fourteen members included James R. Lambdin, John Neagle (1796–1865), John Sartain (1808–1897), Bass Otis (1784–1861), and Thomas Birch (1779–1851).7 Returning to Pittsburgh in July 1824, James advertised drawing lessons and sought portrait commissions. By December he had decided to make a “professional visit” to Wheeling, West Virginia, his first of many painting trips.8 American artists at this time often traveled from city to city, staying a few weeks or a season. James’s excursions then, and for many years following, took him from Pittsburgh, along the Ohio and Mississippi rivers, to southern cities, including Wheeling; Louisville, Kentucky; Mobile, Alabama; and especially Natchez, Mississippi, where, after 1830, the Lambdins had family connections.9 From time to time he also visited Steubenville, Ohio; Lexington, Kentucky; and New Orleans, Louisiana, as well as countless other southern destinations. James met with ever-greater success on these portrait-painting excursions, and he quickly developed a fine reputation as a portraitist. Even so, the cultural opportunities of New York and Philadelphia continually beckoned the young artist, and he found the prospects of traveling to Europe even more intriguing. In early 1827 a Pittsburgh gentleman, Judge (later Secretary of War) William Wilkins (1779–1865), offered James funding for two years of travel and study abroad. James was eager to accept the opportunity and planned to sail from New York in May. For several months that winter and early spring, James worked his way towards New York City, first traveling north through Meadville and Erie in Pennsylvania, and then north and east through such New York towns as Buffalo, Canandaigua, Geneva, Auburn, Utica, and Albany, soliciting portrait business en route. During his stay in Buffalo, he “executed numerous small heads in water colors.”10 Eager to leave for Europe, James pressed on to New York City.Yet upon his arrival there, where funding for his European trip was to await him, he learned that Wilkins had postponed his offer.11 Crestfallen, the artist settled temporarily in Philadelphia, where he sought portrait commissions.12 He vowed that when the next opportunity arose for travel abroad, he would finance it himself.13 Fig. 3. Thomas Sully (American, 1783–1872), James Reid Lambdin (1824), oil on canvas, 29 3/4 x 7 24 /8 inches. Baltimore Museum of Art, Friends of Art Fund. Since May of 1826, James had been betrothed to Mary O’Hara Cochran (c. 1810–1866), a former pupil in one of his Pittsburgh drawing classes. Looking forward to marriage, he was thinking about steady income and settled domesticity.14 James Reid Lambdin 3 That year he happened upon an attractive opportunity, one that both appealed to the intellectually curious and enterprising young artist and was deemed appropriate by his future father-in-law, Pittsburgh merchant George Cochran. James had visited the museum of Rubens Peale (1784–1865) in New York City and was encouraged by Peale to establish such a museum in Pittsburgh.15 Charles Willson Peale’s (1741–1827) Philadelphia museum in the State House (now known as Independence Hall) had been the prototype for his son Rubens’s museum and it would be for James Lambdin’s as well.16 James’s close familiarity with C. W. Peale’s Philadelphia museum is evinced by his detailed recollection of the rooms and their contents even decades after the closing of that vanguard institution. In October 1872 James wrote to Philadelphian Frank M. Etting, describing and charting the museum’s layout and contents and attributing his knowledge to his having been a “very constant visitor for many years.”17 James Lambdin’s Museum in Pittsburgh James Lambdin was twenty-one years old when he opened his Museum of Natural History and Gallery of Painting in Pittsburgh on September 8, 1828, and he married Mary Cochran three days later. The museum was one of the earliest American museums and the first public art gallery west of the Alleghenies.18 Like the Peale museums, James Lambdin’s Pittsburgh museum displayed both natural history specimens and paintings. The collections included stuffed (and live!) European and American birds and mammals, fossils, and seashells. Mrs. Anne Royall, a visitor to the Museum sometime between December 1828 and February 1829, called it “the only specimen of taste or amusement in the city.” One display that she singled out was “flowers of all sorts, pinks, roses, & made out of seashells, the most extraordinary piece of labor I ever saw.” She proclaimed that “these flowers are of all sizes and colors, and are said to be the work of Mrs. Peale, of Philadelphia.” Although Mrs. Royall apparently did not meet James, his “neatness” and “skill” led her to believe that he was a “man of great taste” as well as “genteel” and “amiable.” She praised the glass cases enclosing white display shelves and informed the readers of her travel journal that the collection included two hundred foreign birds, twenty quadrupeds, five hundred mineral specimens, and three hundred fossils.19 A combination of art and natural history was typical of the nineteenth century, when there were strong connections between art and the sciences, especially natural history. Paintings in the museum were originals by and copies after old and modern masters. American paintings were plentiful and included portraits by Charles Willson Peale and James Lambdin as well as a landscape by Thomas Doughty (1793–1856). A local newspaper deemed “Miss Peale’s” copy of George Washington after Gilbert Stuart (1755–1828) “a proof that the gift of genius and taste in the fine arts is not bestowed upon man alone, but that the gentler sex are capable of entering the lists, even in painting, with their monopolizing rivals.”20 Monumental paintings, such as William Dunlap’s Calvary; or, The Moment Before the Crucifixion, painted on 250 square feet of canvas and containing more than one hundred lifesize figures, were often featured as temporary attractions.21 Sometimes, scholarly lectures on subjects like “The Chemical Nature of Water” were offered.22 There were also the frequently advertised sensational “curiosities” and “entertainments,” such as a so-called “mermaid”23 and “artificial fireworks.”24 The name of the museum changed from time to time; aside from its original title, it was variously called “James Lambdin’s Museum,” “The Athenaeum,” and “Pennsylvania Museum.” James Lambdin went to great lengths to gather natural history specimens for his museum. Two extant letters from him to John Adamson (a founder of the Newcastle Antiquarian Society, Newcastle upon Tyne, England) discuss shipments of shells and birds and mention James’s friend John James Audubon.25 Despite these herculean efforts for the museum, which a local newspaper called “the boast and the pride of Pittsburgh,”26 it was not financially viable. James often left the museum in the capable hands of his pupil William Thompson Russell Smith (known as Russell; 1812–1896), while he traveled to seek commissions for formal oil paintings, miniatures, and India-ink sketches. In his early years James’s fees for such likenesses were generally $25 for an oil portrait and $5 for a smaller ink sketch;27 this income enabled him to meet the expenses of his museum and family. Southern Connections Mary and James’s first child, George Cochran Lambdin, was born in Pittsburgh on January 6, 1830. Finding the competition too keen in Pittsburgh, James again set out that June on a painting trip. This time, with his wife and infant child, he went to Steubenville. There the family was warmly welcomed, and James received numerous commissions. 4 While enjoying the hospitality of that beautiful Ohio town, James and his family received an invitation that ultimately would greatly enhance his career and family life. One of two letters extending an invitation to Natchez came from Anne Dunbar (Mrs. Samuel) Postlethwaite, the mother of a fellow student of James’s in the Philadelphia studio of Edward Miles. A second, echoing, invitation came from the young widow Mrs. Celeste McGowen, governess to the Postlethwaite family and a former school roommate of Mary Lambdin. Happy to accept this offer to winter at Clifton, the Postlethwaites’ Natchez residence, the young Lambdin family returned to Pittsburgh before departing for Natchez in November 1830.28 and his wife eventually settled at Edgewood Plantation at Pine Ridge, near Natchez. The Museum Relocated to Louisville In 1832, having received promise of substantial financial support in Louisville, James moved his family and the Pittsburgh museum collection to that city.31 A May 1834 art exhibition in this new location was an ambitious undertaking, including works by or copies after Italian, Dutch, and Flemish masters like Annibale Carracci (1560–1609), Caravaggio (1573–1610), Rembrandt (1606–1669), and Peter Paul Rubens (1577–1640). Americans were represented by Charles Willson Peale, Charles Bird King (1785–1862), and James’s invaluable museum assistant Russell Smith. Smith, who was understandably anxious to develop his own career, first as a portraitist and then as a landscape artist (see fig. 4), did not remain James’s assistant once the museum moved to Louisville. It was December 28 before the family arrived at the Postlethwaite home, due to the sometimes arduous nature of river travel in the early nineteenth century. Their journey along the Ohio and Mississippi rivers was broken up by stops at such ports as Wheeling and Louisville.The Lambdins’ boat was also delayed at various points along the way by a raging storm, low water, ice, and even a fire aboard. Yet the alwaysAt the 1834 Louisville exhibition, James showed his own amiable James met at least one fellow passenger, Mr. Alban prized likeness painted by Thomas Sully in 1824, as well Smith (who later took the name Goldsmith), an eminent as a few of his earlier paintings: Portrait of Chief Justice surgeon and professor, who would in the future be of help to Marshall, Portrait of the Honorable Henry Clay, and the artist in Louisville. In Natchez Mrs. Postlethwaite’s warm Portrait of George Catlin (Artist and Traveller, in the hospitality and many introductions brought James into Costume of a Sioux Warrior). Another much-advertised southern social circles that would later foster his career. The James Lambdin contribution was The Interior of a beautiful Postlethwaite plantation and its gardens occupied Nunnery—With the Ceremony of the highest point in Natchez, a Young Lady Preparing to Take overlooking the city and the the Veil, after the French artist Mississippi River. The comforts and François Marius Granet pleasures of the memorable visit (1775–1849). Granet had been a notwithstanding, perhaps the most student of the illustrious Jacqueslasting benefit of the Natchez sojourn Louis David (1748–1825) and was was an unexpected visit from Mary known for his depictions of church Lambdin’s brother Alfred Cochran. interiors.32 Alfred made a business trip to Natchez in the spring of 1831 and soon after his arrival became engaged to Mrs. Later, James described his two early Postlethwaite’s daughter Eliza, whom museum ventures as “years of Fig. 4. William Thompson Russell Smith (American, he married in the autumn of 1831.29 born Scotland, 1812–1896), View Near Bedford, trouble, vexation, and pecuniary Little is known about Alfred and Eliza Pennsylvania (1848), oil on canvas, 14 x 20 inch- loss.”33 Still, the museums were Cochran. Some years later, James’s es. Collection of Severin Fayerman, Douglassville, important to the history of art in Pennsylvania, sold by the Schwarz Gallery. In younger brother Samuel Hopkins 1835 James Lambdin’s invaluable museum assistant America. James had continued to Lambdin (1811/1812–1902) moved to Russell Smith moved east to Philadelphia, where he paint portraits throughout these Mississippi, where he married Jane M. began specializing in Delaware Valley landscapes, years, so when he traveled east in although he continued to exhibit views of western Bisland.30 Both newly wed couples Pennsylvania like his View Near Bedford, 1837 to settle permanently in settled in Mississippi, where James Pennsylvania.This painting was exhibited in 1849 Philadelphia, he left a rich legacy of visited them again and again. Samuel at the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, likenesses of luminaries local to Philadelphia, (no. 173, lent by Mrs. James Lambdin) and descended in the Lambdin family collection. James Reid Lambdin 5 Pittsburgh and Louisville, as well as countless portraits of citizens in the Deep South.34 frequently required trips to Washington, D.C., and family ties drew him back to Mississippi. Success in Portraiture James Lambdin continued as a portraitist for most of his life, after 1869 commuting regularly from his home in the “suburb” of Germantown to his studio at 1224 Chestnut Street, Philadelphia (fig. 1), until finally vacating the studio in the summer of 1887 when he was eighty years old.38 One of his portraits of the 1860s (fig. 5) was a likeness of the Civil War general Ulysses S. Grant (1822–1885), who would become President in 1869. James was probably among the many American artists who facilitated his portraiture with the use of photographs. James Lambdin was determined to extricate himself from his oppressive museum responsibilities without financial loss. He arranged for the Cincinnati artist Samuel M. Lee (1809–1841) and a board of managers to take over the supervision of his Louisville museum, sold his financial interests to new shareholders, and made a myriad of other arrangements. His skill in copying paintings also helped liberate him from this venture. An 1835 commission from the museum to copy Old Master paintings in Philadelphia for display in Louisville35 laid the groundwork for James’s portrait-painting career in Philadelphia. Original works by the Old Masters were not then plentiful in the United States; and American citizens, with their new taste for culture, were anxious to acquaint themselves with European art. James made a trip to Natchez, a family visit and a portraitpainting excursion, before leaving the West.36 Then, business concluded, the Lambdin family set out for Philadelphia in the spring of 1837. The first months there were difficult, as James attempted, seemingly fruitlessly, to establish a reputation during a summer of nationwide financial problems caused by a stoppage of specie payments by U.S. banks. This left inaccessible his savings from recent months of painting in the South, and he was distraught enough to consider returning to Pittsburgh. Just in time, however, James recovered his investments and received two important commissions, one from a Montgomery, Alabama, gentleman, who desired a portrait of his daughter then at school in Philadelphia, and another from a St. Louis lawyer. Soon thereafter, more Philadelphia commissions materialized.37 This brought James’s itinerant days virtually to a close, although his growing reputation for state portraiture Fig. 5. James Reid Lambdin, Ulysses S. Grant (1860s), oil on canvas, 36 1/8 x 29 3/16 inches. Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, Philadelphia. James Lambdin may have relied on photographic images when preparing portraits. This is not to suggest that his subjects did not sit for him, but rather that the artist may have referred to photographs for poses and details. (See Van Deren Coke,“Camera and Canvas,” Art in America 49, no. 3 [1961]: 69.) This is only one of hundreds of portraits by James Lambdin, who was commissioned to paint presidents, military leaders, and government officials. His sitters also included such luminaries as William Makepeace Thackeray, Daniel Webster, Lucretia Mott, and George Peabody. Advocating for American Art In light of his future leadership in American art, it seems prophetic that James Lambdin, by happenstance, had been one of a small group of American artists present at a meeting preceding the founding of the Artists’ Fund Society of Philadelphia. James also had been with Samuel F. B. Morse at the time Morse first discussed the founding of the National Academy of Design with fellow artist Asher Brown Durand (1796–1886).39 Once finally settled in the city of his choice, James, always an advocate for American artists, immediately became active in (and eventually an officer of) the Artists’ Fund Society. James exhibited at the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts in Philadelphia and served there as a director from 1845 to 1864.40 Active also in New York, from 1840 to 1860 James was an honorary member of the National Academy of Design, where he first exhibited in 1845; he was also an honorary member of the Albany Gallery of the Fine Arts.41 Within a few years James had become so esteemed for both his portraits and his amiable disposition that in about 1841 U.S. President John Tyler (1790–1862), well pleased by the “handsome” presidential portrait James had recently completed for him, offered the artist “any consulate in Italy.” Had it not been for the protests of James’s mother (who then lived with her son and family in Philadelphia), James would have accepted this presidential appointment, and the family would have moved to Italy.42 Amidst his increasingly successful painting career, his teaching, and his leadership in artistic associations, James found an opportunity to visit Europe in 1856, a trip he had anticipated since his disappointment 6 twenty-nine years previous. James sailed on June 26 and was reported to have returned in December of that year, having visited “all the principal cities . . . giving special attention to their schools and museums of Art.”43 In Berlin, James made studies from life for a portrait of German naturalist and geographer Alexander von Humboldt (1769–1859), who was held in great esteem in this country.The painting had been intended for Philadelphia’s American Philosophical Society. Although not yet finished when the artist returned from abroad, it was exhibited at the Pennsylvania Academy the following year. Nonetheless, the portrait did not adorn the walls of the American Philosophical Society until after May 23, 1887.44 James Lambdin’s reputation and abilities are perhaps best reflected in his leadership in the National Convention of Artists, a group of one hundred artists that first met in Washington, D.C., in March 1858. Incensed that the French academic painter Horace Vernet (1789–1863) had been considered for a commission to decorate the enlarged buildings of the U.S. Capitol, this group believed that only American artists should ornament American buildings, or that at least they should have influence in such matters. James presided over the convention, which would resolve “with a view to secure the recognition by the Government, of the claims and interests of Art, . . . the appointment of an Art Commissioner, which shall be recognized as the exponent of the authority and influence of Art in the country, and shall secure to Artists an intelligent and Fig. 6. Attributed to George Bacon Wood, Jr. (American, 1832–1910), Photograph of Members of the Artists’ Fund Society (1888): (left to right) Isaac L. Williams (1815–1895), John Sartain (1808–1897), Frederick DeBourg Richards (1822–1903), and James Reid Lambdin. Library Company of Philadelphia. James Lambdin was corresponding secretary of the Artists’ Fund Society in 1838 and 1844, vice-president from 1840 to 1843, and president from 1845 to 1867. This photograph, probably taken at the Lambdin home in Germantown, shows four of the members of this longstanding Philadelphia association after they had worked together for many years. unbiassed [sic] adjudication upon the works they may present for the adornment and completion of the National buildings.”45 Shortly thereafter, President James Buchanan named James Lambdin, landscape painter John Frederick Kensett (1816–1872), and sculptor Henry Kirke Brown (1814–1886) members of the United States Art Commission.46 Thwarted by Congress, the Commission was short-lived, but American artists had at least been given a voice in a state-sanctioned capacity. In that same year, 1858, James was reported to have opened an art school in Philadelphia. He was praised by a writer in America’s mid-nineteenth century art magazine The Crayon as:“admirably qualified for this undertaking . . . well versed in the technical requirements of his profession and . . . able by his long experience to adapt them to the age and character of his pupils. Mr. Lambdin is furthermore well qualified as a teacher by an intimate acquaintance of the progress of our native Art, having labored earnestly, patiently, and effectively in its behalf; we do not know of a wiser and more faithful friend of the cause in this country.”47 How long that school endured is not clear, but by the early 1860s James was a professor of fine arts at the University of Pennsylvania, a position he held from 1861 to 1866.48 7 James Reid Lambdin Lambdin Family Tree M James Lambdin Rachel Wilbur (1800?–1882?) M 1818 Prudence Harrison 1795 (1773–1812) (1772–1846) Jonathan Harrison Lambdin Samuel Hopkins Lambdin (1798/99–1825) (1811/12–1902) M 1842 Jane M. Bisland (1822–1894) Mary Lambdin (b. 1821) Sarah Lambdin Coffin Catherine Lambdin (1819–1867) (b. 1823) James Reid Lambdin (1807–1889) M Mary O’Hara Cochran 1828 (c. 1810–1866) Mary Lambdin James Harrison Lambdin Alice Lambdin (1835–1836) (1840–1870) (7/1848–8/1848) Eleanor Prudence Lambdin Emma Connor Lambdin (1832–1888) (1843–1923) Agnes Mary (or Marie) Lambdin (1853–1927) (after 1893, Sister Agnes Maria) George Cochran Lambdin (1830–1896) Augustus Biers Snyder (1836–1883) M 1861 Annie Eliza Lambdin Alfred Cochran Lambdin (1838–1911) (1846–1911) M 1873 Katherine McIlwaine John Oldmixon Lambdin (1874–1923) Augustus Biers Snyder George Cochran Snyder (c. 1864–1865) (1868–after 1884) James Lambdin Snyder (1862–1921) Annie Lambdin Snyder Mary Snyder (1869–?) (1866–1867) Henry David Hamilton Snyder William McDaniel Snyder (1863–?) (1871–after 4/1941) Fig. 7. Lambdin Family Tree Dates of birth, marriage, and death for members of the Lambdin family have been compiled from such sources as census records; obituaries; newspaper memorial articles; burial records; gravestones, St. Luke’s churchyard, Germantown, Pa.; James R. Lambdin’s journal; and Mary Cochran Lambdin and James Lambdin’s Family Bible.Two comprehensive Lambdin family genealogies, located as this study was nearing completion, are Sara Eugenia Lambdin Baack (Curley), The Lambdin Files (Kenbridge, Va.: Sara Eugenia Lambdin Baack, 2000); and Gaylord M. Lambdin and Paris L. Lambdin, The Lambdin Chronicles (Alcoa, Tenn.: Gaylord M. Lambdin, 1991). When no other sources have been available, various online genealogical compilations were consulted. All names and dates given here have been researched and evaluated; however, there are a few perplexing discrepancies in the available sources. The Lambdin family collection was acquired from a descendant of Augustus Biers Snyder. 8 The Lambdin Family By the time James and Mary Lambdin had departed Pittsburgh for Philadelphia in 1837, their first three children were born: George Lambdin, Mary Lambdin (who died in 1836 at two years or under and, like James’s father and brother Harrison, was buried at Trinity Church in Pittsburgh), and Eleanor Prudence Lambdin (1832–1888). The family grew quickly in the Philadelphia years, when six more children were born: Annie Eliza Lambdin (1838–1911); James Harrison Lambdin (1840–1870); Emma Connor Lambdin (1843–1923); Alfred Cochran Lambdin (1846–1911); Alice Lambdin, who died at about one month in 1848; and Agnes Mary (Maria) Lambdin (1853–1927).49 In all probability Agnes was the only child born in Germantown, where the Lambdins settled in the early 1850s. In May 1861,Annie Eliza Lambdin wed Augustus Biers Snyder (1836–1883) in St. Luke’s Church in Germantown. Snyder was a native of Prattsville, Greene County, New York.While it is not known how Annie met Augustus, James had in-laws in northern New Jersey and family connections in nearby southeastern New York. His brother Harrison Lambdin’s wife, Rachel Wilbur Lambdin, was from Lyons Farms in the Elizabethtown (now Elizabeth) and Newark area. James often visited the Wilbur family there before and after Rachel was widowed and, with her three daughters, returned home to Lyons Farms. Sarah Lambdin Coffin (1819–1867), Rachel’s oldest daughter, died in Irvington, New York.50 In fall 1860 George Cochran Lambdin was in Ulster County, New York, where he had gone to make sketches51 and might have had contacts. Annie’s first child, James Lambdin Snyder (1862–1921), was born in Clovesville in Delaware County, New York, and baptized at Woodland in Ulster County, New York, in 1862. In September of the following year, Annie’s second child, Henry David Hamilton Snyder, was also baptized at Woodland.52 Figs. 8 & 9. James Reid Lambdin: (left) Henry David Hamilton Snyder (c.1865), oil on academy board, 12 3/4 x 10 1 /4 inches; (right) Augustus Biers Snyder (c.1865), oil on academy board, 12 5/8 x 10 3/4 inches. Collection of Dr. and Mrs. Joseph H. Schneider, Houston,Texas, sold by the Schwarz Gallery. A writer in the Round Table recorded that in 1865 James was “traveling . . . in Northern New York . . . during the entire summer” (“Philadelphia Art Notes,” Round Table [September 30, 1865]: 60). At about this time James must have painted two of his daughter Annie’s children, Henry David Hamilton Snyder (born in Clovesville, New York, in 1863) and Augustus (Gussie) Biers Snyder (born c. 1864), who probably died soon after James painted him. Notations in the Lambdin Family Bible indicate that by 1864 James Lambdin’s daughter and son-in-law had moved north to Port Leyden in Lewis County, New York. It seems reasonable that James would have painted scenes from this area while making family visits. While living at Port Leyden, Annie Eliza Lambdin Snyder gave birth to Augustus (Gussie) Biers Snyder (1864?–1865), Annie Lambdin Snyder (1866–1867), George Cochran Snyder (1868–after 1884), and Mary Snyder (1869–?). The mid-1860s, when James apparently spent so much time in New York near his daughter Annie, could not have been easy years. His second son, Harry (James Harrison), was seriously wounded in the Civil War in June 1864, and James’s beloved wife Mary died in March of 1866. Mary’s poetic and heartfelt obituary, so unusual a tribute to a woman of her time, reveals the esteem and affection in which her family held her: “The record of her calm and peaceful life is like a placid river shining in the sunlight and reflecting nothing but gentle lights and shades.”Yet we also learn from the obituary that Mary suffered “years of terrible disease.”53 James must also have shared the sorrows of the Snyder family during the mid-1860s, when Annie lost her very young children, Gussie and Annie. The period following these tragedies, 1866 to 1867, may have marked a turning point for the widowed artist—a time when he sought solace with children and grandchildren far away from the cares of the city. He left his teaching post at the University of Pennsylvania in 1866 and soon after began to write his autobiographical journal. The journal text was addressed to his children who, James wrote,“have always manifested such an interest in every circumstance connected with my early life and professional experience.”54 James Reid Lambdin 9 Plate 1 JAMES REID LAMBDIN The Old Cedar on the Squan River, New Jersey Watercolor on paper, 8 7/8 x 13 1/4 inches Inscribed in pencil on verso: “The Old Cedar/Squan River, N.J.” This watercolor of a quiet sandy beach along the Matasquan inlet is the only New Jersey scene in the Lambdin family collection. Perhaps the Lambdins chose to paint scenes in northern New Jersey because James’s sister-in-law’s family, the Wilburs, had lived at Lyons Farms, New Jersey. In his Journal (pt. 1, p. 51), James described Lyons Farms as “equally distant between Elizabeth and Newark.” Since James had visited the Wilbur family and their neighbors even before he settled in eastern Pennsylvania, if family members and acquaintances had remained in the vicinity, the Lambdin family might have returned to the area as late as the 1870s, as suggested by a reviewer’s commentary on George Lambdin’s work in 1877 (“Spring Exhibition of the Philadelphia Academy of Arts,” Art Journal, n.s. 3 [1877]: 190). Plate 2 JAMES REID LAMBDIN Water Running over Rocks Watercolor on paper, 13 x 9 inches Like Muddy Brook, Woodland, Ulster County, New York (plate 6) and Beach’s Dam, Woodland, Ulster County, New York (plate 7), Water Running over Rocks may also have been painted in the Woodland area of Ulster County, New York. Plate 3 JAMES REID LAMBDIN River View with Mountains Oil on canvas, 14 x 22 inches James Lambdin’s landscape subjects include scenes from the Catskills, the Adirondacks, and New Jersey, locales also visited by many other American artists in the nineteenth century. Thomas Cole (1801–1848) had spent a great deal of time in the Catskills, and James’s Germantown neighbor William Trost Richards (1833–1905) painted in the Adirondacks as early as the 1850s. Lambdin’s landscapes probably represent his personal connection to these remote New York State locales near where his daughter Annie lived in the 1860s (see fig. 10). 10 Elizabethtown ● ● Port Leyden ● ● ● Bolton’s Landing, Lake George Trenton Falls Niagra ● Buffalo Painting Landscapes in Water Colours, first published by Fielding Lucas in 1815).56 James also recorded an excursion to Niagara Falls in the late winter of 1827. While working in the Buffalo area, he made pencil sketches at the falls, and back in Buffalo he created a large painting of the grand, icy scene (location unknown).57 James Lambdin’s landscapes in the family collection have a sense of intimacy. For the most Woodland part they are small watercolors, Lake Mohonk lacking the breathtaking grandeur of monumental oil landscapes by American artists like Frederic Edwin Church (1826–1900), Albert Bierstadt (1830–1902), and Thomas Moran (1837–1926). The fact that James’s landscapes remained with the family suggests that they had special meaning for his relatives. ● Fig. 10. Map of Upstate New York Showing Locations Where James Painted Landscapes Landscapes in the Lambdin Family Collection After the War of 1812 Americans began to pay increasing attention to the visual qualities of the American terrain, which was then still a largely unspoiled wilderness. By mid-century more and more artists traveled, especially in the summer months. They drew their attention to America’s natural wonders, such as Niagara Falls, the Natural Bridge of Virginia, and, increasingly, popular vacation sites like the Catskills, the Adirondacks, and coastal locales in New Jersey and New England. During the second half of the century, hotels and railroad lines grew in number to accommodate such travel, and vacationers traveled in droves. City artists rushed to the woods, mountains, countryside, and seashore to create the landscape images then so much in demand. Even the Civil War did not seem to stem America’s enthusiasm for landscape paintings. James Lambdin not only was a muchsought-after painter of portraits but also painted significant landscapes such as Delaware Water Gap (1874; La Salle University Art Museum, Philadelphia) and Below High Falls (1868; private collection), a spectacular view of Trenton Falls in Oneida County, New York.55 James had an early interest in landscape painting; his journal reveals that as a youth he had already begun assiduously copying landscapes from a drawing book published in Baltimore (almost certainly the popular Art of Colouring and ● Just as landscape painting grew in popularity during the nineteenth century, so also did the use of watercolor paints for plein air subjects. This medium had become popular in England by the late eighteenth century and was associated there, for very practical reasons, with landscape painting. First, watercolor paraphernalia is somewhat easier to carry outdoors than are heavy stretched canvasses and substances like linseed oil and turpentine. Second, watercolor, done on heavy white paper with water-based washes, has a pristine, sometimes sparkling quality that makes it ideal for depicting reflections, atmosphere, bodies of water, and nature’s soft natural effects. Not deterred by the difficulty of its execution, which requires a sure and quick hand, American artists used watercolor frequently and with great skill. The nineteenthcentury popularity and importance of the watercolor medium in this country is apparent from such events as the Philadelphia Society of Artists’ Second Annual National Water-Color Exhibition in 1883, a show of three hundred entries, to which James Lambdin contributed four.58 James Reid Lambdin 11 Plate 4 JAMES REID LAMBDIN Dewey’s Grist Mill on the Black River, Port Leyden, Lewis County, New York Oil on canvas, 12 1/8 x 16 3/8 inches Inscribed on verso: “Dewey’s Grist Mill/on Black River/Port Leyden, Lewis Co., N.Y.” To reach Port Leyden, James Lambdin would have had to travel in the vicinity of Trenton Falls, situated just north of Utica, New York, and at that time a mecca for artists. James’s several views of Trenton Falls and that area were dated or exhibited between 1866 and 1868. They are View Near Trenton Falls (exhibited 1866 at the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, Philadelphia, then owned by J. S. Whitney; location unknown); Trenton Falls (exhibited 1867 at the Artists’ Fund Society, Philadelphia; location unknown); and Below High Falls (1868; private collection). James’s son-in-law, Augustus Snyder, and Augustus’s brother, always known as H. D. H. Snyder, became very successful entrepreneurs in the Port Leyden area. Among other pursuits, in the 1860s the brothers owned the Tanning Manufactory and the Telegraph Service and resided in two of the village’s most “beautiful residences.” Augustus and Annie’s home was described as a “mansion.” (See Matthew J. Conway, Port Leyden,”The Iron City”: A Passing Glance [Woodgate, N.Y.: Tug Hill Books, 1989], pp. 15–16 and passim.) Dewey’s Grist Mill on the Black River is the only Port Leyden view by Lambdin that is known. During the 1860s the Black River was becoming increasingly industrialized. This painting probably shows the flouring mill owned by Charles D. Dewey, located below the Hellgate flume and seen here before surging flood waters tore the structure from its site in April 1869. (See Conway, Port Leyden, pp. 15, 17, 74–77.) Plate 5 JAMES REID LAMBDIN Lake George from Bolton’s Landing, 1886 Watercolor on paper, 10 1/8 x 14 3/8 inches Signed and dated at lower left: “JR Lambdin/86” Inscribed in pencil on former mount: “Lake George from Boltons” James Lambdin painted at least two views of popular Lake George. One view was exhibited in December 1867 at the Artists’ Fund Society of Philadelphia. The work illustrated here, from the Lambdin family collection, is identified as Lake George from Bolton’s Landing and is dated 1886. As in most of his landscapes, Lambdin did not represent people in this watercolor. 12 The Catskills The Catskills area is naturally rocky, and landscape artists were likely to be attracted to its craggy outcroppings and boulders.59 James Lambdin’s heightened interest in rocky terrain in his views of the Catskills and other New York State sites was surely related to the widespread popular interest in geological discoveries and theories in the middle decades of the nineteenth century. Americans took notice of the ideas and writings of German naturalist and geographer Alexander von Humboldt, Swiss naturalist and Harvard professor Louis Agassiz (1807–1873), and Sir Charles Lyell (1797–1875), a British scientist who authored several popular treatises on geology and lectured widely. Humboldt had even written about landscape painting and the study of nature in his widely read Cosmos (Kosmos; 5 vols., 1845–62; Eng. trans. 1849–58). Connections existed between all these scientists and contemporary artists. Frederic Church owned a copy of Cosmos and greatly admired Humboldt. Germantown artist William Trost Richards (1833–1905) was quite interested in Agassiz’s theories.60 Russell Smith, James’s colleague and former pupil, produced illustrative material for Lyell’s lectures and publications and developed a close acquaintance with the scientist.61 James had an opportunity to know Humboldt when the German scientist, so greatly admired in the U.S., sat for him in Berlin in 1856. Furthermore, John Ruskin (1819–1900), the versatile and influential English critic, artist, poet, philosopher, and aesthete, had studied geology in his youth and later disseminated geological ideas in his prolific writings.62 Plate 6 JAMES REID LAMBDIN Muddy Brook, Woodland, Ulster County, New York Watercolor on paper, 9 3/4 x 14 5/8 inches Inscribed in pencil on verso: “Muddy Brook Woodland/Ulster Co NY” Since neither this work nor Beach’s Dam, Woodland, Ulster County, New York (plate 7) is dated, it is not clear whether they were created while the family was living in the area; however, it seems reasonable to assume a connection between James Lambdin’s subjects and his daughter Annie’s residences. In the spring of 1883, at the Philadelphia Society of Artists’ Second Annual National Water-Color Exhibition, James exhibited a landscape entitled Woodland Valley. Whether this work was painted earlier is not known— apparently it was not for sale when exhibited. (See Catalogue of the Second Annual National Water-Color Exhibition, p. 16, no. 97.) Since James painted at least two views known to be from Woodland, and these views stayed in the family, it is likely that the area had particular significance for the Lambdins. Woodland, even today, is a remote and unspoiled hamlet in Ulster county, hardly a locale heavily frequented by artists and tourists. It is not far from the birthplace of James Lambdin’s son-in-law, Augustus Snyder, who may have had relatives there. Plate 7 JAMES REID LAMBDIN Beach’s Dam, Woodland, Ulster County, New York Watercolor on paper, 9 7/8 x 13 7/8 inches Inscribed in pencil on mount verso: “Beach’s Dam, Woodland/Ulster Co N.Y.” Interestingly, this work seems to conform to the instructions for watercolor landscapes from The Art of Colouring and Painting Landscapes in Water Colours, which James Lambdin had studied so many years before. The manual urges capturing a mood of “rural simplicity” and showing “the lone cottage, partly obscured in the recesses of a few old trees” (The Art of Colouring and Painting Landscapes in Water Colours [Baltimore: Fielding Lucas, 1815], p. 45). 13 James Reid Lambdin Lake Mohonk Just south of Woodland is Lake Mohonk, known to vacationers today as the location of Mohonk Mountain House, a famed resort nestled in the Shawangunk Mountains beside a picturesque lake. The mountain hotel was built on land purchased in 1869 by the Smiley brothers, Albert and Alfred, and has been in continuous operation, although much enlarged, since June of 1870. It is unclear how James came to visit there, but he was a registered guest in 1873, 1881, and 1883. In 1880, 1881, and 1882, he was listed as a reference in Mohonk’s circulars. A guidebook of 1875 refers to “Lambdin’s Glen,” named for the artist and accessible via a short path through woodlands leading to a glade above the lake, marked to this day by a handsome carved wooden sign pointing to “Lambdin’s Path” (fig. 11).63 At the Second Annual National Water-Color Exhibition of the Philadelphia Society of Artists in 1883, James exhibited two paintings that relate to the Lake Mohonk site. One was (probably erroneously) titled Lake Mohawk and was almost certainly intended to read Lake Mohonk. The other work was titled Lake Minnewaska, a sister resort to the Mohonk Mountain House and one that James is known to have visited in August of 1883.64 Fig. 11. Sign Pointing to Lambdin’s Path, Mohonk Mountain House, Lake Mohonk, New Paltz, New Plate 8 Plate 9 JAMES REID LAMBDIN JAMES REID LAMBDIN Shawangunk Mountains from Artist’s Rock, Eagle Cliff, Lake Mohonk, Ulster County, New York 1880 Oil on academy board, 12 x 16 /8 inches Label fragment (supplier, printed) on verso: “ACADEMY BOA[RD]/Prepared/FOR OIL PAINTI[NG]/BY/GEO.ROWNEY/ 52, Rathbone Place, and 29, Oxf[ord, missing]/London.” 5 While some of James Lambdin’s watercolors of the area may not be exact images of the lake and mountains from identifiable vantage points, this view from Artist’s Rock on Lake Mohonk offers a genuine image of specific mountains in the Shawangunk range; they are called the Trapps, the Near Trapps, and Millbrook Mountain. Lake View with a Summerhouse, Lake Mohonk, Watercolor on paper, 9 3/4 x 13 7/8 inches Signed and dated at lower left: “JR Lambdin, 80” Three of the landscapes in the Lambdin family collection were painted at or near Lake Mohonk. This view is certainly from the area of the Mohonk Mountain House. As many as 150 rustic summerhouses (today called gazebos) were constructed in the vicinity of the hotel by 1920. (See Benjamin H. Matteson and Joan Lachance, “The Summerhouses of Mohonk” [paper written for the Mohonk Archives, 1996].) Lake View is probably not an exact representation of the lake and mountains from a specific vantage point. 14 The Mohonk Mountain House owns three 1881 prints of Mohonk views painted by James Lambdin and phototyped by Philadelphia photographer Frederick Gutekunst (1831–1917). These are titled Catskill [sic] Mountains from Sky Top, Lake Mohonk, Ulster County, New York; Lake Mohonk, Ulster County, New York; and Shawangunk Mountains from Sky Top, Lake Mohonk, Ulster County, New York.65 It is not known how these particular Gutekunst phototypes were marketed or by whom. Elizabethtown, Essex County, and Lake George Elizabethtown, Essex County, and popular Lake George lie near the northeastern border of New York, northeast of Lake Mohonk and Woodland and west of the Hudson River. Whether or not the Lambdins or Snyders had family or other connections in this area of New York is not known. Scholar Linda Ferber has called Elizabethtown, Essex County, “a kind of crossroads for artists.”66 Perhaps the gregarious James traveled there in hopes of meeting cronies or followed the recommendations of his colleagues and Germantown neighbors William Trost Richards and George Bacon Wood, Jr., both of whom had spent time in Essex County, where Pleasant Valley and the Bouquet (or Boquet) River area offered interesting landscape views. In the nineteenth century the Elizabethtown-area scenery and several commodious hostelries attracted hoards of visitors, among them not only artists but also prominent literary figures, including James Fenimore Cooper (1789–1851), Alfred B. Street (1811?–1881), and Horace Greeley (1811–1872).67 Plate 10 Plate 11 JAMES REID LAMBDIN JAMES REID LAMBDIN Near Elizabethtown, Essex County, New York Lake View with Rocks: Near Elizabethtown, Essex County, New York, 1878 Oil on canvas, 13 1/2 x 21 3/4 inches Inscribed in pencil on stretcher verso: “Near Elizabethtown Essex Co. N.Y.” This oil may be presumed to be based on James Lambdin’s watercolor Lake View with Rocks: Near Elizabethtown, Essex County, New York (1878; plate 11), also in the Lambdin family collection. The artist also exhibited a view of a nearby scene, Ford on the Bouquet River: Adirondacks, at the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, Philadelphia, in 1879. Watercolor on board; 13 1/8 x 8 1/2 inches Signed and dated in pencil at lower right: “JRL 1878.” Inscribed in pencil on verso: “75c/3/8 [illegible] Gildred/Snyder” Label (supplier, printed) on former backing verso: “Evans Bros. & Myers,/Everything in Art Goods,/Picture Frames Made to Order,/ Undertaking in all its Branches,/Wellesboro, Pa.” 15 George Cochran Lambdin (1830–1896) George Cochran Lambdin was born while his parents were still in Pittsburgh and was about seven years old when the family settled in Philadelphia. Like his father, George gravitated early to an artistic life; but unlike his father, he had ample opportunities to watch an artist at work. George must have closely observed James, who was also his principal teacher, and of course George also enjoyed contact with James’s many associates and with the institutions in the midnineteenth century American art world. George Lambdin’s Early Career Following a modicum of general schooling in Philadelphia,68 George began to exhibit early at the Pennsylvania Academy. His first exhibited works included religious and literary subjects: Dorcas Distributing Garments to the Poor, The Presentation in the Temple, The Lady of Shallot, and Queen Margaret and the Robber. These and many other early works are unlocated today but give us an idea of George’s penchant for literary themes, especially scenes from Tennyson and Shelley. His works between 1848 and 1855 also include numerous crayon heads, especially of children. During a painting trip to Savannah, Georgia, in 1851, George was praised in a local paper: “The style in which these pictures are executed is new to us, and is, we believe, original with [the talented young artist] Mr. Lambdin. It is peculiarly adopted to delineation of youthful faces.”69 Genre Paintings By the early 1860s, George was specializing in genre themes, both sentimental and anecdotal. These images reveal everyday life at its most human and commonplace and take the viewer behind the scenes into situations that might otherwise be private. Genre subjects, which so frequently illustrate childhood and domestic life, often share an element of universality and are understood regardless of cultural differences. The nineteenth-century sensibility was particularly oriented to sentimental subjects, such as the intimacy of courtship, the sorrow of parting, the tenderness of a mother, and the pathos of death. As John Ruskin proclaimed in 1858: “The rage is for sentiment, and everybody is encouraged to tell us all that is in or near their hearts.”70 Fig. 12. PIERRE-EDOUARD FRÈRE (FRENCH, 1819–1886) The Young Knitter, 1883 Oil on panel, 17 x 13 1/2 inches Signed and dated at lower left: “Edouard Frère 1883” Schwarz Gallery Although George Lambdin was only one of many American artists to paint genre subjects, critics called him “the American Frère.” This was quite a complimentary comparison. The French genre painter PierreEdouard Frère was so admired in the United States that a popular American journal, Harper’s New Monthly Magazine, published a lengthy article about Frère and related genre painting in France (W. D. Conway, “Edouard Frère and Sympathetic Art in France,” Harper’s New Monthly Magazine 43 [November 1871]: 801–14). (I thank William Gerdts for informing me of the comparison with Frère. Also see “Art Items,” New-York Daily Tribune, November 7, 1860, p. 7, and January 31, 1861, p. 7.) Like Lambdin, Frère often pictured children engaged in adult activities. The Young Knitter addresses the popular Victorian topic of age versus youth and dignifies the timeless domestic work of women and girls. One of Lambdin’s best-known paintings, The Pruner (1868; Museum of Fine Arts, Boston), shows a small boy absorbed in watching a middle-aged man trimming trees. 16 Artist Models and the Use of Photographs There has been a question of where George Lambdin found his youthful models, though since he had many younger siblings, he probably did not have to look far. Between 1857 and 1869, when George created most of his important figure studies and genre works involving children and youthful figures, his siblings ranged in age from four to thirty-seven. If George (or another photographer) was photographing his models, he could have captured the likeness of a sibling at a particular age (and in various poses) and then could have drawn on these images again and again. Close comparison of his genre scenes reveals the same model, in similar poses, in more than one of his paintings. For example, the small boy in Boy and Girl in a Barn (plate 15) is almost identical to the seated child in The New Knife (fig. 17). Plate 12 GEORGE COCHRAN LAMBDIN Crocheting, 1860 Oil on canvas, 16 5/8 x 13 inches Signed and dated at lower right: “Geo.C. Lambdin.60.” Inscribed in ink on stretcher verso: “Crocheting/Geo. C.Lambdin/Nov.1860 Philadelphia” George Lambdin’s works often capture stillness and related concepts of reverie, contemplation, waiting, watching, and resting. Even his child subjects pause for moments of reflection or are quietly absorbed in a task, as in this work, in which a girl of about six is completely absorbed in her handwork; only her cat looks on. Light streams from a window barely seen at left. As in most Dutch Baroque genre paintings, the window light illuminates the child but the window does not offer a view. George created another, slightly different, version of this scene, also titled Crocheting and dated 1860. (See Schwarz Gallery, Philadelphia Collection XLVI [1991], no. 3.) American artists were preoccupied with the development of photography, at first because it seemed to threaten their commissions for portraiture, but also because it offered them many new visual possibilities. Painting from photographs worked especially well for capturing still poses of active small children. A handful of albumin prints, annotated “made of the Lambdin family about 1863–5,” was unearthed in the collections of a Philadelphia research library,71 and there is no doubt that George Lambdin used these or related photographs for such paintings as The Bashful Model (1862; location unknown), The Consecration, 1861 (1865; Indianapolis Museum of Art); Rosy Reverie (1865; Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, Washington, D.C.), and The Pruner (1868; Museum of Fine Arts, Boston).72 George Cochran Lambdin 17 Plate 13 GEORGE COCHRAN LAMBDIN In a Window, 1856 Oil on canvas, 31 1/8 x 26 1/8 inches Signed at lower right: “Geo. C. Lambdin” Inscribed on verso (copied on lining canvas): “In a window/painted by/Geo. C. Lambdin/Germantown/1856” EXHIBITED: Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, Philadelphia, Thirty-Third Annual Exhibition (1856), no. 139 In a Window was painted in Germantown in 1856 and exhibited that year at the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts. Here, a young woman sits at a window, absorbed in intricate handwork. Sunlight from the window creates light effects that play over the colors and textures of her needlework, the salmon drapery behind her, and her delicately rendered dress and sash. The pose by a window is dictated by the subject’s need for light in her exacting work. In other paintings, such as Reverie: Sunset Musing (apparently exhibited as Reverie in 1858; private collection), George Lambdin portrayed a young woman in silent thought as she gazes out the window and into the distance, a theme popular in nineteenth-century German art. In both Reverie and In a Window, the landscapes are verdant vistas, though not entirely wild. Through the landscapes run winding rivers—major paths of transport and travel in the nineteenth century and thus perhaps evocative of distance, a journey, even absence of a loved one. 18 An undated letter from New York artist William Holbrook Beard (1824–1900) to “Mr. Lambden” requested “two photographs of cats.” Beard first denied that he would use them in his painting, but then he contradicted himself, writing: “If I had a photograph which was what I wanted or could get one that would help me in my picture, I should not hesitate to use it. Nor would I care to conceal it . . . I do not wish the Photographer to destroy the negative on my account.”73 Beard’s letter makes clear that artists of the time, though conflicted, were using photographs, sometimes obtained by mail, and that they sometimes wanted the negatives of photographs they had used destroyed. One of George Lambdin’s most popular paintings was Golden Summer, painted for George Whitney. It shows a young man and a young woman gazing into the fields as they lean on a rustic country fence or stile.Although the painting’s present location is not known, the work survives in an engraving published in Peterson’s Magazine (fig. 14). A memorial tribute published in a Philadelphia paper a few days after George’s death, likely written by George’s brother Alfred Cochran Lambdin, describes the painting. It explains that the woman is clad in lavender accentuated by the complementary color of the golden grain fields. The author describes the subject as “Tennysonian” and claims that it was a plein air subject rather than a studio work.74 It is quite possible, however, that the female figure was based on a photograph. Amateur photographers in Philadelphia were capable of making adequate photographs as early as 1857, or Fig. 13. George Cochran Lambdin, Clasping a Bracelet (1857), oil on canvas, 26 x 22 inches. Collection of Joseph A. Hardy, III, N e m a c o l i n Woodlands Resort and Spa, Farmington, Pennsylvania. In the mid-1850s George Lambdin made an extended trip to Europe, spending most of his time in Paris and Munich, where he apparently became acquainted with not only with French genre paintings but also the rich color, eye-pleasing textures, and glowing light of Dutch Baroque genre painting, such as the works of Johannes Vermeer of Delft (1632–1675). Some of Lambdin’s most beautiful images from the late 1850s, like Clasping a Bracelet, show what he gained from his study of Dutch, German, and French paintings, which may have included mid-century female portraits by the French academic painter Jean-Auguste-Dominique perhaps earlier.75 Thus Golden Summer, and possibly Ingreseven (1780–1867). even others like Clasping a Bracelet (fig. 13) and Our Sweetest Songs Are Those That Tell of Saddest Thoughts (1857; National Academy of Design, New York), might be based on a posed photograph, such as one of a series found in Philadelphia of the same model in three poses (fig. 15).76 The exact photographs used as the basis for paintings may not have survived; small and ephemeral photographs of this type may have been easily lost or discarded in artists’ studios, even if they were not purposefully destroyed. Fig. 14. (left) George Cochran Lambdin, Golden Summer, frontispiece for Peterson’s Magazine (January 1866), engraved and printed by Illman Brothers. Library of Congress, Washington, D.C. Fig. 15. (above) Unknown photographer, Model in Three Poses, possibly a member of the Lambdin family (c.1863–65). Historical Society of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia. George Cochran Lambdin 19 It is tempting to identify a child in a few George Lambdin paintings as the artist’s youngest sister, Agnes Mary (or Marie) Lambdin. She would have been no more than six or seven years old when George painted (and possibly photographed) her in both The Nursery (undated; plate 14), and Three Little Mothers, apparently also called The Three Mothers (1860; location unknown; fig. 16). Both girls in the rocking chairs are clearly based on the same model, and, very likely, photographs—perhaps two from the same series. This image is not, however, found in the batch of photographs discovered in Philadelphia. The facial features and hair of the child in the rocking chair are very similar to those of the older subject in Portrait of a Young Woman, dated 1865 (see plate 30). George exhibited a painting titled Agnes in 1868 and 1869, but whether or not it is the same painting is unknown. A biography of Agnes Maria Lambdin confirms, however, that she did serve as a model for her 77 brother. In the 1860s George benefitted from the patronage of several of America’s premier art collectors, including George Whitney, John Taylor Johnston, Samuel Putnam Avery, and Robert M. Olyphant. It appears that The Nursery and Three Little Mothers were once the property of the noted American landscape painter John Frederick Kensett (1818–1872), who had just a year or two before served with James Lambdin on the Art Commission. In November 1859 The Crayon reported that “Lambdin has painted a picture for Kensett.” Two George Lambdin paintings later offered at auction as part of Kensett’s estate were titled The Nursery and Three Little Mothers. These paintings had the same 78 dimensions as the works illustrated in this catalogue. Fig. 16. George Cochran Lambdin, Three Little Mothers (1860), oil on panel, 12 3/4 x 16 inches. Photograph courtesy of Schutz & Company Fine Art, New York. George modeled the Union officer in five Civil War paintings on likenesses of his younger brother, Union volunteer officer James Harrison (Harry) Lambdin, who enlisted in the 121st Pennsylvania Regiment, Army of the Potomac, in August of 1862. These paintings, all showing sentimental and psychological aspects of warfare rather than battle scenes or military actions, are Consecration, 1861 (1865; Indianapolis Museum of Art); Weary, Tiresome Winter Quarters—Culpeper Plate 14 GEORGE COCHRAN LAMBDIN The Nursery Oil on canvas, 8 x 6 inches Signed in pencil on stretcher verso: “Geo. C. Lam[bdin]” PROVENANCE (probable): John Frederick Kensett, New York EXHIBITED: Washington County Museum of Fine Arts, Hagerstown, Maryland, The Victorian Child (July 1–August 29, 1993) [exhibition label on frame verso] One of the children in several George Lambdin paintings may be the artist’s youngest sister, Agnes Mary Lambdin. She would have been only six or seven years old when George painted her in both The Nursery (undated) and Three Little Mothers (1860, location unknown). Two George Lambdin paintings later offered at auction as part of John Frederick Kensett’s estate were titled The Nursery and Three Little Mothers. These paintings had the same dimensions as those illustrated here and were probably the same works. 20 County, Virginia (1864; private collection); Winter Quarters in Virginia—Army of the Potomac, 1864 (1866; Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library, Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut); At the Front (1866; Detroit Institute of Arts); and Compensation (exhibited 1866; Biggs Museum of American Art, Dover, Delaware).The scenes of the brooding officer in camp were reportedly Fig. 17. George Cochran Lambdin, The New Knife, oil on canvas, 13 x 10 inches. Private collection, sold by the Schwarz Gallery. The same little boy who is in Boy and Girl in a Barn (plate 15) appears in this undated painting. George Lambdin exhibited The New Knife at the Artists’ Fund Society of Philadelphia in 1866, and it was once in the Wilstach Collection of the Philadelphia Museum of Art. The catalogue W.P. Wilstach Collection (Philadelphia: Commissioners of Fairmont Park, 1913), no. 233, records that the painting was “dated 1866” and gives dimensions as 13 by 10 inches whereas the auction catalogue Valuable Oil Paintings from the W.P. Wilstach Collection . . . (Philadelphia: Samuel T. Freeman & Co., 1954), lot 224, gives a date of 1868 and dimensions as 13 by 10 1/2 inches. Another painting of the 1860s, Lambdin’s The Pruner (1868; Museum of Fine Arts, Boston), was exhibited in 1864 and 1867 but later dated 1868. Possibly there were two paintings of the same title or George Lambdin wanted to take newly dated paintings to New York’s Tenth Street Studio Building, where he resided for a time in late painted from studies made by George in Virginia. One was later reproduced photographically, and these images “continued to be in demand for many years after the war 79 closed.” Used one way or another, photography was a powerful force, influence, and aid in the visual arts from shortly after its advent throughout the nineteenth century 80 and even into the twentieth. Plate 15 GEORGE COCHRAN LAMBDIN Boy and Girl in a Barn Oil on academy board, 8 x 10 inches Label (supplier, printed) on verso: “MILL-BOARDS./Prepared by/H. KAUSZ./ SIZE.10X14/Manufacturer of/ARTIST’S COLORS AND MATERIA[LS]/First Premium for Pastel & Oil Colors, Franklin Institute 1858/804Sansom Street,/ PHILADELPHIA.” Anecdotal genre offers a view into another’s world, often that of a child. Frequently it contains a note of humor, if only because the viewer is an uninvited witness, as in the painting illustrated here, one of at least four barn subjects painted by George Lambdin. This small painting offers a charming view of two youngsters tucked away, out of the view of adults. Lambdin’s other known barn subjects are White Heifer Calf (1869; location unknown); Music and Refreshments (1875; New York State Historical Association, Cooperstown); and Little White Heifer (formerly Feeding Time, 1876; location unknown). George Cochran Lambdin 21 Plate 16 GEORGE COCHRAN LAMBDIN Blowing Bubbles, probably 1863–64 Oil on prepared board, 5 x 7 inches EXHIBITED (probably): Great Central Fair, Philadelphia (June 1864) Philadelphia’s Great Central Fair, held in Logan Square, was among the most successful volunteer fund-raising efforts staged during the Civil War, and the generous contributions of many Philadelphia artists, including James and George Lambdin, helped assure its success. George Lambdin’s diminutive Blowing Bubbles, an oil sketch probably executed in 1863 or 1864 and showing a young girl in a domestic interior, was almost certainly displayed at the Fair. The Catalogue of Paintings, Drawings, Statuary, Etc. of the Art Department in the Great Central Fair, 2nd ed. (Philadelphia, 1864), lists the title (no. 761) in a group (p. 24) of forty-nine “sketches” exhibited by “Artists of Philadelphia”—one of more than a thousand art works donated for the cause. Quite alone, the young girl sits on the edge of her chair gazing at a large soap bubble that has floated from her pipe. The seventeenthcentury chair was also used in several other of Lambdin’s genre paintings (Small Pets [1867; private collection]; Boy [1877; Hickory Museum of Art, North Carolina]; My Favorite Rose [1884; Reading Public Museum, Pennsylvania]; and Waiting [published in Art Union 1 (August–September 1884): 156]). The chair is discussed by Lambdin’s contemporary Anne Wharton in “Some Philadelphia Studios: First Paper,” (Decorator and Furnisher 7 [December 1885]: 78). Lambdin had created an earlier version of Blowing Bubbles in 1858 (oil on canvas, 29 x 23 inches; location unknown). The earlier version is very different from this painting: it is much larger and lighter and is beautifully finished in the seventeenthcentury Dutch manner, with great attention to detail, textures, and light reflections. It shows a girl of five or six blowing a bubble in a doorway; outside is a vine-covered porch with a landscape view beyond. The subject of a child blowing bubbles was not new to the nineteenth century, having been used historically to signify themes of Vanitas, idleness, and impermanence. In his two versions of Blowing Bubbles, George Lambdin probably only intended to convey the short-lived innocence of childhood. 22 Plate 17 GEORGE COCHRAN LAMBDIN Goldfish, 1859 Oil on canvas, 12 x 9 inches Signed and dated at lower left: “Geo.C.Lambdin/‘59” PROVENANCE (possible): John Frederick Kennsett, New York The Chinese practice of keeping fish had been adopted by the French in the eighteenth century. In England and America, the popularity of decorative fish was later fostered by such writings as British naturalist Philip Henry Grosse’s The Aquarium: An Unveiling of the Wonders of the Deep Sea, published in London in 1854. The displaying of ornamental fish by middle-class Americans became something of a status symbol. Throughout the nineteenth century, American artists created and exhibited portraits, still lifes, and genre paintings that included goldfish. In 1812 James Warrell (c. 1780–before 1854) exhibited Full Length of a Child with Gold-Fish (location unknown); in about 1835 Samuel F. B. Morse (1791–1872) painted The Goldfish Bowl: Mrs. Richard Cary Morse and Family (Smithsonian American Art Museum, Washington D.C.); in 1856 Lilly Martin Spencer (1822–1902) painted Child Playing with Fish Bowl (Newark Museum); and in 1874 James Wells Champney (1843–1903) painted Girl Feeding Goldfish (location unknown). Records show that George Cochran Lambdin exhibited one or more paintings titled Gold Fish or Gold Fishes in Troy, New York, and New York City in 1860 and 1862. One of these paintings (if indeed the titles refer to more than one) was then owned by the prominent American landscape painter John Frederick Kensett; however, the Kensett painting is thought to have had slightly larger dimensions than the one in the Schwarz collection. Lambdin’s painting shown here depicts a domestic interior in which a young girl contemplates two goldfish as they swim in a prominently displayed glass pedestal bowl. The child has seemingly flung aside her toys to study this lesson in nature and Asian aesthetics. George Cochran Lambdin 23 Plate 18 GEORGE COCHRAN LAMBDIN Sketch Related to “Among the Roses,” 1879 Watercolor on paper, 16 x 20 inches Signed and dated at lower right: “Geo. C. Lambdin./79.” Even as late as 1879, George Lambdin was relying on photographic models. His Among the Roses (1877; location unknown) shows a floral landscape surrounding a maiden in white, her arms uplifted as she pins a rose to her hair. George’s 1879 sketch from the Lambdin family collection (shown here) is very similar to the earlier Among the Roses and is clearly a related work. Perhaps this is another image of the artist’s sister Agnes, based on a photograph taken in about 1862–65, when she was between nine and twelve years old, and reproduced on canvas much later. 24 Plate 19 GEORGE COCHRAN LAMBDIN Two Girls Picking Fruit, 1867 Oil on canvas, 16 1/8 x 21 3/4 inches Signed and dated at lower left: “Geo C. LAMBDIN.1867.” RECORDED (possibly): Henry T. Tuckerman, Book of the Artists: American Artist Life (New York: Putnam, 1867; reprint, New York: James F. Carr, 1966), p. 450, as Gathering Cherries The figures in this painting are similar to girls in other George Lambdin paintings of the 1860s and 1870s: The Vineyard (fig. 19) and Playmates (1868; location unknown). In some instances, it seems that a model used by Lambdin may also appear in genre works by other American painters. The dark-clad girl in Two Girls Picking Fruit seems strikingly similar in certain ways to the central figure—a young girl reaching upward—in the Seymour Joseph Guy (1824–1910) work Contest for the Bouquet (1866; Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York). Figures in all of these paintings, as well as in Guy’s The Pick of the Orchard (c. 1870; collection of Jo Ann and Julian Ganz, Jr., Los Angeles), might well be related to a darkclothed girl in profile whose photograph can be found in the cache of photographs apparently once owned by the Lambdins and now in the Historical Society of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia. The connection seems especially strong because the girl, surrounded by a landscape in the photograph, seems to pose as though picking fruit from a tree or holding and admiring an object. George Cochran Lambdin 25 Plate 20 Attributed to GEORGE COCHRAN LAMBDIN Girl in a Yellow Dress with Fresh Cut Flowers Oil on canvas, 30 x 25 inches 26 Floral Studies George Lambdin had been in New York at the Tenth Street Studio Building, where so many of America’s leading artists had ateliers in the late sixties, but he left before Christmas 1869 to return to Germantown for reasons of poor health—“the fatigue of constant toil in his profession.” His illness continued into April, and his physician forbade him to “touch his pencils for the present.” Early in May, George and his brother Harry (also needing to restore health) sailed for Europe. The Franco-Prussian War forced them to England, but Harry’s worsening condition hastened their return to Germantown. There, Harry died in November 1870.81 Back in Germantown, George pursued new directions in his oeuvre of the 1870s. Throughout his career he depicted flowers in his work. Such genre scenes as Girls and Flowers (1855; Smithsonian American Art Museum, Washington, D.C.); The Consecration, 1861 (1865; Indianapolis Museum of Art); and Lazy Bones (1867; location unknown) incorporate flowers in one way or another, even if only in a small nosegay.82 In the 1870s, however, George began concentrating on floral still lifes. This is not surprising. At New York’s Tenth Street Studio Building, he might have been influenced by the flower studies of John La Farge (1835–1910), or he might even have seen some early examples of what was to be a growing and very popular genre of floral still life in France.83 But Philadelphia had its own long tradition of still-life painting,84 and the area was renowned for its flower gardens. The Germantown section of the city, where George’s family had settled, was the site of internationally known nurseries and home to noted horticulturists like Thomas Meehan (1826–1901).85 George Plate 21 GEORGE COCHRAN LAMBDIN Pink Rose Bud Watercolor on paper, 11 x 7 inches Signed in monogram at lower right: “L.” George Cochran Lambdin 27 Plate 22 GEORGE COCHRAN LAMBDIN Pink and Yellow Roses Oil on canvas, 24 1/8 x 18 1/8 inches Signed at lower right: “Geo. C. Lambdin” EXHIBITED: Louisville, Kentucky, Southern Exposition (1884) [exhibition label on frame verso] REFERENCE: Ruth Irwin Weidner in Robert Devlin Schwarz, 150 Years of Philadelphia Still-Life Painting, Philadelphia Collection LXII (Schwarz Gallery, 1997), pp. 62–64 (repro. p. 63) Of the several rose paintings in this exhibition, all feature outdoor settings, and two or three show the blossoms in various stages of opening, a detail that may derive from the innovative scientific thought of Charles Darwin. Although pointing out that Lambdin did not paint in the manner prescribed by John Ruskin, William H. Gerdts discusses Ruskin’s and Darwin’s impact on George Lambdin in Down Garden Paths: The Floral Environment in American Art (Cranberry, N.J.: Associated University Presses, 1983; esp. pp. 19–22). 28 Plate 23 GEORGE COCHRAN LAMBDIN Yellow and Pink Roses Oil on canvas, 16 3/8 x 12 inches Signed at lower right: “Geo.C.Lambdin—” plate 22 continued Pink and Yellow Roses, a painting that shows roses out of doors against blue sky and with several opening buds as well as fullblown blooms, was exhibited by Lambdin at the 1884 Southern Exposition in Louisville, for which Charles M. Kurtz was art director. Although it is uncertain whether the two artists met, George enthusiastically participated in Kurtz’s plans for exhibitions in Louisville and New York City, among other Kurtz projects of the 1880s. George Cochran Lambdin 29 maintained his own gardens and a greenhouse at the Lambdin home at 211 Price Street. Over the years he painted apple blossoms, azaleas, calla lilies, carnations, chrysanthemums, cyclamen, goldenrod, hollyhocks, lilacs, magnolias, snapdragons, tiger lilies, tulips, water lilies, wisteria, and various other cultivated plants and wildflowers. Attitudes towards flowers changed in the course of the nineteenth century. In the early decades, flowers were seen as precious and symbolic, representing the obvious emotions like ardor and envy.86 In this early period, living flowers were something of a luxury, and perhaps flowers were more typically viewed as color illustrations in gift books and catalogues than as living plants. In the middle decades of the century, flowers were associated with goodness, morality, and even reform.A Maine resident wrote that the “cultivation of flowers tends to improve health, purify the heart, elevate the affections, and ennoble man’s nature. He who has a love for the culture of flowers cannot but be a person of refined feelings, religious nature and a generous life.”87 A Massachusetts author instructed:“Learn of the flowers what they teach. They will mirror the different elements of moral character,—some of modesty and purity, others of beauty, taste, loveliness, and many, also, of their opposites.”88 Gardener’s Monthly proclaimed that “Many of our best men and wisest philanthropists are now beginning to appreciate the fact, that to cultivate a love for flowers and gardens, is to raise up one of the most powerful agents in moral reform.”89 In time, increasing affluence and leisure allowed more and more middle-class Americans to establish home gardens. Nursery personnel, gardeners, and artists promoted the sheer beauty of flowers—ravishing or delicate colors, exotic types and forms, subtleties of textures, and profusion of blooms. Scientific propagation and import of new varieties kept the public interest: Between 1870 and 1873 the Miller & Hayes nursery in Germantown imported over three hundred new Tea and Hybrid Perpetual roses from Europe.90 George was aware of varietal differences. In 1882 at the National Academy of Design he exhibited a painting he described as “the climbing yellow Pactole rose reaching down to meet La France— bright pink in color.”91 Roses were the flowers that George Lambdin preferred to paint and those for which he would become best known. He grew roses, wrote about them, and painted more versions of them than any other subject in his oeuvre. During the seventies he popularized roses on dark, usually black, backgrounds. Many of these were chromolithographed by Louis Prang (1824–1909) in Boston, and the reproductions were widely marketed. Brought within the means of the average pocketbook, “Lambdin’s roses” became household words.92 In the 1870s and especially in the 1880s, George’s rose studies typically showed the plants growing out of doors, displaying both mature blooms and buds in progressive stages of opening, and seen against the sky or occasionally a plaster wall. Scholarly George had undoubtedly paid close attention to some of John Ruskin’s mandates to artists, which included the English author’s preference for showing flowers just as they grow in nature. Ruskin had wanted to dispel the artificiality of previous still-life conventions, which showed cut flowers indoors and carefully arranged in decorative vases; very often flowers with entirely different blooming seasons were displayed together in artists’ still lifes. George Lambdin, both gardener and artist, was perfectly suited to carry out Ruskin’s strong suggestions, although he apparently never adopted the author’s instructions about meticulous drawing and exactitude of portrayal. These rose studies also suggest possible connections with photography. In both New York and Philadelphia, George had ample opportunity to see large photographic studies by French photographer Adolphe Braun (1811–1877), showing flowers arranged vertically, filling the image but lacking visible containers.93 Although George’s compositions might have been informed by many different influences, his artistic success with roses can be largely attributed to his patience and dedication in studying rose textures and hues. He devoted countless hours to painstaking studies of individual rose blossoms, of which one long-stemmed example is included in this collection—Pink Rose Bud (plate 21). The artist believed that the rose holds the “secret of color,” and he allowed the color-tones of rose petals to inspire his painting.94 A critic of the day wrote that, in spite of a “great boldness” in handling, George’s “freedom of execution that comes with knowledge” leaves “not the least thing lacking in definition.”95 It seems that George came to understand intuitively the shape, texture, and colors of each petal he painted; his roses seem natural and yet artful. The verve and energy of his paintings resulted in depictions of flowers seeming even more natural and alive than they might have appeared if created according to John Ruskin’s exacting formulas for painstaking drawing. 30 Plate 24 GEORGE COCHRAN LAMBDIN Yellow and Pink Roses Growing Against a Wall Oil on canvas, 21 1/4 x 15 1/4 inches Inscribed in pencil on frame verso: “Levison” George Cochran Lambdin 31 Plate 25 GEORGE COCHRAN LAMBDIN Two Blossoming Pink Roses and Vines Oil on canvas, 16 1/8 x 12 inches Signed at lower right: “Geo.C.Lambdin” Label (supplier, printed) on stretcher verso: “H.KAUSZ./Manufacturer and Importer of/Artist’s Colors and Materials/First Premium for Pastels and colors, Franklin Institute, 1858/No.804 SAMSON STREET,/PHILADELPHIA.” 32 Plate 26 GEORGE COCHRAN LAMBDIN Pink Rose Vines Oil on canvas, 29 3/4 x 19 7/8 inches George Cochran Lambdin 33 Plate 27 GEORGE COCHRAN LAMBDIN Goldenrod in the Sand Watercolor on paper, 19 x 12 inches EXHIBITED (possibly): Brooklyn Art Association (1881), no. 200, as Golden Rod by the Lake Not all of George Lambdin’s flower studies were of elegant or exotic cultivated plants. His watercolor of a wild and unpretentious goldenrod, its autumn bloom seen before a body of water, sharply contrasts with what the artist called the rose’s “delicacy,” “translucency,” and “hidden yet half revealed” charm (Geo[rge] C. Lambdin, “The Charm of the Rose,” Art Union 1 [June–July 1884]: 137; republished in Weidner, “Pink and Yellow Roses,” in Robert D. Schwarz, 150 Years of Philadelphia Still-Life Painting, p. 64). George’s choice of a virtual weed as a subject fulfilled Ruskin’s mandates to look at common wildflowers “as Nature arranges them in the woods and fields” (John Ruskin, “Letter III: On Colour and Composition,” Elements of Drawing in Three Letters to Beginners, 1st ed. [London: Smith, Elder, and Co., 1857], p. 234). His choice also elucidates how long Ruskin’s pervasive influence, first felt in the 1850s, lingered in this country. The watercolor illustrated here may be Golden Rod by the Lake, exhibited at the Brooklyn Art Association in 1881, or more likely one of two paintings, titled Goldenrod and Goldenrod by the Shore that were offered for sale in 1887 (Catalogue of Valuable Paintings: The Collection of George C. Lambdin . . . [Philadelphia: Davis & Harvey’s Galleries, April 6–7, 1887], p. 5, lot 7, and p. 15, lot 90). It is possible, of course, that the painting exhibited in Brooklyn was one of these. 34 Portraits of Women in the 1880s Plate 28 GEORGE COCHRAN LAMBDIN Viva (after the artist’s painting of that title, exhibited at the National Academy of Design, 1884) Crayon on paper, 8 x 5 7/16 inches Signed at lower left: “Geo. C. Lambdin” Inscribed: (in pencil at lower center) “Viva”; (in ink at lower center) “1884. p 89”; (in crayon at upper left) “89”; (in pencil at lower right) “9384 m 6 [?]” Inscribed in ink on verso: “1884 p 89/Geo. C. Lambdin—’Viva’—” PROVENANCE: Charles M. Kurtz, New York [collector’s stamp on verso] ILLUSTRATED: National Academy Notes, Including the Complete Catalogue of the Fifty-Ninth Spring Exhibition, ed. Charles M. Kurtz (New York: Cassell & Co., 1884), p. 89, no. 140 George Lambdin’s studies of the hues of rose blooms and the textures of delicate petals enhanced his ability to create the visual and tactile qualities and subtle colorations necessary in his portraits of women, which were an extraordinary success. The two line drawings of young women shown here were illustrations created especially for Charles M. Kurtz’s illustrated catalogues of the National Academy of Design Annuals of 1884 and 1885, respectively. Viva, shown at the Academy in 1884, had been enthusiastically reviewed by an anonymous writer when previously shown in Philadelphia: The studies of maidenly beauty [George Lambdin] has contributed to recent exhibitions have marked a new departure in his artistic career. His latest work in this genre, shown on Saturday, is an ideal figure . . . It is the loveliest of his creations and will undoubtedly prove a center of interest in the New York exhibition. The figure is that of a young lady in full dress in pale pink material, her fair arms raised above her head, holding in both hands a pink fan, which half shades her winsome face. This is of the red-gold type of blonde beauty, and these characteristics have been idealized by the artist with poetic refinement and delicacy. The roseate glow of the flesh tints, luminous even in shadow, yet cool as the petals of a flower drenched with dew, justify the enthusiastic expression heard more than once before the easel, ‘What a glorious picture!’ (Unidentified newspaper clipping enclosed in a letter from Lambdin to Kurtz, February 28, 1884. Charles M. Kurtz Papers. Archives of American Art, Washington, D.C., microfilm roll 4819, frame 1219) Plate 29 GEORGE COCHRAN LAMBDIN A Portrait (after the artist’s painting of that title, exhibited at the National Academy of Design, 1885) Ink on paper, 10 1/16 x 7 inches Signed at lower left: “Geo. C. Lambdin” Inscribed in ink on verso: “1885 p 80 Geo C. Lambdin A Portrait/(Woman holds three roses)” PROVENANCE: Charles M. Kurtz, New York [collector’s stamp on verso] ILLUSTRATED: National Academy Notes and Complete Catalogue, Sixtieth Spring Exhibition, National Academy of Design, ed. Charles M. Kurtz (New York: Cassell & Co., 1885), p. 16, no. 62 The oil A Portrait that Lambdin reproduced in this drawing was not for sale when exhibited in 1885; it was owned by F. D. Marikwald, so perhaps its subject was a member of that family. In 1884 Leslie W. Miller wrote that George was doing studies in which roses inspired the skin tones, explaining: “Mr. Ruskin advises his pupils to paint peaches and plums, if they would learn how to paint the more delicate bloom of cheeks and lips. Mr. Lambdin has gone to the roses for the same lesson.” (L[eslie] W. M[iller], “The Artists’ Exhibition: Second Paper,” American 7 [February 9, 1884]: 281) In 1885 George Lambdin pointed out to Anne Wharton “how exactly this picture of the girl, pink, white and flesh color, corresponds with the picture of the roses, every tint and tone in one may be matched with a tint or tone in the other.” (Wharton, “Some Philadelphia Studios: First Paper,” Decorator and Furnisher 7 [December 1885]: 78) In Charles Kurtz’s National Academy of Design exhibition catalogue, Lambdin described the color missing in his black-and-white drawing of A Portrait, explaining that her hair and eyes are dark and her dress is a “pale pink covered with white muslin and lace.” Deep green foliage fills the background, and she holds yellow and pink 35 George Cochran Lambdin The 1880s: Writing, Lecturing, and Leading Artistic Organizations Even if George Lambdin had devoted the mid-1880s solely to painting rose studies and creating portraits of lovely young women, his reputation would have been solid. In those years, however, George was also a figure much in demand on the lecture circuit. He published frequently in art journals and was quoted often in newspapers. Throughout his career, George stayed abreast of the latest trends in the art world and was active in several of the major East Coast art societies. He had been a longtime member of the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, Philadelphia, where he became an Academician in 1863. He had held elected offices and even served as president of the Artists’ Fund Society of Philadelphia. In the late 1870s he became a member of the newly formed Philadelphia Society of Artists, a lively and ambitious group active from 1879 to the mid-1880s. Not content to limit his involvement to the Philadelphia art world, in 1868 George had obtained residence in New York’s Tenth Street Studio Building, where so many of America’s leading artists had studios. While in New York, he became an Academician in the National Academy of Design, where he had exhibited frequently between 1856 and 1886. It was not at all out of character for George to participate avidly in several of Charles M. Kurtz’s endeavors of the 1880s. Director of the Art Department of the Southern Exposition in Louisville from 1883 to 1886, Kurtz was also editor of the National Academy Notes for the National Academy of Design from 1881 to 1889. In addition, Kurtz was a key figure in New York’s revived Art Union and its publication of the same name. The Fig. 18. George Cochran Lambdin, Autumn Sunshine (1880), oil on canvas, 30 1/4 x 20 1/2 inches. Smithsonian American Art Museum,Washington, D.C., sold by the Schwarz Gallery. The chrysanthemum is an ancient flower from Asia, where, greatly prized, it became the emblem of Japan’s imperial family. In the nineteenth century, as America’s interest in Japanese and Chinese culture waxed, and as new Asian varieties of flowers and plants were imported into the United States, the chrysanthemum became a favorite, second only to the rose. Kurtz papers contain numerous letters from George that elucidate the artist’s interest in Kurtz’s projects. For the catalogues of the Art Department of the Southern Exposition and the annual catalogues of the National Academy of Design, artists were asked to send line drawings and written descriptions of works accepted for exhibition. George’s correspondence with Kurtz centered around his drawings and illustrations, as described below with Viva (plate 28) and A Portrait (plate 29).96 For the Art Union, George also contributed quite a few articles and comments, including “Further Words on the Tariff” (January 1884),97 “Primitive Colors” (May 1884),98 “The Charm of the Rose” (June–July 1884),99 and “Style” (January–March 1885).100 To a Philadelphia newspaper, George sent two scholarly communications in 1885–86, one regarding nudity in art (presumably in response to the 1885 controversy that swirled around Thomas Eakins [1844–1916]), the other an argument regarding “The Picturesque.”101 George was very visible in Philadelphia in 1885. He lectured in May of that year on “What We Mean by a Work of Art” at the Philadelphia School of Design for Women (now Moore College of Art and Design)102 and on “The Invention of Oil Painting and Its Development” at the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts.103 George also gave the commencement address at the Philadelphia School of Design for Women in 1885,104 certainly a year in which his activities and successes proved his erudition and his influence in the art world. In the period from 1885 to 1887, George was a member of the faculty of the Philadelphia This work shows yellow and pink potted chrysanthemums in a greenhouse, a variation on the outdoor still life. During the 1880s this flowering plant became so popular that in 1890, Louis Prang & Company published F. Schuyler Mathews’s gift book of poetry and full-page chromolithographs by Anglo-American artists James Callowhill (1838–1917) and Sidney T. Callowhill (1867–1939). The artists featured many large, elaborate, and beautifully colored mums. 36 School of Design for Women; the school’s mission was “to give women thorough and systematic training in the principles and practices of the art of design.”105 George Lambdin’s familiarity with artists, writers, and philosophers was wide ranging; his writings and speeches drew on the works, ideas, and accomplishments of such figures as the ancient Greek poet Pindar, fifteenth-century Italian artist Antonello da Messina, sixteenth-century Italian artist and historian Giorgio Vasari, and nineteenth-century English artist John Flaxman. The Lambdin household had been a cultured one. James’s brother Harrison Lambdin was a bookseller, printer, and papermaker, and had become a partner in the Pittsburgh firm Patterson & Lambdin before his untimely death in 1825.Although a physician by training, George’s brother Alfred Cochran Lambdin worked as an art and music critic in Philadelphia and belonged to many local cultural groups. George’s sister Agnes recalled that a dramatic club met at the Lambdins’ Germantown home.The family owned a large collection of books and engravings, which James willed to his sons.106 James had the sensibilities of a historian and carefully chronicled incidents, biographies, additions, and corrections in his personal copy of William Dunlap’s A History of the Rise and Progress of the Arts of Design in the United States,107 as well as in his own journal—a rich repository of first-hand information. Plate 30 GEORGE COCHRAN LAMBDIN Portrait of a Young Woman, 1865 Oil on academy board, 10 1/8 x 8 1/4 inches Signed and dated at lower right: “Geo C Lambdin. 65” The facial features and hair of this young woman resemble those of the younger girl in The Nursery (plate 14). The model for this painting may have been the artist’s youngest sister, Agnes Mary Lambdin. Lambdin exhibited a painting titled Agnes in 1868 and 1869, but whether it was the painting illustrated here is not known. Fig. 19. George Cochran Lambdin, The Vineyard, oil on canvas, 24 x 18 inches. Collection of J. M. Smucker Company, Orrville, Ohio, sold by the Schwarz Gallery. 37 The Lambdins’ Careers and Their Contributions to American Art The careers of James Lambdin and his son George Lambdin ended at about the same time. On the afternoon of January 31, 1889, James, then in his early eighties, was riding a train home from an exhibition at the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts when he died quietly of heart failure as the train approached his Germantown stop.108 George, on the other hand, suffered from an illness of many years, a decline reported in spring 1887 when the contents of the ailing artist’s studio were sold at auction.109 He was hospitalized for at least part of the decade before his death in 1896. There have been differing explanations of what caused George’s illness, but the Lambdins’ Germantown friend and neighbor Edwin C. Jellett, also a local historian, took pains to explain that its onset followed George’s disappointment at not being named president of the Philadelphia School of Design for Women.110 James Lambdin and George Lambdin both left splendid legacies. James painted likenesses of jurists, writers, scientists, generals, governors, senators, clergymen, and women of all ages. He painted every president from John Quincy Adams to James A. Garfield, and he himself wrote that “he was thought to have painted more portraits than any other living artist.”111 George, too, was a prolific and highly regarded portrait painter even in the early years of his career, but he became most famous for “Lambdin’s roses,” which were widely exhibited and reproduced as chromolithographs that hung in many American homes. Together, the careers of the two artists illustrate fundamental developments in nineteenth-century art. James’s experiences and contributions exemplify the life of the itinerant portraitist and the continuing importance of portraiture through the first three-quarters of the century; he also contributed to the tentative foundations of museum work. Both father and son were informed, even erudite, artists. In spite of a lack of formal education, James led in the founding and governance of distinguished societies intended to support the interests of artists and to facilitate the exhibition of art, and George enthusiastically wrote and lectured about art history and artistic theories. George was among the American artists who turned away from religious and literary subjects to genre and still life. James became interested in landscape painting, joining the hundreds of Americans who created images of their growing nation’s varied terrain. George explored the uses of photography and was cognizant of foreign artists, theorists, and critics. Both artists benefitted from travel and study in Europe; yet, both Lambdins steadfastly supported uniquely American causes and artistic expressions. Although their contributions to America’s cultural heritage were centered in Pennsylvania, their influence spread much farther.The hundreds of images that survive them and their record of support for American art reveal much about the history of art in nineteenthcentury America. Fig. 20. (above left) George Cochran Lambdin, Morning Walk (1868), chromolithograph published by Bencke and Scott, New York (copyright 1874). Library of Congress, Washington, D.C. This is yet another example of George Lambdin’s use of family members as models. It may be the painting entitled Sunday Morning, which Lambdin showed in New York in 1868 (described in Putnam’s Magazine, n.s. 1 [March 1868]: 388). Fig. 21. (above right) Unknown photographer, James Reid Lambdin (probably 1860s). Library Company of Philadelphia. The clothing and pose in this photograph strongly suggest that James Lambdin is the man in Morning Walk. 38 List of Plates James Reid Lambdin George Cochran Lambdin Plate Page Title Plate Page Title 1 2 3 4 9 9 9 11 5 6 7 8 11 12 12 13 9 10 11 13 14 14 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 The Old Cedar on the Squan River, New Jersey Water Running over Rocks River View with Mountains Dewey’s Grist Mill on the Black River, Port Leyden, Lewis County, New York Lake George from Bolton’s Landing Muddy Brook, Woodland, Ulster County, New York Beach’s Dam, Woodland, Ulster County, New York Shawangunk Mountains from Artist’s Rock, Eagle Cliff, Lake Mohonk, Ulster County, New York Lake View with a Summerhouse, Lake Mohonk Near Elizabethtown, Essex County, New York Lake View with Rocks: Near Elizabethtown, Essex County, New York 16 17 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 30 31 32 33 34 34 36 Crocheting In a Window The Nursery Boy and Girl in a Barn Blowing Bubbles Goldfish Sketch Related to “Among the Roses” Two Girls Picking Fruit Girl in a Yellow Dress with Fresh Cut Flowers Pink Rose Bud Pink and Yellow Roses Yellow and Pink Roses Yellow and Pink Roses Growing Against a Wall Two Blossoming Pink Roses and Vines Pink Rose Vines Goldenrod in the Sand Viva A Portrait Portrait of a Young Woman Notes The George Cochran Lambdin paintings from the Lambdin family collection and the three works once in the hands of Charles M. Kurtz, along with seven others now with the Schwarz Gallery, virtually represent the course of George Lambdin’s mature career.All but the following works by George Lambdin were acquired from the Lambdin family: plates 13, 14, 16, 20, 22, 29, 30. Works reproduced in color, including The Young Knitter by Pierre-Edouard Frère, are for sale. George Lambdin’s black-and-white drawings A Portrait and Viva (not from the Lambdin family collection) are also for sale. Information about works exhibited in the nineteenth century has not been provided in the notes if that information has come from standard sources: e.g., The Annual Exhibition Record of the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, 1876–1913, ed. Peter H. Falk, 3 vols. (Madison, Conn.: Sound View Press, 1989); The National Academy of Design Exhibition Record, 1861–1900, ed. Maria Naylor, 2 vols. (New York: Kennedy Galleries, 1973); Inventory of American Paintings, Artist Listings (Smithsonian American Art Museum, Smithsonian Institution, computerized and routinely updated); and National Museum of American Art’s Index to American Art Exhibition Catalogues, from the Beginning through the 1876 Centennial Year, comp. James L.Yarnall and William H. Gerdts, 6 vols. (Boston: G. K. Hall, 1986). 1. In winter 1996–97 the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts presented an installation of the works of Philadelphia’s artistic families. I thank Christine Schultz Magda for obtaining the checklist of this exhibition and for her many contributions to the research for this catalogue. 2. The Schwarz Gallery, Philadelphia, has published exhibition catalogues for members of several of these Philadelphia families: Philadelphia Artists: The Weber Family, Philadelphia Collection XXIX (1985); A Gallery Collects Peales, Philadelphia Collection XXXV (1987); Anna Richards Brewster, Philadelphia Collection L (1990); Robert Wilson Torchia, The Gilmans, Philadelphia Collection LXI (1996); and Robert Wilson Torchia, The Smiths: A Family of Philadelphia Artists, Philadelphia Collection LXIV (1999). See also Philadelphia’s Cultural Landscape: The Sartain Family Legacy, ed. Katharine Martinez and Page Talbott (Philadelphia:Temple University Press, 2000); Linda S. Ferber, William Trost Richards (1833–1905): American Landscape and Marine Painter (New York: Garland, 1980); and Nancy K. Anderson, Thomas Moran (Washington, D.C.: National Gallery of Art, 1997). 3. The primary source for information about James Lambdin is the “Journal of James R. Lambdin,” an autobi- ographical account written from about 1867 and covering roughly the years from his parents’ marriage in 1795 until James and family made Philadelphia their permanent home in 1837. James’s son Alfred Cochran Lambdin probably typed a manuscript written or dictated by James, who then edited the typescript. Division of Archives and Manuscripts, Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission, Harrisburg, Pa., MG–6, GM–190, box 2 (hereafter cited as J. R. Lambdin Journal). Although rich in details that might otherwise have been lost, the journal includes dates, sequences of events, and place names that are sometimes ambiguous and require careful study. Accompanying the journal and also in the Division of Archives and Manuscripts, Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission, MG–6, GM–190, is a five-page “Brief Sketch of Jas. R. Lambdin’s Career as Painter,” handwritten by the artist, apparently for publication (hereafter cited as J. R. Lambdin, “Brief Sketch”). Other useful sources for James Lambdin are John O’Connor, Jr., “Reviving a Forgotten Artist: A Sketch of James Reid Lambdin, The Pittsburgh Painter of American Statesmen,” Carnegie Magazine 12 (September 1938): 115–18; and Dictionary of American Biography, s.v. “Lambdin, James Reid.” The spelling of James’s middle name has caused confusion because both James himself and his son Alfred spelled it “Read.” See J. R. 39 Notes Lambdin Journal, pt. 1, p. 5; Alfred C. Lambdin to J. D. Woodward [1892] advises the Pennsylvania Academy that the correct spelling is “Read” (Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts Archives, Philadelphia). J. R. Lambdin’s Journal, pt. 1, p. 5, explains that he was named for a traveling Methodist minister, the Rev. James Read. However, James seems most likely to have been the namesake of the Rev. James Reid (1780–1850 or 1860). For George C. Lambdin, see Ruth Irwin Weidner, George Cochran Lambdin (Chadds Ford, Pa.: Brandywine River Museum, 1986). 4. For cultural life in early Pittsburgh, see Edward Park Anderson,“The Intellectual Life of Pittsburgh, 1786–1836,” Western Pennsylvania Historical Magazine 14 (1931): 9–27, 92–114, 225–36, 288–309. Part 8,“Painting” (October 1931): 288–309, includes material on James Lambdin. 5. J. R. Lambdin Journal, pt. 1, pp. 1–23. Gaylord M. Lambdin and Paris L. Lambdin, Lambdin Chronicles (Alcoa, Tenn.: Gaylord M. Lambdin, 1991), pp. 47–48, have published an 1897 letter from Samuel Hopkins Lambdin to an unknown recipient stating that Samuel was one of eight children, the fourth male child born. In his journal James repeatedly mentioned his two brothers Samuel and Harrison, but never other siblings. 6. J. R. Lambdin Journal, pt. 1, p. 33. 7.“Notes and Queries:The Painter’s Club of Philadelphia,” Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography 40 (1916): 122–23. 8. J. R. Lambdin Journal, pt. 1, pp. 46–47. 9. J. R. Lambdin Journal, pt. 3, pp. 4, 8, 9–11, and passim. For James’s brother-in-law Alfred Cochran’s marriage into the Postlethwaite family of Natchez, see pt. 3, p. 17. 10. J. R. Lambdin Journal, pt. 2, pp. 9–13. 11. J. R. Lambdin Journal, pt. 2, p. 13. According to Dictionary of American Biography, s.v. “Wilkins, William,” the judge experienced financial problems in about 1828. Lambdin Journal, pt. 2, p. 13. 14. J. R. Lambdin Journal, pt. 2, p. 20. Coleman Sellers, Mr. Peale’s Museum (New York: W. W. Norton, 1980). 12. J. R. Lambdin Journal, pt. 2, pp. 9–14. 15. J. R. Lambdin Journal, pt. 2, pp. 17–18. 13. J. R. 16. For C. W. Peale’s museum see Charles 17. J. R. Lambdin to F. M. Etting, October 12, 1872, Etting Papers, Historical Society of Pennsylvania. Published in Gaylord M. Lambdin and Paris L. Lambdin, Lambdin Chronicles, pp. 36–37. 18. An invaluable source for information about Lambdin’s museum is Elizabeth Kennedy Sargent,“Lambdin’s Pittsburgh Museum of Natural History and Gallery of the Fine Arts, 1828–1832” (tutorial research paper, Chatham College, 1984; hereafter cited as “Lambdin’s Pittsburgh Museum”). I am indebted to Henry Adams for sending me a copy of this extremely useful work. 19. Anne Royall, Mrs. Royall’s Pennsylvania; or, Travels Continued in the United States (Washington, D.C.: Anne Royall, 1829), 2:64–65. Cited in Sargent,“James Reid Lambdin’s Pittsburgh Museum,” p. 51. It is unclear which Mrs. Peale created the floral display. 20.“A Friend to Merit” [pseud.],“From the Club—No. 10,” Hesperus, November 8, 1828; reproduced in Sargent, “Lambdin’s Pittsburgh Museum,” p. 108. “Miss Peale” can probably be identified as either Anna Claypoole Peale (1791–1828) or Sarah Miriam Peale (1800–1885), both daughters of James Peale and associates of the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts by 1824.Although Sarah Miriam Peale was well known for state portraiture, by 1828 Anna Claypoole Peale had painted at least one portrait of Washington (after a work by her cousin Rembrandt Peale [1778–1860]). Rembrandt had made copies after Gilbert Stuart (1755–1828), John Trumbull (1756–1843), and others. See John Hill Morgan and Mantle Fielding, The Life Portraits of Washington and Their Replicas (Philadelphia: Printed for the Subscribers, 1931), pp. 339, 384. 21. Advertisement, Pittsburgh Gazette, September 24, 1830; reproduced in Sargent, “Lambdin’s Pittsburgh Museum,” p. 113. Other paintings by Dunlap exhibited in Lambdin’s Museum were The Bearing of the Cross and Christ Rejected; reproduced in Sargent, “Lambdin’s Pittsburgh Museum,” pp. 110, 115. 22. Advertisement, Pittsburgh Gazette, February 19, 1830; reproduced in Sargent,“Lambdin’s Pittsburgh Museum,” p. 112. Gazette, December 24, 1831; reproduced in Sargent, “Lambdin’s Pittsburgh Museum,” p. 115. 23. Advertisement, Pittsburgh 24. Advertisement, Pittsburgh Gazette, September 2, 1831; repro- duced in Sargent,“Lambdin’s Pittsburgh Museum,” p. 118. 25. James Reid Lambdin to John Adamson, undated letter; James Reid Lambdin to John Adamson, March 16, 1832. Records, 1682–1953. Pierpont Morgan Library, New York, N.Y. Microfilmed by the Archives of American Art, Washington, D.C., microfilm roll N68–12, frames 241–47. 26.“A Friend to Merit” [pseud.],“From the Club—No. 10.” 27. J. R. Lambdin Journal, pt. 2, p. 3. 28. J. R. Lambdin Journal, pt. 3, pp. 3–5. 29. J. R. Lambdin Journal, pt. 3, pp. 3–8, 11–12, 14–17. Clifton was destroyed during the Civil War. 30. It has not been possible to confirm dates for Samuel Hopkins Lambdin and his wife Jane Bisland Lambdin.They probably wed in 1842. Although Samuel’s date of death is often given as 1892, an autobiographical letter detailing facts of his life is said to be dated in 1897, giving credence to the 1902 date. See Gaylord M. Lambdin and Paris L. Lambdin, The Lambdin Chronicles, pp. 47–48. 31. J. R. Lambdin Journal, pt. 3, pp. 25–28. 32. Catalogue of the First Annual Exhibition of Paintings (Louisville, Ky.: Louisville Museum and Gallery of the Fine Arts, 1834). J. R. Lambdin Collection, Catalogues and Pamphlets on Art. Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, Philadelphia. Microfilmed by the Archives of American Art, Washington, D.C., microfilm roll P40, frames 901–9; transcript in Sargent, “Lambdin’s Pittsburgh Museum,” pp. 93–100. Lambdin’s painting after Granet was apparently exhibited in a special room and without a catalogue number. This work, like many in the Louisville exhibition, was previously shown in Lambdin’s Pittsburgh Gallery.The Granet work (present location unknown) is reproduced in Sargent,“Lambdin’s Pittsburgh Museum,” p. 135. For Russell Smith, see Torchia, The Smiths, pp. 10–33; and Virginia Lewis, Russell Smith, Romantic Realist (Pittsburgh: University of Pittsburgh Press, 1957). 33. J. R. Lambdin Journal, pt. 2, p. 18. 34. For luminaries painted by J. R. Lambdin, see O’Connor, “Reviving a Forgotten Artist.” Scholarship on Southern por- traiture includes Mississippi Portraiture, comp. Vera Jacobs Speakes with Estill Curtis Pennington (Laurel, Miss.: National Society of the Colonial Dames of America in the State of Mississippi/Lauren Rogers Museum of Art, 1987), which illustrates thirteen portraits by James Lambdin, including Lambdin family portraits. 35. J. R. Lambdin Journal, pt. 3, pp. 27–28, 54. 36. J. R. Lambdin Journal, pt. 3, pp. 34–35. 37. J. R. Lambdin Journal, pt. 3, pp. 35–37. 38. J. R. Lambdin to Philip C. Garret, May 17, 1887, in A Catalogue of Portraits, p. 50. James occupied the studio at 1224 Chestnut Street from 1869 to 1887. J. R. Lambdin Journal, pt. 3, p. 54; pt. 1, p. 52. 40. Dictionary of American Biography, s.v. “Lambdin, James Reid.” 39. 41. Catalogue of the Third Exhibition (Albany, N.Y.: Albany Gallery of the Fine Arts, 1848). J. R. Lambdin Collection, Catalogues and Pamphlets on Art. Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, Philadelphia. Microfilmed by the Archives of American Art, Washington, D.C., microfilm roll P40, frame 553. 42. J. R. Lambdin Journal, pt. 2, pp. 52–53. 43. J. R. Lambdin,“Brief Sketch,” p. 4; text transcribed in Sargent,“Lambdin’s Pittsburgh Museum,” p. 90. 44.“Sketchings,” Crayon 4 (January 1857): 28; James Reid Lambdin to The American Philosophical Society, June 12, 1856; J. R. Lambdin to Philip C. Garret, May 17, 1887; Philip C. Garret to Frederick Fraley, May 23, 1887. Collection of The American Philosophical Society, Philadelphia. Published in A Catalogue of Portraits and Other Works of Art in the Possession of the American Philosophical Society (Philadelphia: American Philosophical Society, 1951), pp. 49–51. Courtesy of Sue Ann Prince. The portrait might have been completed by early 1857 but remained in Lambdin’s Philadelphia studio until 1887. Another Lambdin portrait of Humboldt hangs in the Academy of Natural Sciences, Philadelphia. 45. Proceedings of the National Convention of Artists, Held March 20, 22, and 23, 1858, at the Smithsonian Institute, Washington, D.C. (Washington, D.C., 1858). J. R. Lambdin Collection, Catalogues and Pamphlets on Art. Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, Philadelphia. Microfilmed by the Archives of American Art, Washington, D.C., microfilm roll P40, frames 625–33. Resolution 4 is on pp. 8–9. 46. “Report of the United States Art Commission.” House Doc. no. 43, 36th Congress, 1st session, March 1860. Also published in Henry K. Brown, James R. Lambdin, and John F. Kensett,“Report of 40 the U.S. Art Commissioners” [To the President of the United States] Crayon 7 (April 1860): 106–9. See also “Sketchings: Art of the Capitol, Washington,” Crayon 5 (October 1858): 295–96. 47.“Domestic Art Gossip,” Crayon 5 (March 1858): 88. 48. Dictionary of American Biography, s.v.“Lambdin, James Reid.” 49. Lambdin Family Bible (given “To Mrs Mary C. Lambdin From her affectionate Brother, Alfred Cochran, Natchez March 9th 1837”), private collection. 50. J. R. Lambdin Journal, pt. 1, p. 50; pt. 3, p. 12a (page numbered pt. 3, 12a is out of sequence in the copy consulted and appears between pt. 3, p. 30, and pt. 3, p. 31). 51. “Art Items,” New-York Daily Tribune, November 7, 1860, p. 7. 52. Lambdin Family Bible. Annie’s second son is entered here under “Henry David Hamilton,” giving him the same initials as his uncle, whose full name was apparently Henry Daniel Hyers Snyder. See Matthew J. Conway, Port Leyden,”The Iron City”: A Passing Glance (Woodgate, N.Y.:Tug Hill Books, 1989), p. 34. 53. E. C. W. [possibly James Lambdin’s nephew Ernest C. Wallace],“Obituary: Mary Cochran Lambdin,” Daily Evening Bulletin, (Philadelphia) March 24, 1866, p. 1. 54. J. R. Lambdin Journal, pt. 1, p. 1. 55. Illustrated in Paul D. Schweizer, Art of Trenton Falls, 1825–1900 (Utica, N.Y.: Munson-Williams-Proctor Institute Museum of Art, 1989), no. 46, pp. 63–64. 56. J. R. Lambdin Journal, pt. 1, p. 15; Art of Colouring and Painting Landscapes in Water Colours (Baltimore: Fielding Lucas, 1815). 57. J. R. Lambdin Journal, pt. 2, p. 12. 58. Catalogue of the Second Annual National Water-Color Exhibition of the Philadelphia Society of Artists (Philadelphia: McCalls & Stavely, 1883). For James Lambdin’s contributions, see p. 16, no. 97; p. 17, no. 106; p. 26, no. 224; p. 28, no. 259. 59.Two brief Crayon articles elucidate an interest in landscape painting and geology in the 1850s: E. B. M., “Trees and Rocks at the Catskill Mountains,” Crayon 4 (September 1857): 280–82; and N. P. C., “Relation Between Geology and Landscape Painting,” Crayon 6 (August 1859): 255–56. 60. For interrelationships between earth scientists, American artists, and landscape paintings, see Barbara Novak, Nature and Culture: American Landscape and Painting, 1825–1875 (London: Thames and Hudson, 1980), pp. 44–77, 130–34. 61. Lewis, Russell Smith, pp. 82, 131–32, 229. 62. Virginia L. Wagner,“John Ruskin and Artistical Geology in America,” Winterthur Portfolio 23 (summer/autumn 1988): 151–67. For a more general study of Ruskin’s influence in the U.S., see Linda S. Ferber and William H. Gerdts, The New Path: Ruskin and the American PreRaphaelites, exh. cat. (Brooklyn, N.Y.: Brooklyn Museum, 1985). 63. Joan Lachance, archivist for the Mohonk Mountain House, kindly provided materials and information. When I visited the Mohonk archives in summer 1997, the hotel’s register books from 1875 to 1880 were not yet available for research (they have since become available). See Benjamin H. Matteson and Joan Lachance, “The Summerhouses of Mohonk” (paper written for the Mohonk Archives, 1996). I thank Joan Lachance for her comments on the topography of the Mohonk Lake area and Ann Barnett, Al Frane, and Rachael Matteson for identifying the exact spot from which James Lambdin viewed the mountains. The site, Artist’s Rock, is now marked by a summerhouse. Mountain House. 65. The dimensions of the phototypes are approximately 9 by 12 1/2 inches. 64. Guest register. Archives, Mohonk 66. Linda S. Ferber, “William Trost Richards (1833–1905): American Landscape and Marine Painter” (Ph.D. diss., Columbia University, 1980), p. 118. 67. George Levi Brown, Pleasant Valley: A History of Elizabethtown, Essex County, New York (Elizabethtown, N.Y.: George Levi Brown, 1905), pp. 419–20. 68. Charles J. Cohen, Memoir of Rev. John Wiley Faires, M.M., D.D., Founder and Principal of the Classical Institute, Philadelphia (Philadelphia: Charles J. Cohen, 1926), p. 834. 69. Unknown newspaper dated May 16, 1851, in Annals of Savannah, 1850–1937: A Digest and Index of the Newspaper Record of Events and Opinions (Savannah: Works Progress Administration of Georgia, 1937). I thank William Gerdts for this reference. 70. John Ruskin, “Notes on Some of the Principal Pictures Exhibited in the Rooms of the Royal Academy, 1858,” The Works of John Ruskin, ed. E. T. Cook and A. Wedderburn (London: G. Allen, 1904), 14:152–53. Ruskin wrote about the sentimental subjects popular at the time. Genre painters offered a view into another’s world, often that of a child. For nostalgic views of American country children, see Sarah Burns, “Barefoot Boys and Other Country Children: Sentiment and Ideology in Nineteenth-Century American Art,” American Art Journal 20, no. 1 (1988): 24–50; and idem., Pastoral Inventions: Rural Life in Nineteenth-Century American Art and Culture (Philadelphia: Temple University Press, 1989), esp. pp. 297–332. A scholarly study of images of childhood in the nineteenth century is Marilyn Brown, ed., Picturing Children: Constructions of Childhood Between Rousseau and Freud (Burlington,Vt.:Ashgate, 2002). German Romantic painting is one likely source for some of the imagery in George Lambdin’s genre paintings, including several that feature a young woman at a window (e.g. plate 13). An important motif of German Romantic painting is a prominently placed window through which a woman gazes; a classic study is Lorenz Eitner, “The Open Window and the Storm-Tossed Boat: An Essay in the Iconography of Romanticism,” Art Bulletin 37 (December 1955): 281–90, esp. 283–86. 71.This group of twenty-two albumin prints was discovered in the Historical Society of Pennsylvania and labeled “Price St. Germantown Photographs.” A selection of these photographs was first published by the Brandywine River Museum in 1986; see Weidner, George Cochran Lambdin, pp. 34, 38, 40–43, and related illustrations and endnotes. I am indebted to the Historical Society’s former president, the late Susan Stitt, for pointing out that Lambdin’s inspiration for In the Greenhouse, Lily Fairy, and The Stolen Lily (fig. 22) might have been a photograph of General Patterson’s daughter in the Patterson greenhouse at 1300 Locust St., Philadelphia. See Historical Society of Pennsylvania, Society Photo Collection, box 51, folder 1. 72. Some of the related paintings were published by the Brandywine River Museum in 1986. See Weidner, George Cochran Lambdin, p. 15, no. 5; p. 20, no. 10; p. 57, no. 9; p. 23, fig. 5. 73. W[illiam] H[olbrook] Beard to Mr. Lambden [sic], June 5, 1862. Dreer Collection, Historical Society of Pennsylvania. First published by the Brandywine River Museum in 1986. See Weidner, George Cochran Lambdin, p. 38. 74.“The Lambdin Pictures: Representative Pictures by the Late George Lambdin,” Times (Philadelphia), February 2, 1896, p. 21. 75. This information was kindly provided by Sarah Weatherwax. 76.These posed photographs were first published by the Brandywine River Museum in 1986. See Weidner, George Cochran Lambdin, p. 43, figs. 16–18. 77. Sister Eliza Monica and Sister Florence Teresa, “Sister Agnes Maria,” biographical typescript written between 1926 and 1933, p. 1. Convent of St. John Baptist (Episcopalian), Mendham, N.J. Kindly provided by Sister Barbara Jean. Agnes Mary (or Fig. 22. George Cochran Lambdin, The Stolen Lily (1864), oil on paper, 8 x 5 1/2 inches. Collection of Mrs. Christine M. Glazer, Cranford, New Jersey, sold by the Schwarz Gallery. From time to time George Lambdin painted two or more similar works on the same theme, although sometimes he used different titles. This is exemplified by his paintings (all dated or exhibited in 1864) In the Greenhouse, Lily Fairy, and The Stolen Lily; the first two are unlocated today. Each depicts a little girl holding a large white calla lily while standing in a greenhouse filled with lush tropical plants. This work was once a part of an album donated to the Great Central Fair held in Philadelphia in the summer of 1864, a venue where it would have had wide exposure. A description of Lily Fairy may be found in “Philadelphia Art Notes,” Round Table (May 7, 1864): 327. A description of In the Greenhouse appears in an unidentified auction catalogue (lot 23; 13 3/4 by 10 inches). 41 Notes Marie) Lambdin entered the convent as a postulant June 16, 1893, and became a novice later that year. She took her final vows February 1, 1896. 78. “Sketchings,” Crayon 6 (November 1859): 350. Catalogue of the Entire Collection of Paintings Belonging to the Late Thomas Kensett, Esq., Baltimore, Comprising Examples by American and Foreign Artists, Selected by the Late John F. Kensett, Esq., and Formerly Loaned to the Metropolitan Museum (New York: Leavitt, 1877), nos. 19 and 79. Both paintings are listed in the previous sale of Kensett’s estate in 1873. 79.“Philadelphia Art Notes,” Round Table (March 26, 1864) p. 234; and Round Table (September 30, 1865) p. 60. [Alfred Cochran Lambdin?],“The Lambdin Pictures: Representative Pictures by the Late George Lambdin,” Times (Philadelphia), February 2, 1896, p. 21. A likeness of Harry and three of George’s war paintings are reproduced in Weidner, George Cochran Lambdin, p. 19, cat. B and fig. 2; p. 20, no. 10; p. 35. no. 8. 80. Two current essays shed much light on how Thomas Eakins incorporated photographic sources into his work and on photographic activity in Philadelphia: Mark Tucker and Nica Gutman, “Photographs and the Making of Paintings,” and W. Douglass Paschall, “The Camera Artist,” both in Thomas Eakins (Philadelphia: Philadelphia Museum of Art, 2001), pp. 225–238 and 239–255. 81. “The Fine Arts,” Daily Evening Bulletin (Philadelphia), April 14, 1870, p. 2; and “Art Items,” Daily Evening Bulletin (Philadelphia), May 18, 1870, p. 3. Illustrated in Weidner, George Cochran Lambdin, p. 36, no. 2; p. 20, no. 10; p. 17, no. 13. 82. 83. Elisabeth Hardouin-Fugier and Etienne Grafe, The Flower Painters: An Illustrated Dictionary (North Dighton, Mass.: JG Press, 1989). This resource documents the burgeoning interest in floral still-life painting in France in the second half of the nineteenth century, the movement towards naturalism, and flower painting’s popularity in the French provinces and in England. 84. See Robert Devlin Schwarz, 150 Years of Philadelphia Still-Life Painting, Philadelphia Collection LXII (Philadelphia: Schwarz Gallery, 1997). 85.Weidner, George Cochran Lambdin, pp. 27–30. For a detailed account of the horticultural history of Germantown, see Edwin C. Jellett,“Germantown Gardens and Gardeners,” Germantown Site and Relic Society Historical Address, no. 10 (Germantown, Pa.: The Society, 1914). 86. For a recent overview, see Beverly Seaton, The Language of Flowers: A History (Charlottesville, Va.: University Press of Virginia, 1995). 87. S. L. B.,“Influence of Flowers,” Gardener’s Monthly 3 (March 1861): 68. 88. G. D., “Lessons from the Flowers,” Gardener’s Monthly 3 (July 1861): 202. Horticulture,” Gardener’s Monthly 1 (April 1, 1859): 56. 89. “Conservative Influence of 90. C. P. Hayes, “New Roses,” Horticulturist 29 (January 1874): 3–4. 91. Illustrated Art Notes, ed. Charles M. Kurtz (New York: Cassell, Petter, Galpin & Co., 1882). George Lambdin supplied the description and drawing for his La Pactole and La France, p. 96, no. 660. 92. For studies of floral painting in the United States and George Lambdin’s place within an American context, see William H. Gerdts, Painters of the Humble Truth: Masterpieces of American Still Life, 1801–1939, exh. cat. (Columbia, Mo.: University of Missouri Press, 1981); idem., Down Garden Paths: The Floral Environment in American Art, exh. cat. (Cranberry, N.J.: Associated University Presses, 1983); and Bruce Weber, American Beauty: The Rose in American Art (New York: Berry-Hill Galleries, 1997). Gerdts discusses Ruskin’s and Darwin’s impact on George Lambdin in Down Garden Paths, esp. pp. 19–22. See also idem.,“The Influence of Ruskin and Pre-Raphaelitism on American Still-Life Painting,” American Art Journal 1 (fall 1969): 80–97, esp. p. 81. See also Ferber and Gerdts, The New Path, esp. p. 271; and Ella M. Foshay, “Charles Darwin and the Development of American Flower Imagery,” Winterthur Portfolio 15 (winter 1980): 299–314. Weidner, George Cochran Lambdin, p. 38, fig. 7. (December 17, 1881): 153. 93. First published by the Brandywine River Museum in 1986. Adolphe Braun’s Flowers is illustrated in 94. “Notes,” American 10 (June 13, 1885): 91. 95. “Art: The Philadelphia Artists’ Exhibition,” American 3 96. Charles M. Kurtz papers. Microfilm rolls 4804, 4806, and 4820, passim. Kurtz’s illustrated notes were published from 1881 through 1889 and variously called American Academy Notes, Illustrated Art Notes, and National Academy Notes. Some of the artists’ sketches for these Notes are now in the collection of the National Academy of Design. See David B. Dearinger, “Foreword,” Rave Reviews: American Art and Its Critics, 1826–1925, ed. David B. Dearinger (New York: National Academy of Design, 2000), pp. 25–26, p. 29, n. 80. 97. Geo[rge] C. Lambdin, “Further Words on the Tariff,” Art Union 1 (January 1884): 22. 98. G[eorge] C. L[ambdin],“Primitive Colors,” Art Union 1 (May 1884): 114. 99. Geo[rge] C. Lambdin,“The Charm of the Rose,” Art Union 1 (June–July 1884): 137. 100. Geo[rge] C. Lambdin,“Style,” Art Union 2 (January–March, 1885): 5–6. 101. Geo[rge] C. Lambdin,“An Artist’s View of the Nude Question,” American 10 (July 4, 1885): 141; idem., “The Picturesque,” American 11 (February 27, 1886): 301. The second letter called the human body “picturesque.” Interestingly, at this same time arguments about nudity in art were being hurled back and forth in the British papers Times and Pall Mall Gazette. Also George Lambdin himself, in 1885 and shortly thereafter, exhibited or submitted a nude subject, Youth, a watercolor showing an unclothed girl by the shore with a butterfly (dated 1884; location unknown). 102. For the text of this lecture, see “What Is a Work of Art?” Times (Philadelphia), May 18, 1885, p. 2. 103. For the text of this lecture, see “Oil Painting,” Times (Philadelphia), May 16, 1885, p. 3. George Lambdin gave a similar lecture at the National Academy of Design later that year. 104.“Notes,” American 10 (June 27, 1885): 125. 105.“Art Notes,” American 10 (August 29, 1885): 267; American 12 (September 4, 1886): 317. 106. Sister Eliza Monica and Sister Florence Teresa,“Sister Agnes Maria,” p. 1.Will of James R. Lambdin, dated July 26, 1878. Collection of Valuable Engravings Belonging to Alfred C. Lambdin, Esq., of Philadelphia, cat. no. 998 (Philadelphia: Samuel T. Freeman & Co., June 1, 1909). 107. Anna Wells Rutledge, “Dunlap Notes,” Art in America 39 (February 1951): 44–48. Dunlap (who of course was a friend of James) published his two-volume history of American art, the first such compilation, in New York in 1834. 108. Obituaries for J. R. Lambdin: Public Ledger (Philadelphia), February 1, 1889, p. 4; New York Times, February 1, 1889, p. 5. 109.“Art Notes,” American 13 (April 2, 1887): 382. After the sale of paintings from his studio that month (see Catalogue of Valuable Paintings), George’s name seldom turns up in connection with artistic activities. James and George vacated their Philadelphia studios at about the same time in spring 1887. 110. Obituaries for G. C. Lambdin: Public Ledger (Philadelphia), January 29, 1896, p. 2; Germantown Guide, February 1, 1896, p. 2; Times (Philadelphia), January 29, 1896, p. 4.; Statement by E. C. Jellett dated 1896, in Warren H. Poley’s scrapbook, Germantown Historical Society. 111. O’Connor,“Reviving a Forgotten Artist”; J. R. Lambdin,“Brief Sketch,” p. 4. F I N E P A I N T I N G S SCHWARZ P 1806 Chestnut Street H I L A D E Philadelphia PA 19103 L P H I Fax 215 561 5621 F O U N D E D A Tel 215 563 4887 Art Dealers Association of America; Art and Antique Dealers League of America; CINOA 1 9 3 0